The Jacksboro Gazette (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 10, 1921 Page: 2 of 8
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I
K
THE JACKSBORO GAZETTE
t ■■5
November 10, 1921
PAIN IN BACK?
Usually Your System is Full of Uric Add
to Excess and this Causes Rheumatic
Pains. Your Kidneys Do Not
Carry Away The Poison
Frederick, Okla.—“I have used Dr.
Pierce’s Family Medicines for at least 40
years. I am 59 years old at the present
time, and I think Dr. Pierce’s An uric
Kidney Tablets saved my life. I was
ivery poorly four years ago this spring,
the doctor said I could not live 6 months.
I had a dull aching pain over my kidneys.
I did not dare to eat very much of any-
thing. Now I feel so much better and can
eat without fear. I could not think of do-
ing without Dr. Pierce’s Anuric Tablets.
I keep them in the house for all of us to
use as needed.”—Mrs. Ida Roady, 213
E. Amethyst Ave.
Send 10c to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’
Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for a trial pkg.
of Anuric. You will receive FREE med-
ical advice.
ImmM
I Tv- .....
*vnr~
ipj
rsssrst I
Portify your system with
FORCE — the wonderful re-
vitxlizer end reconstructive —
cnequeled in its strength-giving
and up-building qualities.
Sold If reliable drugglet* everywhere. Of
oomal benefit to men, women and children.
“It Makes for Strength**
Red Cross
BALL BLUE
to needed to every department of house-
keeping. Equally good for towel*, table
linen, sheets end pillow cmn. At Grocer*.
1
CEMENT MONUMENTS
New process whereby letters are cast
into cement. Representatives wanted
everywhere. Information free. Ad-
dress:
CEMENT PRODUCT CO.
Grayburg Bldg., San Antonio, Texas
Are You
TROUBLED WITH
CONSTIPATION?
Take
Dr.Tutt's Liver Pills
Education is life’s apprenticeship;
Its chief aim is to teach us how to
think. ,
YOU CANT TRUST
CALOMEL AT ALL
It’s Quicksilver, Saiivates, Causes
Rheumatism and Bone
Decay.
The next dose of calomel you take
may Salivate you. It may shock your
liver or start bone necrosis. Calomel
Is dangerous. It Is mercury, quicksil-
ver. It crashes into sour bile like
dynamite, cramping and sickening you.
Calomel attacks the bones and should
never be put into your system.
If you feel bilious, headachy, consti-
pated and all knocked out, just go to
your druggist and get a bottle of Dod-
son’s Liver Tone for a few cents which
is a harmless vegetable substitute for
dangerous calomel. Take a spoonful
and if it doesn’t start your liver and
straighten you up better and quicker
than nasty calomel and without makihg
you sick, you just go back and get your
money.
Don’t take calomel! It can not be
trusted any more than a leopard or a
wild-cat. Take Dodson’s Liver Tone
which straightens you right up and
makes you feel fine. No salts neces-
sary. Give it to the children because
it is perfectly harmless and can not
salivate.—Advertisement.
Childish sports may satisfy the chil-
dren, but annoy the neighbors.
BOARD OF CONTROL
SUSTAINS SUPT. KING
BOARD DECLINES TO MAKE A
CHANGE—TWO MEMBERS UP-
HOLD MANAGEMENT
THIN, FLAT HAIR
GROWS LONG, THICK
AND ABUNDANT
V
“Danderine” costs
only 35 cents a bottle.
One application ends
all dandruff, stops itch-
ing and falling hair,
and, in a few moments,
you have doubled the
beauty of your hair.
It will appear a mass,
ao soft, lustrous, and
easy to do up. But what
will please you most
will be after a few
weeks use, when you
see new hair—fine and
downy at first—yes—but really new
hair growing all over the scalp. “Dan-
derine” Is to the hair what fresh
fhowers of rain and sunshine are to
vegetation. It goes right to the roots,
■Rvlgorates and strengthens them.
This delightful, stimulating tonic
helps thin, lifeless, faded hair to grow
•ong. thick, heavy and luxuriant.—Ad-
vertisement
Real happiness Is cheap enough, .vet
now dearly we pay for its counter-
feit.
The avarice of the miser may be
termed the grand sepulchre of ail his
other passions.
CUBES COUM - LA GRIPPE
it 3Bmp
—CASCAIA & OUININE—
-T AND ART) t
1 toaria* Mr. HIT. portrait mmi -cuaiara.
At AH Dnatfrtt—to Own
#. R. Wl.l. COMPANY, DETROIT
InMl ,
MOTHER!
Move Child’s Bowels with
“California Fig Syrup”
iht ITCH!
Money bock without question
if HUNT* GUARANTEED
SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES
(Hunt'* Salve and 8o*p). fail in
the treatment of Itch. Bctema,
Ringworm. Tetter or o-her iteb-
tnr aWln disea eea.Try this t reat-
*• riak Sold by all reliable drufzfeta.
A, B. Rich* da Me diet oe Co, Sherman. Texas
HI,UAH CASK »mr, beat.
LUNGARDIA is “without a
rival” in ordinary or deep-seated
Coughs and Colds, difficult breathing,
and for the relief of Whooping Cough.
The wonderful results following its
use will astonish you and make you
its life-long friend. Your money
back if you have ever used its equal.
Danger lurks where there is a Cough
or Cold. Conquer it quickly with
LUNGARDIA.'Safe for ail ages. 60c
and $1.20 per bottle. Manufactured
by Lungardia Co., Dallas, Texas.
For sale by your favorite druggist.
KING PIN
PLUG TOBACCO
Known as
“that good kind”
CIry it—and you
will know why
EYES HU
Don’t liaoee the dnaw pigasls
Bye Salve remove- Irrita-
tion reduce* Inflammation,
aootbea pain.
KAU At MVOXXL
MT Wavarlj PI., He# Tark
&%
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM I
HDanarne-AtopaBairPalilnf
Bnonty to Grey and Faded Hah
toe. and St ao at DrsrcrUtt.
Hlarox Cham- W ft* ■ V
HINDERCORNS
losses, eta., stops ail pata. ensures comfort I
NEFF URGEDACLEAN HOUSE
Governor Wanted Changes Made and
Wrote Board a Letter Explain-
ing Position
Hurry, mother! Even a sick child
loves the “fruity” taste of “California
Fig Syrup” and it never fails to open
the bowels. A teaspoonful today may
prevent a sick child tomorrow. If con-
stipated, bilious, feverish, fretful, hus
cold, colic, or if stomach is sour, tongue
coated, breath bad, remember a good
cleansing of the little bowels is often
all that Is necessary.
Ask your druggist for genuine “Cali-
fornia Fig Syrup” which has directions
for babies and children of all ages
printed on the bottle. Mother! You
must say “California” or you may get
an imitation fig syrup. Advertisement.
You will never find time for any-
thing. If you want time you must
make It.
If the shoe fits, wear it—unless you
are a woman; then, of course, you will
want a size or two smaller.
Austin, Texas.—The State Board ot
Control, by a vote of 2 to 1, declined
to make any change in the manage-
ment or personnel of the State Juve-
nile Training School at Gatesville. The
vote was taken following a recent in-
vestigation of the school by the board,
which was occasioned by the death of
Del Thames, a boy inmate.
The majority opinion of the board,
as given by the votes of S. B. Crowell
and L. W. Tittle was to the effect
that the preponderance of the evi-
dence adduced in the investigation
was “overwhelmingly conclusive that
Superintendent King was not in the
remotest way responsible for the death
»*san*n*n«saig«iaHgg Big SUBBHR 3883
State News |
ti «HK»ansan gBHBBHWi Essaas SEJESSiS 3
In some parts of Texas the lack
of rain has forced farmers to haul
water for a considerable distance
[or their stock.
Last week at McCaulley, a safe in
the State Bank was blown open and
about $600 in cash and stamps be-
longing to the local postoffice were
stolen. The bank safe was not mo-
lested.
r f
The Ku Klux Klan of Longview
has donated large-print Bibles and
big silk American flags to all schools
in the county. The county superin-
tendent of schools has accepted the
gifts with thanks.
While driving past a vacant lot
in Laredo last week Amador San-
chez Jr., heard a baby crying. Upon
investigation he found a newly-born
infant girl wrapped ,in rags hanging
on a barbed wire fence.
Work is progressing rapidly on the
excavation of 80,000 yards of dirt
from the location where 650 acres
space will hold millions of gallons
of Del Thames, which occurred at the pure fresh water for use of Cor-
training school on Sept. 25, 1921,” and gfcana and its growing population,
that the testimony does not show that
DROPSY
Superintendent King “has ever au-
thorized or approved any system ol
discipline or method of punishment
which in its extreme form could re
suit in such a tragedy.”
Governor Neff,, by invitation of the
board, counseled with them as to what j
changes, if any should be made in the j
present management of the school and ! Warren Ritchie, a Parker County
in a letter sent the hoard made rec-1 WN° lives near Reno and who
has been instructed in grain judg-
Several of the more important jails
of the State - in which Federal pris-
oners are lodged will be inspected
shortly by Rudolph McAdams of
Washington, special' representative
of the Federal Prison Commission.
ommendationa for changes in the man-
agement of the institution.
The vote to sustain the manage-
ment of the school was by Chairman
S. B. Cowell and L. W. Tittle. Adam
R. Johnson Jr., voted to make a change
Following the decision by the board
each member gave out a statement
explaining his views as to the weight
of the evidence that was adduced at
the hearing by the board in the inves-
tigation of the institution following
tbe -death of Del Thames. The letter
from Governor Neff to the Board was
also given out. In it he made rec-
ommendations for changes in the ilk
stitution.
HAPSBURGS ARE EXILED
TO MADEIRA ISLAND
Will Occupy Building Put Up By Gen
mans and Abandoned
Lisbon.—(Portugal has granted per-
mission for the deportation of Ex-
Emperor Charles of Austria, the form-
er Empress and their children to Fun-
chal, Maderia Island, where they will
take up their residence. Their hom«
hereafter will probably be in the wing
of an enormous building at Funchal,
which was intended as a sanitarium
when it was constructed some year*
ago by a group of German financiers.
The building never was finished, be
cause of a disagreement between the
Portugese Government and the Ger
mans., and the place has been without
occupants.
Madeira is 35 miles long and II
miles broad, and lies in the Atlantic
Ocean 440 miles west of Morocco and
is under the control of Portugal. It*
population is 150,754 and its largest
city, Funchal, has 20,000 inhabitants.
Besides being five times the area o1
the Island of Elba, to which Napoleon
was exiled, Madeira is picturesque
with windAg roads and has a variety
of fruit orchards and vineyards.
S
CORE RIBBON SUCIAR
; aatmpl* He. priest
Syrup Co., Wharton. Tax.
TREATED ONE
WEEK FREE
Short breathing re-
lieved in a lew hoars;
•wailing reducad in a
lew day*; regulate* the ltvsr, kidney*, stomach
and heart; purifies the blood, strengthens th*
entire system. Write for From Trial Treatment.
nan mm iehedy n, imtuiti.m.
BIGGEST BARGAIN IN DIXIE—*40 Mre
farm, nice home, big barn, tenant bourn*.
Owner'* business necessitates move. *16.09*.
part terms. Act quick,
riSAD. WAT, Owns*,
BONUS IS EXCLUDED
FRDMJAX MEASURE
. "Washington.—After a hot partisan
fight, bristling with dramatic clashes
the Senate has voted down an attempt
to tack the soldier bonus feature to
the pending tax bill.
By a vote of 28 to 38 the Senato
rejected an amendment lby Senatoi
Reed (Pem.) Missouri, providing foi
payment of the bonus out of excess
profit taxes.
The proposal was supported by five
Republicans and two Democrats voted
against the amendment.
The defeat of Reed’s amendment
foreshadows a similar fate for the
Simmons-Walsh and McKellar bonus
proposals, which would pay the bonus
out of the interest on the foreign
debt.
Designate* Nov. 11 Armistice Day
Washington.—President Harding hai
Issued a proclamation declaring Armis-
tice Day, Nov. li, a holiday. This, the
President set forth, is a “mark oi
respect to the memory of those who
gave their lives in the late world war,
as typified by the unknown and uni-
dentified American soldier who is to
be buried in Arlington National Cen*
etery on that day.”
Banker* Oppese Postal Savings
Washington.—Representative of the
American Bankers' Association have
protested before the House Postofflce
Committee against passage of either
the bill proposed by Postmaster Gen-
eral Hays or introduced by Represen-
tative Parrish of Texas to extend th*
facilities of the postal tarings sys-
tem. Instead of extending the sys-
tem, the banker* favor a repeal of the
law, on the ground that they are op-
posed to the Government going late
.the banking busiaeee.
iirntt
* ^]m»HniiniiiiniinniiBiiimiinnminimniiKUH»»nnn
Raises PE-RU-NA!
FOR CATARRH OF THE HEAD AND NOSE 1
j~ Mr. Fnik Piriiy
S Ondl, Bex 16,
| Hibraska,
Mhaa
** I began using
PE-BU-NA Tablets
three years ago for
catarrh of the head
and nose. Was un-
able to <Jo anything.
I saw a decided
improvement after
one box and after
NO
RETURN
OF
THE
DISEASE
IN
TWO
YEARS
using five boxes be- jg
lieve I am cured as H
there has been no 5
return of the die- S
ease in two years.” a
Fifty years of use- j
fulness is the beet:
guarantee of Pe-rn-
na merit.
'■M
Tablets or Liquid Sold Everywhere 5
iB»WBHHillll»imillllliHlHUHiilnliiiininniniiiiinninin«imimnwnimMK
Shining-up Days Are Here, Use
STOVE POLISH
its Shine is Wonderfui
Save the coapons for kitchen aprons. Martin & Martin. Mfra..Chicago
FAULTLESS
<*y
<p
m STARCH”
FOR SHIRTS COLLARS CUFFS AND FINE LINEN
STARCH
Religion used as a cloak is always
rather a transparent one.
ing, succeeded in taking first prize
at the Dallas Fair in a contest where
several hundred boys were partici-
pants.
A wholesale dealer in Coleman,
ordered a carload of apples shipped
from California. The freight bill on
the apples amounted to $655. A car
load of potatoes bought in Idaho cost
$403. The freight bill to Coleman'
was $41$
V
Sufficiently rapid .progress to’wards
recovery has been made by Sheriff
Bob Buchanan, one of the men
wounded during the affair at Lorena,
Oct. 1, to permit him to be moved
to his home. He is the last of the
ten mef hurt at that time to leave
the sanitarium. *
Th® Katy Railroad Employes’ Hos-
pital, at Denison, recently completed
at a cost of approximately $300,000,
was thrown open for public inspec-
tion last week. The new institution
will serve all Katy employes in Tex-
as and will be i* charge of Dr. T. J.
Long, chief surgeon, of Denison.
The 4-year-old son of William
Combs, of Alvord, while playing with
a party of companions last week,
fell into an old, abandoned bored
well. The child’s feet went In the
hole first and he dropped a distance
of fifteen feet. Death resulted from
suffocation before he could be res-
cued.
Colonel E. B.' Cushing of Houston
was elected president of the Texas
Section, American Society of Civil
Engineers, at the annual meetin
in Dallas last week. E. E. Sands o
Houston was named first vice presi-
dent, Major W. J. Powell, of Dallas,
second vice president, and E. N.
Noyes of Dallas was re-elected secre-
tary-treasurer.
Street sprinkling was ordered
stopped by Water Commissioner Ap-
pel ot Dallas last week on account
of the low condition of the city res-
ervoirs due to the long drouth.
Acceptance of his appointment as
a member of the board of regents
of the University of Texas was con-
tained in a letter last week by Sam
P. Cochran, addressed to Governor
Neff at Austin.
4
J. A. Ball of Slayden claims tc
have one of the best pecan tree
in that section. From one tree b
gathered 525 pounds of pecans this
fall, selling them for 12^ cents a
pound, realizing more than $60 front
the one tree. There are many trees
on the Guadalupe river bottom that
bear more than 100 pounds to the
tree.
The building zone ordinance of the
city of Dallas prohibiting under pen-
alty the construction of any business
house within what the ordinance de-
nominates a resident district of the
city, except with the consent of three-
fourths of the property owners of the
district and on the Building Inspec-
tor’s approval of the design of the
proposed structure, was held to be un-
constitutional and void by the Su-
preme Court.
•
Three additional prohibition en-
forcement officers have been appoint-
ed to the San Antonio office, begin-
ning duties Nov. 4. according to David
H. Morris of Austin, prohibition en-
forcement director of Texas.
A connecting line between the Tex-
as Midland and the Texas & Brazos
Valley Railway from Ennis to Bard-
well will be built at a cost of $500,-
000 as aoon at business conditions
justify It, according to Col. E. H. R.
Green, owner of the Texas Midland-
Red Cross Ball Blue is the finest
product of its kind in the world. Ev-
ery woman who has used it knows
this statement to be true.—Advertise-
ment.
No one is ever forgiven for explod-
ing a man’s bubble of self-conceit.
FOR COLDS, CROUP AND PAINS.
Use Vacher-Balm ; it relieves at once.
AVOID IMITATIONS.
If we have no agent where you live,
write to E. W. Vacher, Inc., New
Orleans, La.—Advertisement.
AFTER THE FOOTBALL GAMES
Man Who Had Been There Knew
There Would Be Only One Dis-
tinctive College Color.
They were talking of their absent
sons, and the fact that- each of the
fathers had a boy in a different college
did not prevent them from amicably
discussing their prospects.
“It won’t be long,” said one of the
fathers, “before the athletic season
opens, and then I think we’ll hear
something from the Orange and Blue.”
“Yes,” said another, “and there’ll be
some shouting done by the Blue and
Gray.”
“Of course,” said the third father,
“and as my boy has gone to Prince-
ton, I’ll have to put in a word for the
Black and Orange; but it doesn’t make
such a great deal of difference. The
boys are bound to come under the
same colors in the end.”
“No,” said one.
“Can’t be arranged,” said the other.
“Oh, yes, it can !”
“To which colors dq you refer?”
“Black and Blue.”—Philadelphia
Ledger.
The man who tells you that he is n?
fool may be only mistaken.
> i 3
GREEN’S AUGUST FLOWER
The Remedy With a Record of Fifty**
Five Years of Surpassing Excellence.
All who suffer with nervous dyspep-
sia, sour stomach, constipation, indi-
gestion, torpid liver, dizziness, head-
-aches, coming up of food, wind oo
stomach, palpitation and other indica-
tions of digestive disorder, will find
Green’s August Flower an effective
and most efficient remedy. For fifty-
five years this medicine Vxas been suc-
cessfully used in millions of house-
holds all over the civilized world. Be-
cause of its remarkable merit and
w idespread popularity Green’s August
Flower can be' found today wherever
medicines are sold.—Advertisement.
FRANCES E^WILLARD MUSEUM
In Justice to Justice.
“Justice is blindfolded—but just the
same she can talk.” “Yes, she does
sometimes peep!”1—Wayside Tales.
Prefer diligence before idleness, un-
less you esteem rust before bright-
ness.
Little Schoolhouse Near Janesville^.
Wis., Dedicated to Memory of
Great Temperance Leader.
Log cabins and marble palaces,
courthouses and round towers are now
and again turned into museums in the
memory of some historic person. More
rarely the building Is a schoolhouse,
but such Is the case with the new
Frances E. Willard museum. The Ht-
tle country schoolhouse near Janes-
ville, Wis., has recently been dedicated
by followers of the American temper-
ance leader, among .them former pu-
pils of Miss Willard’s in Wesleyan
seminary and at Northwestern univer-
sity, and national officers of the Wom-
an’s Christian Temperance union. The-
schoolhouse is far from Imposing.-Miss
Willard referred to it once as “a sort
of big ground-nut,” but it symbolizes
the progress of a child who came into
a wilderness with her pioneer family,
and through her good work gained &
place for herself in the Hall of Fame
at Washington, the only woman a»
honored. \
. ■*
J
A Student’s Wish.
“History repeats itself.”
“Well, I wish arithmetic would
itself up.”
■
s
i „ - t'w&HI
This little bit of advice may help
you regain your Health,
Strength and Vitality
, / . : . . ' " |i§||§|
Thousands of people suffer from nervous-
ness. They are run down and miserable without
knowing the reason why. \
They do not stop to think that much of their
trouble may be caused by drinking tea and coffee
which contain the drugs, thein and caffeine. When
you over-stimulate the system for any period of
time, the result may be nervousness with its
many accompanying ills. You may fail to sleep
properly and your sleep does not refresh you as
it should.
Postum, made from scientifically roasted
cereals, will help you to overcome all these
conditions. For it contains only healthful sub-
stances, instead of drugs, as are found in tea
and coffee.
Postum helps build sound nerve structure,
by letting you get sound, restful sleep.
In flavor, Postum is much like high-grade
coffee. In fact there are many people who pre-
fer Postum for its savory flavor alone.
Order Postum from your grocer today.
Serve this rich, fragrant beverage for the family.
See how the children will like it, and how much
better everybody will sleep at night.
Postum comes in two forma: Instant Postum (in tins)
made instantly in the cup by the addition of boiling water.
Postum Cereal (in packages of larger bulk, for those who
prefer to make tbs drink while the meal is being prepared)
(Bad* by boiling for 20 minute*.
Postum for Health
“There’s a Reason”
'M
%
■
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The Jacksboro Gazette (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 10, 1921, newspaper, November 10, 1921; Jacksboro, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth729982/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Gladys Johnson Ritchie Library.