The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 20, 1910 Page: 3 of 4
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GETTING EVEN WITH MAMMA
*i Thl« Case Child’s Punishment Cer-
tainly Failed to Have Salu-
tary Effect.
A little girl had been ao very
Suughty that her mother found It
necessary to enut her up In a dark
closet—4n that family, the direst
punishment for the worst offense.
Kor 16 minutes the door had been
locked without a sound coming from
behind It. Not a whimper, not a snif-
fle.
At hut the stern but anxious parent
unlocked the closet door and peered
Into the darkness. She could see
nothing.
"Whut are you doing In there?" she
cried.
And then a little voice piped from
the blackness:
"1 thplt on your new dress and I
thplt oa your new hat, and I’m wait-
ing for more thplt to come to thplt
on your new parasol!”
The Piece of Honor.
Parmer Hodge was of the good, old-
fashioned school, and he always gave
n feast to hts hands at harvest time.
It was harvest time and the feast
was about to commence.
(files was the oldest hand and the
hostess, with beaming cordiality, mo-
tioned him to the sent by her right
hand. But Giles remained silently un-
responsive.
"Come," said the hostess, "don't be
bashful. Mr. Giles"—he was Just GUee
on ordinary occasions—“you’ve n
right to the place of honor, you know."
Giles deliberated a moment, then
spoke.
"Thank you kindly, Mrs. Hodge,"
he said, "but If It’s all the same to
you. I'd rather sit opposite this pud-
den!”
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CA8TOKIA, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that It
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Men are Inclined to boast, yet, ac-
cording to statistics, three out of four
are buried at somebody else’s ex-
pense.
tet
NG
Ip
£§3*' . ft
i fT-s,
IT CURES PILES.
It works gently but powerfully. Many
relieved cases on record. Hera is a
desperate one quickly cured.
Mr. J. Cottle. Chinquapin, N.C.. writes t—
"Mexican Mustang Liniment completely
cured me of piles in its worst form. I baa
been a sufferer for thirtsen years It Is by far
the best remedy I have ever tried ; it acts llks
magic. All that Is necessary la to aaoint the
affected parts night and morning uatil a cure
Is effected. I am free to say that it ought to
be called "A Sura Pile Rausody " for euch It
certainly il. I am ao grateful for the great
go6d it has done me and I earnestly recom-
mend it to others."
28c. SOc. $1 a bottle at Drug * Gan’l Stores.
The Army of
Constipation
la Crowing Smaller Every Day.
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS are
responsible—they oo£
only give relief—
they permanently
cure Conilipa-
tion. Mil-
lions use
them lor
Biliosi-
■ess, Indigestios, Sick Headache, Sallow Skin.
SHALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PR1CB
Genuine muitbeai Signature
R&W FURS
Coon, mink and other
skins wanted. We
are the largest direct
Ibuycrs in the South
and charge NO COM-
MISSION. Write for
our prices today.
Jno. A.Vesey Co.. 503 Cecatur St., No* Orleans, lx
36 AS RELIABLE
* i Tuebt Mar*!
BLACK
96% CAPSULES
TCftEDY FOR MEN ere.ETC
CUBA SWEPT BY STORM
PROPERTY LOSS MANY MILLIONS.
TOBACCO AND SUGAR.
THOUSANDS ARE DESTITUTE
Havana Did Not Escapa—Wavaa Roll-
ed Mountain High at Moro
Caatio.
Tho senso of the sinfulness of tha
world Is often only the feeling that
everyone must be sick because 1 do
not feel well.
Havana.—The island of Cuba has
probably sustained the greatest ma-
terial disaster iu all her history in the
practically continuous hurricane which
began with light rains on Thursday
morning, developing Into torrential
floods and desvastatiug hurricanes and
continuing until Monday evening. The
western half of the island suffered
more severely than the east.
The first hurricane of which there
was some warning had hardly abated
on Sunday night when suddenly the
wind, which up to then had been
southeast, changed to Kouthwest and
with renewed fury the hurricane
blasts Bwcpl over Matauzas, Plnar
del Kto and Havana provinces, com-
pleting the destruction wrought by the
first storm.
It is impossible to estimate even
roughly the amount of damage which
will doubtless aggregate many millions
of dollars. In addition to the great
destruction to 6ugar and tobacco plan-
tations, many thousands of peasants
In the three western provinces have
been rendered homeless and destitute
by the loss of their homes and the
food crops, especillay corn. It now I
seems probable that the republic may i
he compelled to request international I
aid.
Havana's Loss Great.
Iu the city of Havana the losses I
probably will exceed a million dollars, j
mainly due to the destruction of the
customs house sheds which were fill- |
ed with perishable goods, the sinking
of scores of lighters, many of them
containing valuable cargoes which
had been unloaded from steamers, ami
the submerging of about one square |
mile of the residential section of the j
i city facing the sea.
But Few Fatalities.
Few fatalities up to the present !
have been reported. Three men were |
drowned In the harbor, hut no deaths j
from the storm occurred In the city.
CHEERF' L WORDS FOR SUFFER-
ING WOMEN.
No woman can be healthy with sick
kidneys. They are often the true
cause of bearing-down pains, head-
aches, dlStlness,
nervousness, eto.
Keep the kidneys
well and health Is
easily maintained.
Doan’s Kidney
Pills make strong,
healthy, kidneys.
Mrs. Joseph
Gross, Church St.,
Morrllton, A r k.,
says: "My ankles
were swollen and
my back was so
painful I could not
straighten. I was
treated by six doo-
tors without relief. Since using Doan's
Kidney Pills, I have nothing to com-
plain of."
Remember the name—Doan’s.
For sale by all dealers. 60 cents a
box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. T
<&RZ,
ro&Sj&Z SMKRy TTjfr
DOCTORS FAILED AGAIN—
THE GREAT KIDNEY
REMEDY SAVED HIM
About ten years sgo I suffered severely
With inflammation of the neck of the blad-
der and waa also troubled considerably
nights by numerous desires to urinate.
One night I wae compelled to get up
from my bed nineteen time*. I had sev-
eral doctor* but their prescriptions
seemed to have but little effect. At last
upon tha recommendation of a friend
I tried Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root and
found immediate relief.
I began to get well after the firet half
dozen dose*, and am now in an ordinary
•tat* of good health. I consider Swamp-
Root cared me and I believe it it a fin*
tonie end an unrivaled bladder remedy.
You may publish this statement at any
time or place you may wish.
Yours very truly,
M. T. BOSTICK.
McMinnville, Tenn.
Subscribed and sworn to before me in
my office at McMinnville, Tenn., this July
Slit, 1909.
W. A. JOHNSON.
Notary Public.
laws
®». HbMr M
» f*.
V. T.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You
Send to Dr. Kilmer A Co., Bingham-
ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will
convince anyone. You will also receive
a booklet of valuable information, telling
all altout the kidneys and bladder. When
writing, be sure and mention this paper.
For sale by all drug stores. Price fifty-
cent* and one-dollar.
Constipation pntiRt»Ran<1 aggravate* many aerlons
dlm'hw‘8. It In thoroughly cured hy Dr. Fierce s
lJleufuuit IVlIets. Tho tv r to iaiully laxa'lvo-
The next best thing to being rich
Is to have people think you are.
The American consul genera!, J.
Linn Rodgers, succeeded In reaching
Artemisia, thirty-five miles southwest
of Havana. He reports that tile coun-
try lias been devastated by the floods
and conditions from Artemisia to
Cape San Antonio, It is stated, are
even worse than in the territory ex-
plored by Consul Rodgers. All the
tobacco seed beds and barns have
been destroyed. The prospective cron
it is asserted, will not exceed 10 per
cent of the normal.
The sugar plantations suffered less
severely, but great damage has been
done to standing cane by the change
of the wind in the second storm.
Over the Ramparts.
At the height of the storm the great
waves went over the ramparts of Moro
Castle. They rolled with terrific speed
ui> the harbor, tumbled over the sea-
walls, Inundating the streets in the
lower part of the city and carried away
many of the small craft along the
shore and swamped many lighters
which escaped the blow during the
earlier hours.
Maine Raising Delayed.
A barge containing all the outfit of
divers working on the wreck of the
old battleship Maine was carried away
and stranded on the rocks off Moro
Castle. Later the soldiers of the fort-
ress succeeded in saving considerable
of the machinery, but all of the div-
ers' buoys, stakes and other marks
around the Maine were swept away,
which probably will Berlously delay
the work of raising the ship.
HIS HANDS CRACKED OPEN
“I am a man seventy years old. My
hands were very sore and cracked
open on the Insides for over a year
with largo sores. They would crack
open and bleed, Itch, burn and ache
so that I could not sleep and could do
but little work. They wore so bad
that I could not dress myself In the
morning. They would bleed and the
blood dropped on the floor. I called
on two doctors, but they did me no
good. I could got nothing to do any
good till I got tho Cutlcura Soap and
Cutlcura Ointment About a year
ago my daughter got a cake of Cutl-
cura Soap and one box of Cutlcura
Ointment and In ono week from the
time I began to use them my hands
were all healed up and they have not
been a mite sore since. I would not
he without the Cutlcura Remedies.
“They also cured a bad sore on the
hand of one of my neighbor’s children,
and they think very highly of the Cutl-
cura Remedies. John W. Hasty, So. Ef-
fingham, N. IL, Mar. 6, and Apr. 11, ’09.”
ffy&xirSi'/RY
DISTANT.
_ *4ND SvrT-
tMmm m*caTc'°£D. v°v
AND YTTUNTNTTD. IJfU&fi&l
JffJ?<%&(?(//&ATTACKT!) f“NT
Prudent Bridegroom.
"The uncertainties of life In New
York are reflected In wedding rings,"
said the Jeweler. “Of all the wedding
rings I have sold this season more
than half were brought back after the
ceremony to have the date put on. The
rest of the Inscription was engraved
when the ring was purchased, but In
order that the date might be correct
It was cautiously omitted until after
the knot was tied.”
LEFT TO A WORSE FATE
Dynamiter, Himself a Married Man,
Knew What Awaited Forgetful
Husband.
The business ntan waa sitting In his
office, thinking of starting for home,
when a suspicious looking person
came hi with a leather bag in his
hand.
"If you don’t give me 925," said the
visitor, coming at once to the point,
”1 will drop this on the floor."
The business man waa cool. “What
Is in it?” he asked.
“D>namlte,” was the brief reply.
“What will it do If you drop it?”
"Blow you up."
“Drop It!” waa the tnatant com-
mand. "My wife told me when I left
home this morning to be sure and
send up a hag of flour, and 1 forgot
it. I guess It will take Juat about as
much dynamite as you have there to
prepare me for the blowing up I’ll get
when she sees me I"
He threw himself back In his chair
nnd waited for tho explosion, but It
did not come.
"I'm a married man myself," said
the dynamiter, and quietly slipped out.
—Illustrated Bits.
History of Red Cross Beal.
“Charity stamps," first used In
Boston In 1862 for the soldiers' relief
funds during the Civil war, were the
original forerunners of the Red t'ross
Christmas seal, which will be used
this year to bring happiness and cheer
to millions. The Delaware Antl-Tu-
berculosls society In 1907 for the flnt
time in America made use of a stamp
for the purpose of getting revenue to
fight consumption. In a hastily or-
ganized campaign of only three weeks
they realized 93,000. The next year,
1908, the American Red Cross con-
ducted the first national tuberculosis
stamp campaign. From this sale 9135,-
000 vms .ealtzed for the antl-tubercu-
IosIb movement. In 1909, under many
adverse conditions, 9260,000 was rea-
lized from these stamps. This year
the slogan of the tuberculosis fighters
and the Red Cross Is “A Million for
Turberculosls From Red CroBS Seals
in 1910.”
How’s This?
Childlike Ignorance.
Laura Jean Llbbey, discussing In
Brooklyn her successful appearance
on the stage, said:
“I talk In my monologue about love,
marriage and the other Interests of
the heart. On these subjects women,
especially young women, are strangely
Ignorant.
"They really make me think, you
know, of the little girl who was asked
by her teacher:
“ ‘What can you tffll us about Solo-
mon?*
" ‘Solomon,’ replied the little girl,
’was very fond of animals.’
" ‘And how, my dear,’ said the teach-
er, ’do you make that out?
" ’Because,' answered the little girl,
The Bible says he had 500 porcu-
pines.' "
AS SOON BE WITHOUT MATCHES
AS WITHOUT RESINOL IN
THE HOUSE.
Restnol Is the never falling article
resorted to by my wife for the many
bruises, dialings, cuts, burns and
accidents of the children and has been
our cure-all for years. I have used It In
cases of Irritation and Inflammation
and have Invariably been relieved al-
most Instantly. We would as soon
think of being without matches In our
bouse as without Reslnol Ointment
B. Rush Davenport, Philadelphia, Pa.
Cherokee Indian Fund.
Washington.—In accordance with a
petition filed last spring, the Bupreme
court of the United States Monday
directed the court of claims to show
why It should not distribute the 94,-
000,000 Cherokee Indian fund In ac-
cordance with a recent decision of the
supreme court. Answer is to be made
Dec. 5.
$4,358 for Car of Alfalfa Seed.
Amarillo, Tex.—Judge L. C. Ltlr,
of Canyon, shipped the most. valua.V-
car of agricultural produce ever grown
In the Panhandle this week, In the
form of a car of alfalfa seed, for
which he received 94,358. The ship-
ment consisted of 527 bushels of se $!.
950,000 Fire at Houston.
Houston, Tex.—A fire In the planing
j mill of the Harrisburg Lumber Com-
| pany Monday caused a loss estimated
at $50,000. The fire did not reach the
main lumber slirds of tho mill, which
! were saved hy the quick work of the
I Houston auto chemical engine No. 2.
Atascosa County Valuation.
Austin, Tex.—Atascosa County's
J tax valuation Is $7,560,195. In 1909
It was $5,991,395. The county assess-
| or’s estimate of what this year's valu-
ation would be, filed with the depart-
ment July 15, was $7,238,000.
He Knew.
A small boy brought up by a flre-
eatlng father to hate anything con-
nected with England or the English
was consigned recently to eat dinner
with the nurse wuile the family enter-
tained a genuine English lord In the
dining room. The grown-ups’ meal had
come to that "twenty minutes past"
stage where conversation halts direct-
ly, when a childish treble fell upon
the dumb-waiter shaft from the
kitchen. This Is what the astonished
nobleman heard:
"Fe, fl. fo, fum,
"I smell the blood of an Engllsh-
mun.”—Wasp.
Like the Other Kind.
It was In a "down east" village that
the young man met his sweetheart, a
charming country beauty. When he
returned to the city he sent her n Jar
of cold cream to keep her cheeks as
fresh as the budding rose.
On bis next visit he asked her how
she liked his little gift.
"The taste was very nice.” she
said, with a rather sickly smile, “but
I think that 1 like the other kind of
cream best, dear.”—Llpplncott's.
Weather Forecast.
m
m
nl.i.Ua
RIAt BOX BY MAIL 50C
HWRT ST BROOKLYN NV
Banana Field* Devastated.
Kingston, Jamaica.—News from the
Interior of the Island shows that a
large acra of banana fields was devas-
tated by the severe wind and rain-
storm last week.
SAVE YOUR MONEY.
One box ofTutt's Pill* neve many dollar. In doc-
tor.' bill.- Cure dl.ea.e. of the liver or bowel..
For.lck headache, dyspepsia, malarl*. crnetl-
patlon and hlllou.ne.., a million people endorse
Tuft’s Pills
tpisos+
Georgetown Election Carried.
Georgetown, Tex.—In the special
election for the Issuance of 945,000 j
bonds for the purchase of the water
and light plant the proposition car-
ried Monday by the following vote: J
For the bonds, 216; against the bonda,
26. Majority for the bonds, 181.
Gathering Crop* at Hearna.
Hearne, Tex.—This Is ideal cotton-
picking weather and tha farmera are
having their crops gathered as fast as
they can.
COFFEE WAS IT.
People Slowly Learn the Facte.
"All my life I havo been such a
slave to coffee that the very aroma
of It was enough to set my nerves
quivering. I kept gradually losing my
health but I used to say ‘Nonsense, It
don’t hurt me.’
"Slowly I was forced to admit the
truth and the final result was that my
whole nervous force was shattered.
"My heart became weak and uncer-
tain In Its action and that frightened
me. Finally my physician told me,
about a year ago, that I must atop
drinking coffeo or I could never ex-
pect to be well again.
"I was In despair, for the very
thought of the medicines I had tried
so many limes nauseated me. I
thought jot Postum but could hardly
bring myself to give up the coffee.
"Finally I concluded that I owed It
to myself to give Postum a trial. So I
got a package an 1 carefully followed
the directions, and what a delicious,
nourishing, rich drink It wa3! Do you
know I found It very easy to shift
from coffee to Postum and not mind
tho change at all?
"Almost Immediately after I made
the change I found myself better, and
as the days went by I kept on Improv-
ing. My nerves grew sound and
steady, I slept well and felt strong
and well balanced all the time.
"Now I am completely cured, with
the old nervousness and sickness all
gone. In every way I am well once
more."
It pays to give up the drink that
acts on some like a poison, for health
la the greatest fortune one can have.
Read the little book, “The Road to
WellvllU," In pkga. “There’s a Rea-
Colder with rains causing Rheu-
matic pains. HUNT’S LIGHTNING
OIL stops all aches and pains wheth-
er from Rheumatism, Pneumonia,
Cuts, Burns or Bruises. The QUICK-
EST acting Liniment known. 25c
and 60c bottles. All Druggists. Mfg.
A. B. Richards Medicine Co., Sher-
man, Texas.
May 8ell 100,000,000 Red Cross Seats.
Twenty-five million Red Cross
Christmas Seals have been printed
nnd are being distributed by the Amer-
ican Red Cross, and arrangements
have been made to print 100,000,000
If necessary. It Is expected that this
number will be needed. While the
sticker Is perforated like those used
last year, It Is Intended for use only
as a seal on the back of letters. Tho
seal Is one Inch square with the con-
ventional Red Cross In tho center
and the words, “Merry Christmas.
Happy Now Year. American Red
Cross’’ In a circle about It. The col-
ors are red nnd green. The design Is
hy Mrs. Gulon Thompson of Water-
bury. Conn., who received 9100 as a
prize for her sketch.
A Biased Opinion.
"Do you think buttermilk will pro-
long one's life, Colonel Soaksby?"
"Ahem! I have no doubt, Miss
Plumper, that If a person hnd to drink
buttermilk every day It would make
Ilfo seem longer."
We offer One Hundred Pol lure Reward for any
eeae of Catarrh that cannot l>e cuml by Halt's
Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo. O.
We. the underalcned. have known ]•'. J. CbrMf
for the last II year*, and believe him perfectly hOO-
orable In all buelneee transact tone and financially
able to carry wit any obligations made by his Urui.
waldino, Kin-nan A Marvin.
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O.
nall'eCatarrh Oire is taken Internally. HtiDf
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the
system. Testimonials sent free. Trice 7» oeute per
bottle. Fold hy all Druggist*.
Take Hall's Family Tills for constipation.
Poor Prospects.
“Yes,” said Miss Passay, “I found
a very nice boarding house today, but
the only room they had to offer me
had a folding bed In It, and I detest
those things."
“Of course," remarked Miss Pert,
"one can never hope to find a man
under a folding bed.”—Catholic Stand-
ard and Times.
Free Blood Cure.
If you have pimples, offensive eruptions,
old sores, cancer, itching, scratching
eczema, suppurating swellings, bona pain*,
hot akin, or if your blood is thin or im-
pure, then Botanic Blood Balm (B.B.B.)
will henl every sore, stop all itching and
make the blood pure and rich. Cures after
all die fails. $1.00 per large bottle at
drug .tores. Sample free hy writing Blood
Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga., Department B.
Against Orders.
“If you refuse me, Miss Gladys, I
shall get a rope and commit suicide."
“No, colonel, you must not do that.
Papa said distinctly he would not
have you hanging about here."
When Rubbers Become Necessary
And your shoes pinch, shak. Into your
shoe* Allen's Koct-Ease, the antiseptic
powder for tR» feet Cures tired, aching
et and take
r tme reet. cure* tired, aching
ike. the sting out of Corns and
Always use Tt for Breaking In
New ehoee end for denrlng pnrtlea. Hold
everywhere 2S<\ Hemple melted EREE.
Address. Allen 8. Olmsted, I.e Hoy, N. Y.
Still • Woman.
Hewitt—81ie la a man In her enjoy-
ment of baseball.
Jewett—But she showed that she Is
still a woman by refusing to sit
through the thirteenth Inning.
TO DRIVE I
Tha formula Is plainly iiinuil on rvnrf bottla.
boffin* it Is simply Otilnlnn ‘ 1
siiofvhiK It 1^*1 reply (j’ulhl no and Iron )n*a*Lastr-
and tns Iron builds nn thn system?1 teld^Sy^a/t
Ooalars for kU ysars. Trice Ml wot*.
You may call the farmer alow, but
he taken more chances from year to
year than nny dozen men who work
Inside at a salary.
Old Lady’s Advice
"If you had seen me, before I began to take Cardul,
you would not think I was the same person,” writes Mrs.
Mamie Towe, of 102 W. Main Street, Knoxville, Tenn.
"Six doctors failed to do me any good, and my friends
thought 1 would die. I could hardly get out of bed, or
walk a step. At last, an old lady advised me to take
Cardul, and since taking it, I can go most anywhere.”
Cardui is the medicine you need, for weakness, loss of
appetite, tired feeling, irregularity or distress, etc.
CARDUI
CC 97
The Woman’s Tonic
Cardui is a natural remedy, and one that you can feet
confidence in. Its long record of more than half a century
of success, proves that it has real merit behind it, since it
has stood the hardest of all tests—the test of time.
A few doses of Cardui at the right time, will save
many a big doctor bill, by preventing serious sickness.
You are safe in taking Cardui, because it is a gentle,
harmless, vegetable tonic, that can do you nothing but
good. It has helped a million women. Why not you?
Try it It is for sale at over 40,000 drug stores.
W. L. DOUGLAS
•3 *3 5_° & *S4 SHOES FJoBSSS
BOYS’ SHOES, (2.00 S2.BO AND S3.00.
W.L.Douglas $3.00, $3.SO nnd $4.00 shoaa
am poaltlvoly tho boa t mado and moa t pop-
ular ahooa lor tho nr loo In Amor loa, and aro
tho moat ooonomloal shoos lor you to buy.,
I>o you reallr.fftliHt iny elioc* luive been tlio stun.I aril fur over 1
SO years, that I tnnks mill aell moro 9.1.00, • l.r.O anil 94.00
thoet Ilian arif otlior iniunifiwtnrer In the U.R., mill I lint I>OI*-
I*AK FOB non.A It, I (U/AHANTKK MYHKIOKHto hold their .
shape, look and fit hotter,and wear longer than any ot her 93.00, I
93.50 or 94.00 iliosn you can buy T Gtmlltr count*. It baa
made my ahnea TI1K LKADKIM <>F THE WOULD. I
Yon will bo plonaed when you buy ray ahoea Imm-amo off tho IU 9ind »|»|»eAri»tico,
And when It cornea time for you to purohnav Another pAlrt you will he moro than
pieiiNOtI hecAiise the last onea wore ao well, And vnve yon so mart) comfort.
CAUTION! ES,a!ihSSTAKE NO SUBSTITUTE
. - oauiioI auyply y.ni with >V. |„ |>onjf|na HIiofs, write for Mall Order Oatalos.
w. 1a. UUIJULAM, 1 Ad Rpurk btrsst, Urorkioo, Maas.
If jour dealer <
WINTERSMITH’S
Oldest and Beat Tonic; for Malaria and Debility.
A splendid general tonic; 40 year*' ■ucceet.
no artenlo mr other poteen*. Unlike quinine,
,_____________J*. FREE-*
book of puxxlee *ent to env nddrees
We wish to hear from those who consign
cotton. With this steady market it looks like
a safe proposition to ship. If any want to
hold cotton for a time we have the machinery
and conveniences. Write us about it and let
us quote you terms or answer questions.
H. D. TAYLOR & SONS, Houston, Texas
Fads for Weak Women
Nine-tenthi of all the *ickne*t of women la due to ion* derangement or die-
cake of the organ* distinctly feminine. Suoh sickness can be cured—is cured
every day by
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
it Makes Weak Women Strong,
Sick Women Well.
It act* directly on the organa effected end il at the lame time a general restora-
tive tonio for the whole system. It cures female complaint right in the privacy
of home. It make* unnecessary the disagreeable questioning, exeminetions sod
local treatment so universally insisted upon by doctors, and eo abhorrent to
every modest women.
We shell not particularize here ae to tho symptoms of
those peculiar affections incident to women, but those
wanting full information as to their eymptoms and
means of positive cure are referred to the People's Com-
mon Sense Medical Adviser—1008 pages, newly revised
and up-to-date Ldition, sent free on receipt of 21 one-
rent stamps to cover cost of mailing only, or, in cloth
binding tor 31 stamps.
Address Ur. R. V. Pierce, Ruffalo, N. Y.
Bad Breath
“Por months I had great trouble with my
stomach and turd all kinds of medicines.
My tongue has been actually as green as
grass, my breath having a bed odor. Two
weeksngoa friend recommended Cascoret*
and after using them I can willingly and
cheerfully say that they have entirely
cured me. I therefore let you know that I
shell recommend them to anyone suffer
ing from such troubles."—Chas. H. Hat
pern, i it II. 7th St., New York, N. Y.
Pleasant, Palatable. Potent, TaataOood,
DeOood. Nivw Stcken, Weaken orGrlpe.
)Uc. ZV. 50c Never sold In bulk. The *ea-
ulne t.hk-t stamped C CC. Guaranteed to
cure or your money back. K9
DEFIANCE Cold Water Starch
makes laundry work a pleasure IS ox. pktt IDs.
PATENT ;2EP bSSf £2
ruscsnpd 4 llo. I-aXAtSsxJloxIL. Ws.hJnrttin.u2
W. N. U., HOU8TON, NO. 43--1910.
TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY
for Red. Weak. Weary, Watery Eyes
nndGrunulated KyelldH. Murine Doesn’t
Smart—Boothes Eye Pain. Druggists
Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c,
50c, $1.00. Murine Eye Salve In
Areptle Tubes. 25c. 21.00. Eye Books
and Eye Advice Free by Mall,
it urine Eye Remedy Co, Chicago.
It Is nevsr quite polite to oontndlot
e girl, except when she sen she
doesn't want to be kissed, ud then tt
can be done silently.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color siors coodl brighter and
You can drs sn, gsrmont nlthout rlpgln, apart,
faotsr co'or, this any sthsr dr*. 0ns lOo packags cslsrs all ffbsrs. They dys Is cold wotor bolt or than any athsr dye,
......|ib
Writs lor Irss bssklsl— Mow ts Oyo. ■loach and Mil Cslsrs. MOMItOt DRUB OO., Ow/nojr, llUaah
A critic Is a man who by ths light
of his own experience explains to
other* why they, too, have felled.
■fra. Win stow-o Soothlsf lym,
|WtoIh^roi^|««iiiyj._»on»nijh^,nws. jd iwirx
The word "tired” to monk need sad
PINKEYE
Chore* lb* Okie sad eet* we e preventive tor *
to* Warns, awl* for brood mere* nod ell eUera.
HSU nnd I14S e bottle i M-M end USAS Ik* dose,
eed here* food* brass*, or oral ox
SPOHN MEDICAL CO, Che
DISTEMPER _
CATARRHAL FEVER
AND ALL NOSE
AND THROAT DISEASES
(oroUrra. liquid stvosra
bora. Bool kidney moody ;M
doses. Beld by ell draegtsle
pold. by lb* ustlHlsiee
b GOSHEN, INDIANA
You Look Prematurely Old
I
Use “LA OSIOil" HAIR Rl
Ui
V
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Herman, George C. The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 20, 1910, newspaper, October 20, 1910; Batesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1107839/m1/3/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .