Jefferson Jimplecute. (Jefferson, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 19, 1913 Page: 1 of 5
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implecutc.
E8TABLI8HKD IN 1865.
VOL. 46
INDEPEN 3KNT IN A I.I. THINtfH— NEUTRAL IN NOTHING.
JEFFERSON. TEXAS. THURSDAY. JUNE 19. 1913
fl.OO PER ANNUM.
NO. \
to
«/•♦ Primtinj |
»/ all Kindt
Phone 99l
J imp!acuta
Job OKC9.
JUST RECEIVED
Ladies Aprons
Ladies Linen Skirts
Ladies Middy Blouses
Ladies Balkin Blouses
At Popular Prices
ROSENFELD'S
The Useless Things
I've made a million bad mis-
takes I've made a million fool
isli breaks in this wide world of
wonders; and I expect to make
Some more before I reach that
happy shore whore no one ever
blunders. And I shall not apolo-
gize nor squirt the briny from
my eves or make long expla-
nations; the breaks I made in
other days are made—their
ghosts I shall not raise to swell
men's tribulations. Of all the
useless things men do the
blamedest is to stand and view
the past with grief and wailing;
the future like a minstrel gay
is Hinging of a pleasant way of
scones and days beguiling; the
future like a star-eyed maid
(mixed metaphors 1 am afraid)
is beckoning and smiling. The
man who markes the future's
and frets about the past de-
serves the kicks that liel'U be
given; he likes to make a friend
of woe and so wherever he may
go by woe he may be driven.—
Selected.
Ttif Onlv au<l Best itch Medit'iue
¥
S»y« Ur W V liockiiitflmm. of RiuKe-
tr^e S O. Hu write* "Pleaae Bend uie
l y mail at once uii« limeu Hunt'a Curt)
tiit* only anil beat itch medicine to be
found in tlir U S" 50r per hoi. anil
the money promptly refunded if U f*il»
in Itch Jvawina Ringworm Fetter
etc. All dru^tfiaia Manufactured by
A H Kicharda Medicine Co Shermau
Thii.
Japan Is making a tfood imita-
tion of Panama hats and doin^
a ^rood business exporting them
i" the United State.*: they made
of the tiber of a reed growing in
tliat country.
1 bare It no buriM Hutment more ef-
fei live for auiuia. tleae than Ballard's
Sjiiow Liniment nur la there any heal-
in; remedy ror the human body only
tnat la milder ur more eftiracious in ita
action. It beala the aorea or woonda
o! nau and beaat Price 'JoJ 50r and
fl.00 per buttle Sold by Allen I'rqu-
hart
Hawk Attacks Child
East Texas Register Cartil-
age: A remarkale incident or
icurred Wednesday afternoon at
at the home of Jim Jernigan a
negro who lives about four
miles north of Carthage. His
little daughter aged about three
years was playing in the yard
when her mother heard her
scream and rushing to the re>
cue found that a large hawk had
fastened its talons in the back of
the child's neck. The mother
began belaboring the hawk with
the bald-headed end of a brush
broom and forced it to release
its hold on the child and so dis
abled it that it was unable to es
cape but became entangled in
in some bushes and was finally
killed. The child's neck is pain
fully lacerated but her injuries
are not serious. The mother
still keeps the dead bird to show
to callers as a trophy of her
victory.
Manager of Railroad Cured of Kr
zema by Hunt's Cure
At one time I bad a very bad ca*e
of eczema. It troubled me fuV seven or
tight >e«rs ami although I tried all
k111' 1 h of medicine and several doctors
1 got relief until I used IluntV
("ure. 1 use I several boxes and it
tinady cured me and I liave alwa> s I
kept a box with rue lor fear it tnuy |
come buck. A I) lioodenough.
General Manager l.ida Valley Hailwa>
Co. (ioldtield Nev.
50c per box at drug store*.
Sun Marcos—Twenty tons of
brooui corn were used by the
Sam Marcos brooui factory last
year and from present idica
tions the output this year will
be doubled as the sale-* to date
are almost equal to the total
stiles last season.
No Hauler
In taking Dr. Hell's 1'ine-Tar lioin .
lor cough* and cold* It contains n<>
habit producing drugs. l.uok for the
Heli on the Bottle
W. F. JON KM U t». UKADKN. W. MOsKl.KY
PrMiJtat. Vic*-Pr*«. <>en. M»u»*rr.
# **» C°™ ***** CQ
JEPPERSON. iTEXAS.
A b il K AC 1 " OK IIILK- T'» All VAKMS Cot sn
LAND» AS1> JKKKKK«-< N CITY !>•!> HiAMII
iT Kfci — >S ABI.K PK fb.
CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED.
OUR TRIP TO
CHATTANOOGA.
Greatest Re-Union in Late Years
Thousands of Old Rebs on
Their Last Trio
We have almost an identical
counterpartof Tennison's Enoch
Arden story—in real life and as
we got th»* data from one of the
parties to the transaction it is
correct in all its details and verj
sad in its long and unhappy sep-
aration- and double exile as it
were. But the recent happr
culmination of the affair com-
pensates to a great extent for
the long suffering and unavoida
ble separation—when the heart
was young and reciprocative of
mutual devotion and the fair
world about them was roseate
with promises and glowing with
new births of happiness and a
radiance that bound the twain
with cords of love that was
thought could never be severed.
Born and reared in the lap of
luxury and amid the fair hills
and dales of Chattanooga's ro-
mantic scenes they naturally
imbibed a sentiment calculated
to foster the holy ties they had
recently contracted to observe
through weal or woe. Just here
—in the midst of happiness and
mutual desires to preserve the
compact and make it holy with
sacred obligations a cloud came
over the scene and left its evil
effects in a waythat soon blight
ed the happiness and left a uoom
that was perpetuated through
all the years of separation that
refused a solution under the
most riged efforts to repair
that which the hydra headed
moster had inflicted upon this
fair creation of royal nuptials.
His loyalty to a mutual friend
made the fatal gap that stood
so long as a menacing feature to
debar reconciliation and to hide
all attemps to ferret out a way
to right the wrong here so inno-
cently ]>erpetrated and so long
endured. To render aid to this
friend it wok essentia) fm Mr.
Wright our hero to visit a dis-
tant section incognito that he
might not appear as a witness
against him and thus ruin him
financially and socially. His I
forced absence from home was
the "balm" for his friend's trou-1
bles in setting his case from
term to term. So true and loyal
to his friend he lot the time slip
by without computing its fatal
cost to him aud the rupture of
his home affairs. Absent for
several years to prolong the |
cause he espoused to a success-
ful issue he finally realized his]
woeful mistake—as a message
came to him in his secluded
retreat announcing that his]
wife and child had sold out the
home and departed for a more
congenial clime und perhaps
feeling "stung" over the way
her leige and lord had acted in
his prolonged'silence1 she left
no trace of her departure nor
clue to her adopted home. Com-
ing home and finding it dispoiled
of all its former happiness and
its charms all broken—he started |
cut on a perilous tour to locate
the pride of his life—and tell]
her how it all happened—and
feel the thrill of her gentle words
and forgiving spirit. Hut his
'treasure' had flown beyond the
limit of hif reckoning and he
must soon dispair of all 'human'
hopes of finding her abiding
place and therefore must go!
out and dwell in the realms of
a hermit He evidently felt that
he was the aggressor and that
fate might inflict a doom com
mensurate with his 'guilt' in this
premises. lie lclt that lie was
willing to suffer for his past mis
takes if it would atom* for his
long continued troubles. Like
all tilings human there must
come a termination to all active
affairs and in this one we have a
happy culmination after a se
nes of eventful episodes and
long drawn-out activities in the
main so obscure that tin- public
knew hut little of the current
affairs that involved mi muc1 o!
human heart lore in these prem
ises After so lonn .1 time and
failing to 1<hate ea» h other they
dispaired of rev.ving former re-
lations and conditions and !o<nt-d
about to promote new condition*
in life. Mi Wright came to T« i
as vears ig '.M-rhaps ai.d
»>oon married H.s ■> • wif«-.
fee ing the st.i.u' h« r w . %
hiMni and !i '' k -Tils .
event: .. iimaxes - i.- met a
good man and married Ti.us
th»»ir destiny was sealed t> .t .t
Kind providence intervened a
fe'A \>ais at. ! rt-sUtr«'l
t: • i. . deV
to « J.a .nat*- • ■'■Hi " 1 ■
vigorous imagination to follow
tin' twain in their respective re
treats and note their hearts thril
ling with emotion torn byacru
el serration that nought could
atonp for less a restoration of
old-time relations of which both
had dispaired as shown by other
vows they had taken. Fate had
prepared the way for a meeting
and reconciliation all round at
the Chattanoogo reunion—and
it was meet and appropriate that
the sad-happy climaxes should
occur here where in their youth
they imbibed all the function
that the romantic scenery there
could impart. Mr. Cooper had
been dead M years and left his
"widow" comfortably fixed with
two children grown. Mr Wright
was also a widower; and tread-
ing the sacred ground and brood-
ing over reminisces of the past
perhaps he was most agreeably
surprised to meet his long-lost
love face to face. Though time
had dispoiled manyof the former
features in both and put the
mark of age and sorrowing
brows respectively there was a
mutual recognition and eviden-
ces of mutual joy and happiness
over the incident that reunited
them after so many cruel years
and eventful climaxes of separa
tion. By accident 1 met Mr.
Wright soon after the occurence
of this brief episode and per-
haps feeling tender toward fel-
low Texans lie told me of his
happiness and that old relations
would soon be restored -and
that he felt immensely happy
over the turn of affairs and of
fate's fiappy climaxes in making
his home what it was originally.
He failed to see his son born
the year after their marriage
and who had been with his moth
er through all the years of wid-
owhood and eventful shifts and
scenes. H.s a wide reputation
in mechanics and was absent
in California installing a largo
mechanical plant. 8ho is proud
of her son self-made anil the
architect of his own fortune in
all that the homely term implies
young Wri«»ht bids fair to reach
the goal of his worthy ambition
in the realms of mechanical sci-
ence.
Stories based on romance and
fiction sometimes illustrates a
point and conveys a moral ap-
propriate to the scenes it wishes
to impress—and thus often puts
a tale in the realms of higher
liteature that stands up for l>road
recognition and merit in portray-
ing its ideal in 'comic' literature.
That truth is stranger than
fiction and illustrates its own
career with current affairs and
actite climaxes without frills
or studied effort to make it liar
monize with some imaginary
monster is attested in the true
facts here given in the abbrevi-
ated form above and divested of
all features of romane and fiction
I may have made a few bad
'breaks' in this gramatrically
or otherwise as I "set it up"
from memory and without copy
to guide me in the premises My
whole "trip" was 'put up' with-
out copy but with an effort to
make the details as interesting
as possible and 1 trust that I
have succeeded to an extent
that has and will give some pleas
ure in the premisesand a broad-
NIRACD
MIR A-CO is a sure turn for
indigestion anil all stomach
kidney liver and bowel troubles
and is Mich a jjood toniyou will
find that it builds up a run-down
j-v-teui. l'*r it on old - res cut*
burn.* e< /cms or itcli You'll
agree that it heals fast and in the
be*t aiitseptic von'vc Tiiei It is
n household remed v of ir loubted
merit an I no home -i uld be
without t I»«.; t It-
SOLD l»V
Allen Urquhart and Druggists
OR. J. P. CHAMBERS
PfiysiCianiland Surgeon
• V r v»|(» i if c't *■'. '<•■ I'h nr
* * Kt-« r : !' 'lie 'Jh
' ■ ' r.i.tr* >nl I) .»• «•••« W
• a I v
IM h UWON' rKXil
J. R. SINGLETON
DENTIST
M« • ; \ ■ : F . '<• rt V&uifh.in
A (V
H**« •: » N ! »! •; «.t« • «
er knowledge of the country and
sections I traversed and the
data given on the old battlefields
about Chattanoogo so prolific of
interest and appealing to old
time sentiment and patriotic iin
pulses. With this brief refer-
ence and "pritnative" allusion I
am done an 1 leave the details
with the readers and others
seeking information on the sub-
jects treated—for all it is worth.
Just here at the close I will
refer briefly to one of the most
interesting features or incidents
that came up for observation. I
have reference to the aeroplane
that was one of the features of
the Chattanooga reunion flying
over and around the city every
evening during the great meet-
ing of old veterans there. It
was one of the most interesting
features of that great occasion
and attracted much attention
viewing the 'birdman' in his
difficult stunts in mid air. The
dimension of his machine was
said to be lf>x'24 but it apj>eared
to be a mere speck in the
dizzy heights it traversed. Its
base of operations was the top
of Lookout Mountainfrom which
it rose gracefully and sailed ma
jestically through the blue azure
of that famous light element of
air and sky and like a thing of
life and intelligence it seemed
bent on some important mission.
This aeroplane is an invention
by a young Chattanoogan and
quite different in mostof its con-
struction from other '"makes"
and promises a successful ter-
mination far beyond the antici-
pation of its most distinguished
rival "'air plants." The maker
and operator of tnis machine oc-
cupies a high place in the esti-
mation of Chattanooga people
who are giving him promiscuous
'boquets' of a golden hue in evi-
dence of their allegiance to car
ry him on to a successful coiuple
tion of his evident groat inven-
tion
LIVER ALL RIGHT
AND BOWES REGULAR ?
Don't take calomel salts oils
or harsh cathartics when you
can go to any real drug store in
town and get a box of sure safe
blissful Hot Springs Liver But-
tons for 25 cents. They never
fail.
One tonight means satisfaction
in the morning. They are the
product of the greatest medical
minds in the world's great s&ni
tarium and are now offered to
you as a perfect remedy for con-
stipation torpid liver sick head-
ache coated tongue and diz/.i
ness.
All druggists at 'J5 cents.
For free sample write Hot
Springs Chemical Co. Hot
Springs Ark. Rexall Drug
Store special agent Jefferson
Texas.
2000 Kinds of Apples
In the January Woman's
Home Companion Fannie Merritt
Farmer cookery editor of that
periodical published an article
entitled "The Wholesome Apple
In Cookery" together with lif
teen receipts for cooking apple
dishes. In her introduction she
says:
"Scandinavian ledgends affirm
that the apple was the favorite
food of the gods. It was one of
the first fruits grown by the
Romans; it was early introduced
into England and brought from
there to America. It is easy
culti.ated bears fruit further
north than almost any other and
by means of grafting almost two
thousand varities have been pro-
duced. These facts show in
part why apples stand at the
head of all fruits."
(iunnintcrd Frcem* Kmicriv
The militant it hintf burning r«d-
lip** mah ami liiaatfrefabl* <•((»•< la i>!
•*(/.fin*. unit rh#tn itch }>iI
an<I irritating akin nruplioua can lit-
res lily curt"I ami thr akin luftil* clear
uinl atiidulli with l)r Hulimn'* Kcxrlua
Omtmeot. M' I C Kvrlaoil of fcnth
HI. aava: "1 ba«i tetania for Iwanty-
fl\r yearn ami had lrie<l «vi»ry thing
Allfailel VV lirti I found Orllobaou'a
Kviema ointment I found a cure"
I hi* ointment it the formula of a
phyncian a*nl I aa h«*<*u iit ua« tor
)far* — not an ripe nuieot. 1 liat la
why we ran guarantiee it Ail drug-
gia'a. >r |iy nmi . Krlr» >0<\ 1'feifler
t';.fi:i'<a Co t'hll*del|>hia an 1 M.
I lit
To Drop Auditors
I nit »V*irHi. 'IVxan. June lii
V H i- I'reaidtMit Ktr»rni*y «»f tin*
TVx.i* and Puf itic announce*
tiiii* • ft . tra.n auditor-^ will In-
Mr" saving t«»n thousand
• .-■« i.onthly. Thin is * re
tr< iTM-isuri'
ftuu I ► ijiri intent W ith & i "Uffb
•• t'r '« 1' .r Iar II Itaa
r - u . •*»» I {• \ Ut ! ;')M •! 'fw)' «* t*#f
• ! *'4fl • I1' I lirl! t . |ii
•• « l. j i f»f the Hi- . •»?* tb*
IS-•(I i #
K * «tti «*Uipir•• «i »»u t
• ... !*'?.'*•» in 1'«! 1
"Studebaker wagons
certainly last a long time"
"I have had this wagon twenty-two yearn and
(luring that time it post me only $6.00 for repairs and
that was (or setting two tires.''
"And after twenty-two years of daily use in good
and bad weather and over all kinds of roads I will
put this wagon against any new wagon of another
make that you can buy today."
"Studebaker wagons are built of air-dried lumber
and tested iron and steel. Even the paint and varnish
are subjected to a laboratory test to insure weuring
qualities."
**No wagon made is subjected to •• many tnti or ia more
carefully made than a Studebaker. You can buy them of Stude-
baker dealer* everywhere."
"Don't Katen to the dealer who wants to sell you ^a cheap
wagon repreaented to be "just as good' as m Studebaker."
Farm wagons tracks dump wagona and carta delivery
wagons buggiea surreys depot wagons - and harneaa of all lunda
of the same nigh standard as the Studebaker vehicles.
S** eur Osafar er writs tu.
STUDEBAKER South Bend Ind.
*«w YORK CHTCAOO . DALLAS ICAN8AS CITY HKNVF.K
MINNEAPOLIS SALT LAK* CITY SAN rSAMClSCO PORTLAND OKK.
Dr. M. M. Car rick of Dallas
Iihh written an article entitled
"How I'd Clean a Town" which
appears in Holland's for June.
As always the doctor has called
the women in to help him. He
says for one tiling that sanitary
instruction is worth inlinitely
more than sanitary laws.
He proposes a slogan that is
worthy of adoption by every
community in the ll in
"Make Good Hearth Contagious"
After reading the article it is
hard to understand why cities
and towns will persist in ignor-
ing the commonest of nature's
laws governing health especial-
ly when it is easier to compl y
with the lawn than it is to break
them. Dr. Carrick has a happy
faculty of writing like he talks;
hitting existing evils some
mighty hard blows but doing it.
in such a friendly way that no
one can take offense at him but
rather side with him in reine
dying the defects.
His article on how he would
clean a town which by the way
should be named "How 1 would
Have You Clean a Town" is
the fifth or the present series
and linked to the others in suchj
a way that each complements
and completes the others yet
each separate article is complete
in itself so far as the subject
with which it deals is concerned.
Ilow's Tbli?
We offer Our Hundred Hollars Reward for *11
ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hntl
i'liinli Curo.
F. J.CHKNKY iCO.. Tolrtio. <»
We. I he underpinned hate known K I. < t*>
ney for the laat l'» years. hm-I t»eIi• vc him per
fretly honorable in nil business transact Ion and
financially ablr t.» carry out any obligations
iu*de by hit fl rui
NATIONAL HANK OK COM Ml KCK.
Toledo O
Hall n Catarrh Cure i* tuken Internal^ a«-linK
direct)y upou the blood and mtn oils sut l»»« »*s t<.
tba ayai*ui. Testimonials smii frn I'rlce .S
Bitl i • i bottle Hold b> all Druggist*
k«Te Hall'a Family Pills loi *uustil»UlOU
Tin; electrical prwi'ss of La.11
nin^f leather lias b»'«-n in experi-
mental use in England for some
time ami it lias now reached a
sta^i' of development that wai
rants it.s adoption on a commer-
cial liasis.
Twenty-five Prostrated
Cincinnati Ohio Juno 15.—
Three men wore killed and
twenty-live prostrated one reri
ousiy by the heat today in Cin-
cinnati. The maximum on the
government thermometer wa.s
S)"> decrees the government
kiosk on the street level showed
104. No abatement of the heat
was shown tonight and the
|>arks mid playground* nre
crowded with sleepers.
A Worker Appreciates This
Wm .MorriH h resident of Florence
Oregon nays "For fourteen yeern my
kidneys miti bladder incapacitated me
for nil work. About eight months ago
1 begun using Foley Kidney Fill* and
tliey have done what other medicinea
failed to do and now I am feeling line-
1 recommend Foley Kidney Pi I 1m.
Hold by Allen lTri|uhart.
Two Knglish physicians are
experimenting with a parasite
with which they hope to ex tor
initiate the flies of their country
in a Few years
BKTTFJlt UK
SAFE
THAN
SORRY
If you have no Insur-
fiiK'i1 sonic as soon
as possible
I represent Kourteen of
the best F'i re Insurance
Companies its well Acci
dent ami Sick Benefit Life
Livestock I'lute Glass ami
Burglary. I will make any
kind of I Joncls
Vour Business Will Have Prompt
Attention and be Appreciated.
G. A. STUTZ Agent.
(SurcnnHur to rpjiihurt A Woi»li
I'll ON !•: 1 'S.l
5c \\?m House IOc
Cool Comfortable SMe)
T1" Show That's Always Good
High Class Motion Pictures
FINE
Music and Latest Song Hits
Everybody Invited!
Everybody Come!
lot
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Taylor, M. I. Jefferson Jimplecute. (Jefferson, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 19, 1913, newspaper, June 19, 1913; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1078384/m1/1/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .