The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. [20], No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, November 30, 1923 Page: 2 of 8
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CARROLLTON CHRONICLE
START CAMPAIGN TO
STOP RATIFICATION
CLAIM SOLEMN PLEDGE TO AR
MENIANS IGNORED BY
PACT.
GERARD HEADS NEW MOVE
LOW
Former Ambassador to Germany and
Associates to Submit Memoran-
dum to Senators.
New York—An organised move-
ment to frustrate ratification of the
l.ausanne treaty by the United States
Senate was taken at the Yale Club
by a group of Influential Americans
headed by James \V. Gen>—> former
Ambassador to Germany Tml now
chairman of the American Committee
for the Independence of America.
A memorandum previously signed
by 100 statesmen, high army officers.,
church officials, editors and foreign
relief workers was opened for pre-
sentation to President Coolidge. Sec-
retary of State Hlighes and Individu-
al Senators before whom the treaty
will come for ratification at the forth-
coming session of Congress.
The document charges that the
State’s Department’s envoys at Lau-
sanne sacrificed to Mustaph Kemal
■the rights of American citizens in
Turkey, and threw overboard the
American people whom this country
was pledged to protect in exchange
for the Chester concessions to a few
American business men, since trans-
ferred to alien control.
"It is a morally indefensible trea-
ty," said the memorandum. "It Is
an utterly humiliating and purpose-
less treaty. It surrenders every Am-
erican right In Turkey. It renders
Impossible the continuance of Am-
erican educational and philanthropic
enterprise In that country. It ig-
nores our solemn pledge to Aremnia.
"Our nationals In Turkey are to
be deprived of the protection of the
American consular courta—a preroga-
tive they have enjoyed since 1832—
and made subject to the notoriously
corrupt Turkish police and courts.
"Our missionary institutions In
Turkey are to be likewise subject to
■Turkish laws.
•’The question of Indemnifies sug-
fered by Americans through arbitrary
and illegal acts is left for later dis-
cussion Our merchant vessels may,
as in the past, pass through the
Dardanells which, however, may be
closed at the will of the Turks, as
■was done In 1914.
"The open door—wo resume our
former privilege to trade with and
Invest In Turkey. The importance
of that privilege may be gauged by
the fact that In 1913, when Turkey's
estimated population was 17,500,000,
American exports to that country
amounted to $3,313,821, or 16c per
capita. The population of Turkey
now is only about 6,000,000,
Automatic Ventilation
Is Latest Convenience
Most poultrymcn today acknowledge
the value of good ventilation In the
winter laying i>ens. Hut ventilation
without objectionable drafts is often
hard to accomplish, especially whese
snowstorms and blizzards are of fre-
quent occurrence. The open-air typo
of henhouse, which Is In general use,
Is not entirely satisfactory because
snow and rain cau enter. Even If a
muslin curtain Is provided to prevent
this, It Is necessary to adjust this cur-
tain according to weather conditions,
and this Is very often neglected. To
overcome these difficulties, und to
muke the ventilation entirely auto-
A Shutter for the Poultry House That,
While Providing Ample Ventilation,
Eliminates Draft, at It Closes Auto-
matically In a Wind.
matfc, a Wisconsin poultrymnn devised
the shutter arrangement shown in the
Illustration.
It consists of a frame projecting
from the side of the poultry house as
shown, ubout 6 feet long and 4 feet
high, roofed over with tar paper. Seven
8-lnch boards are suspended within this
frame, with enough space between
them to Insure proper ventilation at
all times, and arranged In such n man-
ner that they swing easily upon j* vot
nails driven through the fruiue at each
end.
In fair weather the shutters hang
vertically, but when gusts of wind,
with rain or snow, beat ugnlust them,
they close automatically. To prevent
the fowls from scratching litter Into
the openings, which would Interfere
with the movement of the shutters,
sparrow nolllng Is lucked across the
frame, on the Inside of the house.—O.
E. Hendrickson, Arg.vle, Wls., in Popu-
lar Mechanic* Monthly.
GERMANS ARE FIGHTING
TO OBTAIN FOOD
Sixteen Dehd end 67 Hurt as Hungry
People Battle Police and
Raid Groceries.
Berlin.—Food riots In Ruhr ana
Rhineland cities were reported In
Ynessages reaching here tells of
.deaths, Injuries und plundering of*
shops and stores.
At Essen there were frequent
clashes between the mobs, bent on
securing food and clothing from
shops, and the police Five persons
were killed In as many hours and
27 were Injured. The riots are con-
tinuing and It Is believed that with
the approach of night the casualty
,11st will mount rapidly.
At 8topenberg two deaths and five
seriously wounded victims of food
riots were reported.
Nine are dead and 35 Injured at
Bothausen.
, Corn, potatoes and butter now take
tke place of money In certain rural
-districts In Germany. A resident of
Lagow, Prussia, describes the barter
system In ferce there.
“All the tradespeople," he says,
"now make charges like this: Boots
soled and heeled, 76 pounds of corn;
soled only, 60 pounda; altering a
coat, 200 pounds of potatoes; making
a mattress for a child's bed. 300
pounds of potutnns; sharpening two
pairs of scissors and two knives,
'halt a pound of butter, und so on.
Payment of goods Insures that the
shopkeepers receive mil value.
"One of our maids went to the
next town, tuklng with her four
pounds of bulter, which then cost
16,000,000,000 murks u pound. She
asked In a shop the prcle of a skirt
and offered the sum In butter. The
skirt was at once wrapped up for
her. The people In the shops will
slwuys barter for food, because It Is
uo hard to obtain "
Hens Must Be Well Fed
During Molting Period
Mnny people ask how to feed chick-
ens through the molt. They seem to
feel that the system of feeding during
this normal resting period should be
different than their feeding system
during the other periods of the year.
The yearly molt Is a very natural
part of u hen's life. This Is the time
of the year when the ben ceases pro-
duction In order to replenish her ward-
robe and to store up renewed energy
oud strength for her next year of lay-
ing. During this time she Is manu-
facturing a supply of feathers Instead
of eggs. Feathers and eggs are made
up of somewhat the same material.
The system of feeding then should not
be different Vrom one used for egg pro-
duction. Milk should continue to he
fed ulong with the mash, and oyster
shell and g,alii should continue to he
fed In order that the hen may store
up surplus fat so that she can have
l%t to draw upou for the next year's
production.
Cutting down In the feed will cause
production to drop ofT, Any condition
which stops egg production will cause
birds to molt at this time of year.
However, the musing of the early
molting will not bring about n quick
molt. On the contrary, those that
molt early are usually long-tlnye molt-
ere. Those thut molt late are usually
short-time molten. It Is therefore
most profitable to continue to feed for
egg production and let the fowls go
Into their natural “molt, rather than to
try und control this In any way.—
Poultry Extension Service, Colorado
Agricultural College.
$640,000,000 To Aid Unemployed
London. -Approximately $64(1,000-
(mo luis been spruit by the British
government to relieve widespread
unemployment In the lust two and
0 half years, according to a report
of the ministry of labor Just Issued
Of thla huge aum three fourths lias
been provided for, or will tie a fu-
ture charge upon Insured work peo
pie and their employes Not more
than onetourth Is provided by the
.ax payer.
Frankincense
Supply of Oyster Shell
Is Essential to Fowls
A constant supply of oyster shells
or llincstmto grit Is essenllal to the
most profitable egg production. Re-
cent tests In Ohio show that when lltn
hens were denied oyster shells egg
production was greatly reduced and
the eggs averaged two ounces per
do7.cn smaller,
The experiments showed thut min-
erals In the feisl are essential for
growing birds and for the limllly func-
tions of mature birds, while laying
Ileus require additional lime supplied
In ilie form of sliells or grit.
Eggs In Saver# Weather.
With the first hard cold spell, liens
may drop down In egg prisluctlon.
After they have become burdened to
weather conditions, however, one may
expect satisfactory results from them
even In the severest months If they
ure made comfortable.
Bulky Faed for Dueka.
Ducks require more bulky food than
chickens and for that reason should lit
fed hulled vegstahl* steamed frees
clover or alfulfu and other Sivch vege
table foods In ihtlr mash.
(Prepared by the National Geographic
Society, Washington, D. C.)
Off the northeastern point of Africa
at the entrance to the Gulf of Aden,
like a chip fallen there In the making
of the continent, lies Socotra, a little
Island to which the world gives scant
thought, but which sends Its pleasant
messages to the nostrils of thousands
each du.v. It Is the "Isle of Frunkln-
cense" from which comes much of the
pleasant, aromatic gum burned as In-
cense alike In the rhurches and tem-
ples of the West und the East.
Frankincense Is a gum resin ob-
tained from certain trees of the genus
Boswell la. found In Socotra, East Af-
rlcu and Arabia, An Incision having
been made in the bark of the tree, a
milky Juice exudes and slowly hard-
ens In tear-shaped drops of yellowish
hue. These are gathered as oUbanum,
or the true frankincense. The Idea
that frankincense was originally a
product of India probably arose from
a confusion of It with other odorifer-
ous products of that country, and be-
cause of the fact that Imported frnnk-
Ineense Is sold with nutlve Indian
products.
Among ancient and medieval peoples
frankincense was the physician's cure-
all. being confidently administered for
fevers, bolls, Internal disorders, lep-
rosy, ns an antidote to hemlock poi-
soning, as a sedutive, a stimulant and
a tonlr.
In ancient times Socotra and the
southern end of Arabia produced all
the frankincense In the world, but to-
day the largest supply comes from the
Warsangll country. In Somaliland.
Socotra. 78 miles long by 35 miles
wide In Its widest part and lying 543
miles east of Adiffi, Is said to be geo-
logically older than eastern Asia; yet
In the centuries which have elapsed
since the argosies of Persia and Tyre
sought It out for Its precious balsams
It has been almost forgotten. The
Europeans who have visited It could
he counted on one’s fingers. Evcry-
shlp that pusses through Bah-el-Mnn-
deb, east or west, sights Its cloud-belt-
ed peaks and gives It room; for
Socotra hns no harbors, and the mon-
soon snarls about Its uncharted rocks
like a hungry llonesa lying in wait
for her prey.
Tourists Are Not Wanted.
If one mnkes his way to this out-of-(
the-way Island he will probably sull
Into Tumarldn hay, where before him,
smothered In palms, will lie Hidlbo,
eapltol of the Islnnd. In the dlstnnee
he will see a vsst rampart of gray
limestone mountains thrusting needle-
pointed peaks up Into the clouds.
These are the peaks of Hoghler.
It should be explained that the
latch string of Socotra does not hHng
out for tourists. Only after careful
arrangements and the securing of per-
mits docs one venture to the Island,
arid even then his reception may not
he cordial. Its sultan has enjoyed
Isolation so long that he conalders It
a sort of priceless privilege and
wishes to preserve It.
Hadlbo, or Tamarlda, as the Arabs
call It, from Tamar, the date-fruit
tree, Is a collection of flat-roofed white
liousea scattered among the palms.
The sultan’s "palace" Is a large mud
structure with flat towers, and the two
prayer houses are suggeotlve of the
graceful Arab mosques only by con-
trait. The poorer population, chiefly
of African descent and much older In
the history of the Island than Its Arab
aristocracy, lives In huts of thorn and
plaited grass, Invariably overrun with
luxuriant gourd vine*. Surrounded by
tiny garden plots, In which tombac, or
native tobacco, lentils, melons, and
yams grow abundantly, they are more
picturesque outside than Inside,
There Is not much to he seen In
Iliidlho. The principal amusement af-
forded the visitor Is that of being
seen; one la fortunate If any part of
his person or belongings escape* much
handling, ns well ns the sharpest kind
of scrutiny. Yet they nre a kindly
folk, liospltnhle nnd quite harmless.
Quarrels among themselves nre anld
to !>e nlntoat unknown.
The women for the most part keep
shyly veiled, or crowd behind the
doors, while the men may bring out
their smnll stores of skins, dried tom-
bac, lump* of frankincense and aloes
for Inspection. It Is said that In un-
dent times the Socotriin women ex-
ercised the nrts of magic, and among
the Arnlis the legend still survives
that they were wont to sit on the
rocks and lure mariner* to disaster
with their smiles, Possibly the
Socotriin women were the'Circes and
the Sirens, so fntal to the old Greek
sailors; hut If so, their charms have
*mll,v deserted them slnee, or the sail-
oriuett of that day were even more
linptesslonnhle than sullurs lire now
Beside lliidllto Is a khor, or lagoon,
that wind* Its placid way through the
palms. Strangely enough, a atrip "f
niiiiiI not more than 50 feet wide ill
vhies III sweet water* from the brine
of Hie sen, There are several of these
silted In lagoons along the coast, and
Hint emln<*t traveler, the late Theo-
dore Bent, thinks they are the rem-
nants of ancient harbor* In which the
stniiller ships of those times easily
found shelter,
Nothing could be lovelier tliun the
sight of alender Socotriin cattle gniz
Ing kneedeep among the grasses nnd
the palm branches that line the hanks
of these khors. Clouds mussed above
and mountulns near behind; long
sbudows dappling the water, und the
sun turning to gold the tawny flunks
of the cattle makes a picture of pas-
toral beauty rare to behold In this part
of the East.
Hard Trip Into tha Mountains.
If one would Rep the frankincense
tree—and to the Westerner that Is the
most Interesting thing thut Socotra
holds—he must Journey Into the rough
mountains, a trip that Is fnr from be-
ing u holiday Jaunt. The trail up the
narrow gorge of the Motuha, worn by
camels’ feet and the torrentlnl rains,
is nnrrow, rocky nnd exceedingly
steep. In places It Is scarcely wider
than the width of one's beast, and the
great thorn bushes beside It tear with
Insatluble claws at flesh and cloth-
ing. Flower*—yellow, blue, and crim-
son—some familiar, but most of them
strange, nnd creeping vines over low
trees give the whole Jungle the ap-
pearance of a lovely, unkempt garden
—like a woman with disheveled hair.
Occasionally one encounters the hid-
eous cucumber tree, with Its swollen
nnd whitish stems, looking like enor-
mous candles which had guttered hor-
ribly. This tree grows nowhere else,
and the rest of the world Is none the
worse for It. Its proper follnge con-
sists of a few tufts of leaves, with lit-
tle yellow flowers at the top of Its
knobby branches; but one sees vul-
tures roosting In nesrly every tree
nnd they seem Its fitting fruit.
After nightfall the traveler op this
trail will Ree lights appear on the
faces of the clicjs. They are the bed-
time fires of the Bedouin cave-dwell-
ers, who live on nothing hut the prod-
ucts of their herds. They are a folk
so timid that only occasional glimpses
may he caught of them.
On the higher hills nnd mountain
slopes arc much larger trees than low-
er down, many of them strange and
curious. Most interesting of all are
three species of the famed dragon’s
blood—whose ruhy-red fluid wns used
to dye the robes of olden queens—
which are all about on the slopes, like
battalions of skirmishers half hid In
ambush.
The natives call these trees A'nrn-
eelh nnd their resin M'feollo. In an-
cient times Socotra wns known as the
only home of the dragon's-blood tree,
hut nowadays Sumatra nnd South
America furnish the world's supply.
It Is rsrel.v used ns a dye now, but
chiefly In the preparation of varnishes.
The Socotrans themselves employ It
principally for streaking odd designs
on their earthen pots.
One who knows frankincense only
from Its odor will see with surprise
his first tree In Its native setting. It
it undoubtedly a tree, but It look*
nearly as much like an enormous sea-
serpent In the set of shedding Its skin,
so awkwardly contorted and alive It
seems. Tiny, whitish peels cling loose-
ly about stems and bole of a peculiarly
livid, blotchy hue. The woody fiber
of the tree, distended with Its viscous
sap. Is like nothing so much as decom-
posing animal flesh, and even the few
bright red, geranlum-llke flowers can-
not soften Its repulsive aspect. But It Is
Indeed the frankincense tree, the tee-
lee-nh of the Socoterl, the oltbanum,
or al-lubnn of the Arab, and the B<»s-
wellla socotrana of science. The fra-
grance hanging all about and the par-
tially dried, reslnoua "teara," exuding
from wound# In the bark made by In-
sects, testify to Its nature.
Gathering the Frsnklnc*iss.
The process employed by the natives
In gathering the I'lbsn Is simplicity
Itself. About a month after the rnlns
begin, say In Juno, when the tree Is
swollen with sap, the Socotriin gathers
his household about him and they go
among the wild trees which trndltlnn
has allotted him as a family Inherit-
ance. Each tree Is given ten or n
dozen deep, oblique slnsheu two or
three Inches In length, and a wrench
of Hie knife tears the lower end of the
wound open to form a kind of pocket.
In these pockets the amber-colored or
whitish "tears" of resin collect, hard-
ening slowly. At the end of a month
the culleetor returns, rip* out the pur-
Hally hardened resin with the point
of Ids knife, und make* more wounds
In the tiark. He repeat* the proeess
once a month until the end of Sep-
tember.
As soon as (he luban tenr* nr# hnid
they are ready fnr the market, and
they are usually bartered to an Arab
trader for kerosene ar cotton cloths
from America A tree In Socotra will
produce annually about eight pounds
of luban. worth ten cents a pound; a
Somaliland tree will produce twice as
much and of a quality twice us valu-
able.
Aside from H* strangely varied and
odd vegetation and It* blsarre seejilr
beauties, there I* not much, perhaps,
In this fertile, almost forgotten Island
of Socotra to nttrnrt the tourist un-
less he he a student of ethnology.
There arc still to he found In the ruins
of 7,oko, the ancient capital (Suk, the
Arabs call It), traces of a very sarly
civilisation.
Christmas Hymn
(OldSpsouhl
T~>ORN waathy Sompui* Virgin,
JLJ Upon that Christmas nighc
Among the iowls and caule
Thou laidst thy Child aright I
ForThee no gold-decked chamber.
or thee nog
For Thee no tapestry,
But only a lowly manga
In Bethlehem we eeel
Co we, led by the star, now
To Bethlehem straightway
And humbly let ut kneel there
Beiore the Child to pray.
Let u* adore Him gladly
With grateful hearts and pure.
And let ua truly love Him,
Salvation to secure I
Holiday Trip
His Awakening
By KATHERINE EDELMAN
Cliff Winters
Learned a Lesson
From Shoppers
and Won a
Sweetheart
I, I r<’ FORD
WINTERS
wus Jealous.
He would
not have ad-
mitted the fact to
himself for all the
world, but It was
quite plain to everyone else, Including
bis little brother of ten.
For five ‘years he had thought of
Stella Thompson as his—the thought
hnd never occurred to him that some-
one else might come along nnd take,
her from him. True, he hud never
come right out like the men in the
story books and asked Stella to be his,
but surely be thought any girl would
have Bense enough to know when a
man really wunted her. Things hod
been so pleusant, anyhow, coming and
going to Stella's home, that he hnd put
off naming the day, but otherwise, In
his mind, the whole thing hud been
settled.
Now, however. It looked as If Stella
was lost to him—that lie was out of
the running—for
Dick Carpenter
had come back
from the city.
Stella seemed to
have eyes for him
only and Clifford
saw very little •.*
her. It seemed
as If no matter
what time he
called he ;ould
not find her there
—her mother al-
ways met him
with the same re-
mark: "She Just
left with Dick,"
or “Dick and she
are in the parlor now."
He had Just come from there now,
after being told that Dick und Stella
hud gone to town. The Jealousy that
was getting at his heurt grew more
bitter each moment, and so much did
It possess him that he could not go
about his work.
Jumping Into his little car again he
made his way along the smooth coun-
try road until he reached Trenton.
There he found that the town Was full
of Christmas shoppers and that the^a
was little cliunce of his running across
Stella and Dick, even though they
should still be there.
He wandered aimlessly around for
an hour and watched the crowds as
they came and went, noticing particu-
larly the young men of bis own age.
They were hurrying In and out of
■tores and nearly always on the out-
coming trip they were carrying pack-
ages. He could see them through the
windows at times making their pur-
chases—candy, flowers, Jewelry and
other things—and they all seemed so
happy about It. They wqre buying
them for mothers, or wives or sweet-
hearts, he thought.
Swift as a flash the realisation came
to him that never during all the years
that he had courted Stella Thompson
had he given her « gift—not even at
Christmas, What had been the mat-
ter with him? He had Just never
stopped to think—no wonder that
Stella had turned from him to Dick
Carpenter. What a fool he had been
to think that affection could live and
thrive with the little thought that he
had given Itl He wondered if It was
too late now to make amends—at least
be could make an effort and try.
That evening when he called at the
Thompson home aud asked for Stella
the refusnl that
Mrs. Thompson
was going to ut-
ter died upon her
lips ns she saw
the change In him.
The easy-going,
half-hearted Clif-
ford Winter* of
tho past was gone
nnd In ills place
wns an aggres-
sive, quick-spoken
fellow who acted
a* If he would not
be denied. And
when Stella her-
self came along
she could only
gasp ns he placed a large bouquet of
roses In her arms, nnd before she could
recover front the surprise which this
occasioned Clifford had naked her ths
nil-important question and she hnd an-
swered "yes,"
<1 Ilford always thought through tho
years that followed that tlielr happi-
ness was due to that holiday trip he
rnnde to town, but Stid'a’*mother often
smiled to herself as she thought how
she used the vuln little Carpenter boy
to awaken Clifford.
($, till. Waatara Nswspspsr Ualoa.)
ANOTHER NURSE
PRAISES TANLAC
Mrs. Leonti Culpepper, 17 I.uelle Ave-
nue, who was n trained nurse for fif-
teen years, Is another highly esteemed
Atlnnta woman whose gratitude nnd
desire to help others prompts her to
tell of the wonderful results she de-
rived from the Tnnlnc treatment.
‘‘I had suffered from nervpus In-
digestion aud loss of appetite for four
or five years," said Mrs. Culpepper,
“and wns nearly always nauseated. I
had heartburn so had I could hardly
stand It, nnd became so weak and
nervous I could hardly do my house-
work.
"Rending what Tanlac hnd done for
others, I decided to try It, and by the
time I finished the first bottle I was
feeling ro much better Hint I bought
two more. When I had finished the
third bottle I was feeling line nnd had
actually gained sixteen pounds. Tan-
lac Is all that Is rlnltned for It."
Tuning Is for sale by nil good drug-
gists. Tuke no substitute.—Advertise-
ment.
Order of Merit.
Twenty-one years ngo the Order of
Merit was founded by King Edward,
carrying with It the right to add
"O. M." to a recipient’s name. The
order Is limited to 24 members, ex-
clusive of foreign honorary member*.
Military members Include the Earl of
Y'pres and Enrl llalg. while among the
civil members are Lord Morley,
Thomas Hardy, Sir George Trevelyan
—all octogenarians—Sir J. M. Burrle,
Lord Haldane, Lord Balfour und Mr.
I.loyd George. The ribbon Is blue and
crimson.
STOMACH MISERY,
GAS, INDIGESTION
“Pape's Dlnpepsln" Is the quickest,
surest relief for Indigestion, gnses,
flatulence, heartburn, sourness or
stomach distress caused by acidity. A
few tablets give almost Immediate
stomach relief. Correct your stomach
and digestion now for a few cents.
Druggists sell millions of packages of
Pape’s Dlapepsln.—Adv.
Silent Admiration.
A clergyman with a large nose wa*
Invited to ten with a woman who had
a talkative child, whom his mother
warned severely not to pass uny rude
remarks dining the meal.
The hoy's eyes were fixed on the
clergyman so long that the mojher
frowned upon the child, whereupon he
shouted.
"It's all right, mother; I'm not go-
ing to say anything. I’m only looking
at It!"
DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN
Aspirin Marked With “Bayer Cros*'*
Has Been Proved Safe by Million*.
Warning 1 Unless you see the name
“Bayer" on packuge or cn tablets you
are not getting the genuine Bayer
Aspirin proved safe by millions and
prescribed by physicians for 28 years.
Say “Bayer" when you buy Aspirin.
Imitations niuy prove dungeroua.—Adv.
Lawyer Only Joking.
Lawyer tin ii police court)—Did he
Insult .vour wife?
Husband—No; he put his fish supper
down her hack.
A Standard for 90 Years.
As a laxative and blood purifier there
Is nothing better than Brandreth Pills.
In use throughout the world.—Adv.
Fewer Demands Sought.
"Why did George marry Angyl"
"Well, they were engaged for two
years and he got tired of seeing her
every day."—Kansas Sour Owl.
Baby’s little dresses will Just simply
dazzle If Red Cross Bull Blue Is used
In the laundry. Try It and see for your-
self. At all good grocers.—Advertise-
ment.
No Smokt Inspector.
Mrs. Upstairs—Is tlielr married life
cloudless?
Mrs. Nexdore—Mercy sake*, yes,
she won't even let him blow u cloud of
smoke.
“CASCARETS” FOR LIVER
AND BOWELS—10C A BOX
Cures Biliousness, Constipation, Sick
Headache,Indigestion. Drugstores. Adv
Where Is Her Wisdom!
Hrnltli--M.v wife's not a fool, by any
means.
Jones Then why on earth did she
marry you!
One Trial Will Convince You
that Allcock's Plaster I* by fnr tha
quickest, safest nnd most certain rem-
edy for nil local aches nnd pnlns.—Adv.
True Enough.
Perhaps we expert loo much of our
courtesies, If you give a lady your
seat In a ear, she Ik not likely to leave
you $25,<KHl A dazzling smile Is quite
enough payment—Louisville Courier-
Journal.
Wrtshl's 1*41** V«»sl*hls Pills ronlslti
•Blv vssststil* Insrsdlsms whlvh set *• n
fsnils pursstlvi* 7T9 Pss-I S* N, Y. Adv.
A pessimist Is a man with llvor spots
on his disposition
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Whitmore, R. J. The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. [20], No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, November 30, 1923, newspaper, November 30, 1923; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth592162/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Carrollton Public Library.