The Refugio Review. (Refugio, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, April 11, 1913 Page: 6 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Refugio County Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Dennis M. O’Connor Public Library.
Extracted Text
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V ' -»
A HIDDEN DANDER
“Every
Picture
Tells a
Story”
It is a duty of
the kidneys to rid
the blood of uric
acid, an irritating
poison that is con-
stantly forming in-
side.
When the kid/
neys fail, uric acid
causes rheumatic
attacks, headaches,
dizziness, gravel,
urinary troubles,’
weak eyes, d/opsy
or heart disease.
Doan’s /Kidney
Pills help the kid-
neys fight,- off uric
acid—bringing new
strength/to weak kidneys and re-
lief from backache and urinary ills.
I
Mrs. B./S. Andre
Fails, Mont,
beoame/so s
agony vC-itb the pain.
la7 garments just h
■op inf&i
A Montana Case
Andrews, 1621 Eighth Avenue. Great
t., says: ‘‘Mv limbs, hands and feet
swollen I couldn’t stand. 1 was in
I was so redui
eight
jiven
/ Get Doan’s at any Store, 50c a Bos
DOAN’S KJ?JLiT
FOSTER-KILBURN CO., Buffalo, New York
CONGRESS GETS
WILSON MESSAGE
Brief Document Tells Purpose of
Extra Session.
MUST ALTER TARIFF DUTIES
Lawmakers Asked to Square the
Schedules With the Actual
Facts of Industrial and
Commercial Life,
/waited csKa^fffluss&rjst
- him famous—lCOsloriesthat made a continent '
thrilling history of,his life. All the peopi
them Everybody's buying them. Get b-
augn
wan
hem
mon
Bob
a Everybody’s buying them. Get busy. Coin
from the harvest. Liberal commissions paid
Taylor Pub. Go., 5 Noel Block, Nashville, Tec
irer anti Kidney Regulator.
ises t he systei
t and kidneys. For 30 days
BUtS llAhermire’s Chemical Labo:
, _ egma
dy is curing thousands. Pnrifiei
3 the system by regulating thi
regulating the
a 60c size bottle for
-ratory, Jltnilla, Indiana
w. N. U., HOUSTON, NO. 15-1913.
One can fall despite a fine line of
good intentions.
,An open confession may be good
for the soul, but it’s apt to disfigure
a reputation.
Many a man saves money by not
using tobacco, but it is doubtful if the
money has the same soothing effect.
A Winner, If—
At an Easter, breakfast John D.
Rockefeller, Jr., once said:
“The' road to success is called Per-
severance. Perseverance conquers ev-
erything. But—”
Mr. Rockefeller, with a smile, took
up an faster egg. (
■ “But,” he • added, “let us remember
that a hen on an egg of porcelain per-
severes.”
Bear’s Grease and Baldness.
In a recent volume of reminiscences
the writer states ' that baldness is
much more common now ,than in his
early days, and ascribes the modern
man’s loss of hair to the decrease in
the use of “bear’s grease.” This
pomade was made principally of lard
colored and scented, but “hairdress-
ers, many of whom called themselves
‘professors,’ used to advertise The
slaughter of another fine bear,’ ex-
’TDir.:: % a ,cany.as screen depicting in
Washington, April 8. — President
Wilson’s message, read today to the
senate and house at the beginning of
the extra session, was a brief, point-
ed document setting forth in general
terms what congress is expected to do
in the matter of tariff revision. The
message was as follows:
To the Senate and House of Repre-
sentatives:
I have called the congress together
in extraordinary session because a
duty was laid upon the party now in
power at the recent elections which it
ought to perform promptly, in order
that the burden carried by the people
under existing lav/ may be lightened
as soon as possible and in order, also,
that the business interests of the
country may not be kept too long in
suspense as to what the fiscal ehhnges
are to be to which they will be re-
quired to adjust themselves. It is clear
to t^he whole country that the tariff
dutiek must be altered. They must
be changed to meet the radical altera-
tion in the conditions of our ecnomic
life which the country has witnessed
within the ll^st generation.
While the Whole face and. method of
our industrial and commercial life
were being changed beyond recogni-
tion the tariff schedules have re-
mained -what they were before the
change began, .or have moved in the
direction they were given when no
large circumstance of our industrial
development was what it is today.
Our task is to square them with the
actual facts. The sooner that is done
the sooner we shall escape from suf-
fering from the facts and the sooner
our- men of business will -be free to
thrive by the law of nature/ (the na-
ture of free business) • instead of by
the law of legislation and artificial ar-
rangement.
Business Not Normal.
We have seen tariff legislation
wander very far afield in our day—
very far indeed from the field in which
our prosperity might have had a nor-
mal growth and stimulation. No one
who looks the facts squarely in the
face or knows anything that lies be-
neath the surface of action can fail to
perceive the principles upon which
To some not accustomed to th
citements and responsibilities!" oj
greater freedom our methods maty In
some respects and at some points
seem heroic, but remedies, may be
heroic and yet be remedies, it is our
business to make sure that they are
genuine remedies. Our object is clear
If our motive is above just challenge
and only an occasional error of judg-
ment is chargeable against us we
shall be fortunate.
We are called upon to render the
country a great service in more mat-
ters than one. Our responsibility
should be met and our methods should
be thorough, as thorough as moderate
and well considered, based upon the
facts as they are, and not worked out
as if we were beginners. We are to
deal with the facts of our own day,
with the facts of no other, and to
make laws which square with those
facts. It is best, indeed it is neces-
sary, to begin with the tariff. I will
urge nothing upon you' now at the
opening of your session which can ob-
scure that first object or divert our
energies from that clearly defined
duty. At a later time I may take the
liberty of calling your attention to re-
forms which- should press close upon
the heels of the tariff changes, if not
accompany them, of which the chief
is the i eform of our oanking and cur-
rency lav/s, hut just now I refrain.
For the present, I put these matters
on one side and think only of this one
thing—of the changes in our fiscal
system which may best serve to open
once more the free channels of pros-
penty to a great people whom we
would serve to the utmost and
throughout both rank and file.
WOODROW7 WILSON.
The White House, April 8, 1913.
ITER STILL HIGH
AT Iff HIS, TEI
LAST YEAR’S FLOOD ALREADY
OUTDONE AND WATER IS
STILL RISING.
MAIN LEVEES ARE STILL INTACT
The Embankment at Graves Bayou,
Ark., Has Gone Out and Widening
Hourly—The Situation Is Grow-
ing More Acute.
Report of National Red Cross.
- Number
needing
Loss of aid for re-
life. habilitation.
WOMEN KNOWN BY JEWELS
Each Article of Adornment Is Ob-
served and Carefully Catalogued
by Society.
A woman frequently changes- her
face and always her gown, while to
change her jewels is an event calling
for chronicle, Richard Barry writes in
the New York Times.
“Is that Mrs. So-and-So in box —?”
I heard, one woman ask another the
other night.
“Let me see,” replied her com-
panion, seizing the glasses. “No. Mrs.
So-and-So has sapphires surrounding
a pearl in her pendant. That has
emeralds. It is Mrs. If-and-But.”
“Who is that next to her?”
“With the cross of diamonds and
the jade stomacher?”
“No. With the oval brooch set
with ppalsi”
“Oh! That is Mrs. Or-to-Be’s
brooch, but it doesn’t look like her
daughter, only she never will let any
one wear her opals; ‘lucky for her,
unlucky f<jr another’ is her idea. What
has she done to her face?”
These women, their dependents and
their intimates hold their jewels in
City—
Chillicothe......... 17
Coshocton-......... 3
Columbus.......... S6
Dayton ............ 150
Defiance..............
Delaware.......... 21
Franklin........... 7
Frerriont........... 3
Gallipolis.............
Hamilton.......... 72
Ironton...............
Larue ................
Malta . ...............
Manchester ...........
Connellsviile .........
Marietta .............
Miamisburg ....... 2
Middleton ......... 8
Middleport ...........
Ottawa ...........i ...
Piqua ............. 45
Pomeroy ............;
Portsmouth ....... 2
Sidney ...............
Tiffin ........... 30
Troy .............. 6
Zanesville ......... 2
Total ...........454
1.500
1,100
20,000
22.500
500
883
250L
1,000
2.500
12.500
1,000
100
600
350
175
450
2,000
1,000
1,000
125
1,400
715
1,700
125
2,000
•200
2,000
77,133
Costs
less
Bakes
Better -
CALUMET
BAKING
’powder
ECONOMY—that's one thing you are
looking for in these days
of high living cost—Calumet insures a wonder-
ful saving in your baking. But it does more.
Itinsures wholesome food,tasty food—uniformly raised food.
Calumet is made right—to sell right—to bake right. Ask
one of the millions of women who use it—or ask your grocer.
RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS
World’s Pure Food Exposition, Chicago, EIL
Paris Exposition, France, March, 1212.
JWTHfJKBYTKITlW5!
You don ’$ save money when you buy cheap or big-can baking powder.
Don l be mislead. Buy Calumet, it s more economical——mors wholesome*
gives best results. Calumet is far superior io sour milk and soda.
COLT DISTEMPER
BPQHN BfHEDSCAB. CO.s Chemists and Baeterieloglsts, CoShen* InCl.j %?• S, As
Memphis, Tenn.—Weather bureau
officials at Memphis estimate now
that the high water mark at Memphis
of the present Mississippi flood would
be approximately one foot higher than
the record stage of last year, 45.3 feet.
Wednesday’s gauge reading showed a
stage of 45.8 feet, a rise of .2 of a foot
in twelve hours. The crest is passing
New Badrid, Mo., and should reach
Memphis within two or three days.
All of the main levees along the
central stretches of the river, with
the exception of the embankment at
Graves. Bayou, Arkansas, which went
out, Tuesday, are intact, but the sit-
uation hourly is growing more acute.
Favorable weather conditions were re-
ported south of Cairo, but at St. Louis
two inches of rain fell and the river
there rose .6 of a foot.
The wind and rain storms moving
across.Oklahoma will be general over
glaring colors a brown animal of ele-
phantine proportions expiring in a sea
of gore.”
Mount Rova! Once Active Volcano.
In the work on the Canadian North-
ern railway tunnel the engineers have
found that Mount Royal, under 'which
the line will pass, was at one time
either an active volcano or was made
by lava being forced up through the
ground.
An interesting proof of the fact that
at one time a great glacier flowed
from the Laurentian mountains to the
St. Lavrmcn river was found in the
small heading on Ste. Monique gneiss,*
a rock peculiar to the Laurentian
mountains, and it is believed that In
the past this rock was carried down
by a glacier, which probably emptied
into the St. Lawrence river not far
^rom the present harbor.
SHOWING HIM UP.
“That is Duke de Bluffer,
everything he gets is O. K.’!
“I thought it was O. T.”
“Q. T.?”
“Yes; ‘on tick.’”
He says
CONSTIPATION
Munyon’s Paw-Paw
Pills are unlike all oth-
er laxatives or cathar-
tics. They coax the
liver into activity by
gentle methods, they
do not scour; they do
not gripe; they do not
weaken; but they do
start all the secretions
of the liver and stom-
ach in a way that soon
puts these organs in a
healthy condition and
corrects constipation. Munyon’s Paw-Paw
Pills are a tonic to the stomach, liver and
nerves. They invigorate instead of weaken;
they enrich the blood instead of impover-
ishing it; they enable the stoKiach to get all
the nourishment from food that is put into
it Price 25 cents. ATI Druggists.
recent tariff legislation'1 itxas DoeVrj
WHY INCUBATOR CHICKS DIE
Write for book saving young chicks. Send ua
names of 7 friends that use incubators and get
book free. Raisall Remedy Co., Blackwell,Okla,
BESIH BELIEVED _T<#“S .D*«<seojy_
ITSHING INSTANTLY Eianiw SUPPLIES
And Completely Cured Skin Humor.
BARDEN ELECTRIC & MACHINERY COMPANY
fil Main Street, Houston, Texas
ELECTRIC LiGHT.TcLEPHONE & IGNITION SUPPLIES
evidence Of what Resinol Soap and ! *or inner■ duties that'prevenis^l)uncWres^an§amakas
i at nails in your tires, for
IKE toumy, 1310 FKAXKXilN AYE„; HOUSTON, -1JOA9
_ McCANE’S DETECTIVE AGENCY
Houston, Texas, operates the largest force of
competent detectives in the South; they render
written opinions in cases not handled by them,
Reasonable rates.
THE BEST FARMERS USE
PLANET JE. TOOLS
We are Southwestern Bistributors.WriteforCatalog
South Texas Implement & Vehicle Co., Houston,Tex.
McEvoy Wireless Well Steiners
based. We long „ago passed beyond
the modest notion of “protecting” the
industries of the country and moved
boldly forward to the Idea that they
were entitled to the direct patronage
of the government. For a long time—
a time so long that the men now active
in public policy hardly remember the
conditions that preceded it—we have
sought in our tariff schedules to give
each group of manufacturers or pro-
ducers what they themselves thought
that they needed in order to
maintain a practically exclusive
market as against the rest of the
world. Consciously or unconsciously,
we have built up a set of privileges
and exemptions from competition be-
hind which it was easy by any, even
the crudest, forms of combination to
organize monopoly; until at last noth-
ing is normal, nothing is obliged to
stand the tests of efficiency and econ-
omy, in our world of big business, but
everything thrives by concerted ar-
rangement. Only new principles of
action will save us from a final hard
crystallization of monopoly and a
complete loss of the influences that
quicken enterprise and keep inde-
pendent energy alive.
It is plain what those principles
must be. We must abolish everything
that bears even the semblance of priv-
ilege or of any kind of artificial ad-
vantage, and put our business men
and producers under the stimulation
of a constant necessity to be efficient,
economical, and enterprising, masters
of competitive supremacy, better
workers and merchants than any in
the world. Aside from the duties laid
upon articles which we do not, and
probably cannot, produce, therefore,
and the duties laid upon luxuries and
merely for the sake of the revenues
they yield, the object of the tariff du-
ties henceforth laid must be effective
competition, the whetting of Ameri-
can wits by contest with the wits of
’he rest of the world.
Development, Not Revolution.
It would be unwise to move toward
this end headlong, with reckless
haste, or with strokes that cut at the
very roots of what has grown up
amongst us by long process and at
our own invitation. It does not alter
a thing to upset it and break it and
deprive it of a chance to change. It
destroys it. W7e must make changes
In our fiscal laws, in our fiscal system,
whose object is development, a more
free and wholesome development, not
revolution or upset or confusion. We
must build up trade, especially for-
eign trade. We need the outlet and
the enlarged field of energy more
than we ever did before. We must
build up industry as well and must
adopt freedom In the place of arti-
ficial stimulation only so far as it will
build, not pull dbwn. In dealing with
the tariff the method by which this
may be done will be a matter of judg-
ment, exercised itera by item.
group of women might hold their chil-
dren. The entrance to the circle of
each new piece of jewelry is noted
and commented on carefully. It un-
dergoes jealous observation at first.
Then, if deserving it, it achieves a
place and is duly catalogued.
“Look! There is that little Miss
Pretty. It’s her first night. She’s
barely eighteen, and see that string of
diamonds. I do think that is rushing
it a bit, don’t you? They might wait
till the second year, at least, for a
necklace like that. However, give me
your glasses; they are better than
mine.”
After a moment she releases ‘’the
glasses with a satisfied smile. “At
any rate,” she observes, “they are
perfectly matched and just the right
size.”
So it goes. Jewels the center of at-
tention; jewels which mark the dis-
tinctive elements of personality. From
the tiny necklace, which ■ is the joy
of the newest debutante, to the
sturdy stomacher which is the con-
solation of the oldest dowager, jewels
proclaim, define, limit, differentiate,
vitalize and devitalize society.
Sunshine, Plants—and Girls.
Sunlight is so important to life that
it is little wonder that sun worshipers
prevailed in primitive days. Plant a
potato in your cellar, and if there is a
little light the potato will sprout and
try to grow. Surround it with the best
fertilizer, water it, and do the best you
can for it except that you keep it in, the
dark, and it cannot digest and g?ow.
See how slender and pale it is! The
process of digestion, the great function
of assimilation, cannot go on without
sunshine. Nature’s laws are the same
in the animal world. It is just as true
that the only girls with red cheeks
and sweet breaths, the only girls who
become fully ripe and sweet, are those
who baptize themselves fully in glori-
ous sunshine. The many pale girls who
are to be seen with a bloodless, half-
baked sort of face, whose walk, whose
voice and whose whole expression is
devoid of spirit, are not half ripe.
The Queen and Gambling.
Though the queen is to accompany
the king to the grand national next
month, she retainns her dislike for
gambling. But some years ago when
the royal party was traveling down by
rail for the derby, the late King Ed-
ward proposed a half crown sweep-
stake on the race, and Princess Mary
drew a horse that had a fine chance.
Prince Arthur of Connaught having
drawn his usual blank, suggested he
should buy it from her present maj-
esty for five shillings. She declined,
and held to her chance, which romped
home an easy winner. “For any one
who does not like gambling,” remarks
H. R. H., when retailing this yarn,
“I never saw any one collect her win-
ning more quickly.”—London Opinion.
Crevasse Is Widening.
The gap in the Graves Bayou dike,
about twenty-five miles south of Mem-
phis, is reported about 700 feet wide
now and widening rapidly. Water
coming through this break will flow
back into the Mississippi in about five
days through the St. Francis river,
north of Helena, Ark., after flooding
portions of Crittenden, St. Francis
and Lee counties, Arkansas. It is ex-
pected to have but little, if any, ef-
fect on the stage of the river at Mem-
phis, but probably will alleviate condi-
tions to some extent in the vicinity of
Llelena.
In Memphis the only change in the
situation was the spread of backwater
from Bayou Gayoso over about six
additional blocks in the northern sec-
tion of the city.
Many Refugees in Camp.
At Camp Crump 547 refugees, in-
cluding forty white persons, are being
cared for. A number of these were
brought in late Tuesday on a govern-
ment steamer and motor boats sent to
rescue persons from the territory af-
fected by the Graves Bayou crevasse.
Practically all of those at the refuge
camp are women and children or aged
men, the able-bodied men being sent
-back to work on the levees. The
health of the camp is excellent.
At Shawneatown.
Shawneetown, 111. (via Mount Ver-
non, Ind.)—The food supply of the
hundreds of women and children liv-
ing in tents on the hills back of Shaw-
ueetown is nearly exhausted and un-
less relief reaches them soon there
will be great suffering. Farmers have
been supplying them, but the supplies
from this source are -nearly exhausted.
M. E. Strickland, acting mayor, who
is chairman of the relief committee,
has issued a call for public aid. He
asks that ail funds and supplies be
sent in his care.
At Paducah.
Paducah, Ky.—The crest of the
flood reached Paducah about noon
Sunday. Army officers have ordered
a carload of chloride of lime, to be
used for sanitary purposes as the
water subsides.
Cairo, 111.—Conditions at Cairo have
remained practically unchanged, al-
though the river shows a slight rising
tendency. The weather forecaster pre-
dicts that the river will mark a little
over fifty-five feet before the crest is
reached and that the dangerously high
stage of over fifty-four feet will be
maintained for over a week. Water
covers the country in every direction
from Cairo for miles and the river is
high above the city. Wickliffe, Ky.,
on the hills a few miles below Cairo,
is a haven of refugees, more than
2,500 camping there.
hy (
__for In
Piesin-ol Ointment can do for you is | the
the word of one who was cured by
them after weeks of suffering. Adolph
Schoen, 742 Shepherd Ave., Brook-
lyn, writes:
Nov. 1, 1912.—“At first little red
spots were seen on my arms and body,
which I noticed were getting larger
every day. They itched me so much
that I scratched myself until I bled. I
There were times when I stood up all i
night and scratched. I was troubled
about three weeks, during which time
I used -, which seemed to do me
no good whatever. Then, finally, I
thought of trying Resinol Soap and
Resinol Ointment. As soon as I ap-
plied Resinol Ointment I felt much re-
lief. After using it d few times, I no- ________
for pllaad Water Well* \
away, and in about a month I was 1 ’ ~ V4"* ’ - —
cured completely.”
The soothing, healing balsams in
Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap,
penetrate every tiny pore of the skin,
clearing it of all impurities, driving _ _
away eczema rashes,_ ringworm, psori- obtained and Trade Marks and Copyrights
asis, and ether eruptions, and making i registered. Information and an Inventor’s
pimples and blackheads impossible. ~ -
Prescribed by physicians for eighteen
years. For free samples write to Dept.
8-K, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. Every
druggist sells Resinol Ointment (50c)'
and Resinol Soap (25c), or sent by
parcel post on receipt of price.
J. H. McEVOY & COMPANY
345 Washington Street Houston, Texas
PATENTS
Constipation
Vanishes Forever
Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS never
fail. Purely vegeta- ^
ble — act i
but gently
the liver.
Stop after
dinner dis-
tress-cure
indigestion,
improve the complexion, brighten the eyes.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
Better Give Up Fish.
Some people are always prepared
for trouble which may not material-
ize, like the man who carried a raw
egg wherever he went.
“Why must you always carry about
a raw egg?” asked a friend one day.
“Because it is such an excellent
remedy for fishbone in the throat.”
Guide Book upon request Offices at 303-4
Lumbermans Bank Bldg., Houston, Texas,
and Washington, D. C, Phone 4790.
HARDWAY & CATHEY
Wholesale Hardware
and Supplies
Ths Old Reliable Texas Iron House
F. W. KESTIViA^^ COMPANY
ESTABLISHED 1865 HOUSTON,TEXAS
Auto Tires and Supplies
We save you from 1-3 to 1-2.
For instance, G-asolineVulcanizer.
Regular price $3, our price $1.50.
Write for catalog full of bargains.
Consumers’ Auto Supply House, Dallas, Texas
An Instance.
“There is nothing in analogy.”
“Why not?” , t
“Because if there was, if a colt is
a little horse, wouldn’t a Colt revolver
he a little horse-pistol?” *
OFFICE STATIONERY&SUPPLIES
LOOSE LEAF OUTFITS
Gam/sS&te&VGMQ Delivered
STANDARD PRINTING & LITH0. CO.
Manufacturing Stationers
1014-1016 CAPITOL AVE.. HOUSTON, TEX.
SEEDS
POULTRY SUPPLIES
Write for our illustrated catalog
REICHARDT & SCHULTE COMPANY, The Texas Seed
House, 206-208 MILAM STREET, HOUSTON, TEXAS
FOLEY KIDNEY PILLS
, Are Richest in Curative Qualities
FOR BACKACHE, RHEUMATISM.
KIDNEYS and BLADDER
THE IDEAL LAXATIVE
CONTAINS) NO CALOMEL - Acts naturally
on the liver and bowels. SAMPLE FKBK. Try It. |
Box 35o, Stamford, Connecticut
DROPSY TBKATE»- Give quicK re-
Vitwf w a lief, usually remove swel
ling and short breath In a few days and
entire relief In 15-46 days, trial treatment
FliEE, DB.GBEKIiSSONS, XioxA,Atia-t-.Oa.
Texas Directory
GENERAL HARDWARE
AND SUPPLIES
Contractors’Supplies, Builders'
Hardware, Etc. Prices and In-
formation furnished on request
PEDEN IRON & STEEL CO.
HOUSTON SAN ANTONIO
The New
Note! Bristol
Fireproof
Cor. Capitol and Travis Streets, Hcuston, Texas
Modern In All Its Appointments
EUROPEAN PLAN
60 Rooms @ $1.00
75 “ “ 1-5°
75 “ “ 2.00
20 “ “ 2.50
CAFE IN CONNECTION
* CLEANING »
2 DYEING o
WE HAVE NO EQUAL, and
we want your work. For laundry
work we don’t have to advertise.
Model Laundry
HOUSTON - . TEXAS
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The Refugio Review. (Refugio, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, April 11, 1913, newspaper, April 11, 1913; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth846660/m1/6/: accessed May 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Dennis M. O’Connor Public Library.