The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 25, 1911 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Borderlands Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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ft.
— I
■ S I
COCONliTS
in
Amerk^s
^TcHARLES ME1\ to BROWN/
fi
T has been commonly
remarked that the
uses of the coconut
palm ,cocos Nuclferal
are numerous as the
days of the year.
Found nearly every-
where within the trop-
ica, almost tlie sole
dependence for loud
of tlie palmtvorous In-
habitants of many
countries, tliis king of low tropical
countries furnishes man with food,
drink, medicines, domestic utensils,
materials for bout und house build
lng, oil for cooking, lighting, and
lubricating, and innumerable otlior
purposes, and Is of all the palmaeeao
the one that yields the greatest vari-
ety of products. Tennant has truly
said that of the coeoanut palm a ship
can be built and laden, too
De Candolle, in "Origin of Cultl
vated Plants," does not consider the
coeoanut palm a native of the western
hemisphere, but place* Its original
habitat In the Eastern archipelago,
somewhere in the neighborhood of '—
Sumatra and .lava, and surmises that
nuts flouted thence both east and
west; et ward to the islands of the
Pacific- and the coast of Central Amer-
ica, and westward to Ceylon and the
east coast of Africa. He places Its in
troduction Into Brazil, Venezuela and
the West Indies by missionaries about
three centuries ago. l)o Martlus says
that the Portuguese introduced It on
the coast of Guiana about the same
time. The navigators IJampler and
Vancouver found it at the beginning
of the seventeenth century In groves
on the Islands of Panama hay, ns
well as on Cocos Island, 300 miles off
the Pacific coast of Costa Klca. At
that time these Islnnds were unin
habited. Later the coeoanut palm Is
reported in the west coast from Mex-
ico to Ecuador, and Herman reported
having seen the palm both wild and
cultivated on the Isthmus of Panama.
Jn 152C Oviedo wrote that the cocoa-
nut palm was abundant on the Pa-
cific coast In the province of the
Cacique Chlnian, now Darien, Panama.
i
• ‘V i *, ask •f
y coconur PPL MJ
'pr OPLPPtft
Gt/prept0i.0
'^coco/vi/rs py rne- p/iply jTHor-i S
secnaH c
( op cocopur /.V
> iSH£LL PND MUSK
111 I.Hf,
53
JAsm
¥
farther shores, north Into Central
America and Mexico, south into what
Is now Colombia and Ecuador, and
across the Isthmus of Panama to the
Mosquito coast, Venezuela and the
West Indies, there to meet with those
brought over from Africa by either
ocean currents or early explorers
In the Americas today the coeoanut
is an Important product of Mexico,
Guatemala, Nicaragua, Honduras. San
Salvador, Costa Rica, Panama, Colom-
bia, Ecuador as far south as Uuaya-
qull, Venezuela, Guiana and Hrazil;
and in the West Indies, Cuba, Santo
Domingo, Haiti, Huhnmas. Jamaica
and Trinidad. Cocoanuts are being
planted more extensively every year
In southern Florida, and within a few
years will doubtless constitute an im-
portant product of ihat state. Pacific
America sends cocoanuts to the San
Francisco market from the Hawaiian
islands, while copra, or the dried
kernel, and oil expressed therefrom,
reach tliis market from the orient.
Along the coast of Brazil there are
wild coeoanut groves over 200 miles
that in caused by impure, impoveiinhed
blood or low, run-down condition of the
system, is burdensome and discouraging.
Do not put up with it, hut take Hood's
Farsapariiln, which removes it as nothing
else docs.
"I hnd that tired feeling, had no ap-
petite and no ambition to do anything. A
friend udvised mu to tuke Hood - Sarsa-
parilla. I did so, and soon that tired
feeling was gone, I had a good appetite
ami felt well. I believe Hood's saved inn
front a long illness.' Mrs, It. Johnson,
Westfield, N. .1.
Get Mood's Sarsaparilla today. In liquid
form or in tablets railed Saraatahe.
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver is |
right the stomach and bowels are right
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
gently but firmly com^
pel a lazy liver to^
do its duty.
Cures Con-
stipation, In-^
digestion,
! Sick
Headache/
and Distress After Eating.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
! TMPOItTANT Kleven section ranch, well Ini-
-I proved. '6 M-etloi:* «»wn«*d. hulanro l«aUM'U- ull
I film ed it nil mitered. HeM hurualn K«»inK- Alm» a
I f«w Hina11 tracts cheap, rich pralrlo land, no rocks.
no stiiiiipw. wood mitiT, tine climate A place you
I can call Home Hweot Homo. 1*1 yout wautb
I come to Box 1U1» lJumas. 'IViiik
ROUNDABOUT WAY.
DRESSED MAN
Englishman Makes Remarkable
Discovery by Accident.
By Means of Electricity Inventor Can
Print a Newspaper in All Hues of
the Rainbow With One
Contact.
I^ondop.—About two years ago a fu-
gitive paragraph drifting in tho Eng-
lish preas had for Its subject a possi-
ble "printing without Ink."
Just now a soml technicjl London
publication lias succeeded In running
down the author of the discovery and
from him it has the story of the ex-
periment up to date. The man is Ce-
cil Hembridge, London address not
given.
It was an accidental lead which Mr.
Bembridge picked up in his discovery
of inkless printing. It was about 12
years ago that, working in his labora-
tory with an electric battery, lie had
spread a sheet of tin on the table and
on the tin plate he had laid a piece of
moist paper. The bare ends of the
copper wires from his battery trailed
over this sheet of wet paper which
bad stuck fast to the plate of tin.
His experiment originally was to dis-
cover a certain electro-metallurgical
action in connection with gold and for
the purpose of the experiment he
reached into his pocket for a gold coin.
As he brought a handful of mlsccllane
ous coins from his pocket, a gold
piece slipped through his Augers, roll-
ed upon the table and in catching
at the coin, he clamped the sovereign
upon one of the connecting battery
wires and in firm contact with the
moist paper. In the effort at stop-
ping the coin, too, the other wire
was pushed over until it lay in con
tact with the sheet of tin. Then came
the accidental discovery.
He reached for the coin and in pick-
ing it up was surprised to find upon
What Made Him Sot
He was a mass of bandages, th*
result of a severe scalding, and when
he claimed to be "the best dressed
man in town,” people wondered. The
explanation was easy. A prompt ap-
plication of a Resinol ointment dress-
ing to the raw flesh had given Instant
comfort and reliof from the pain and
suffering It is the best dressing for
burns, scalds, cuts, wounds, felons,
carbuncles, and all skin abrasions.
It promptly allays Irritation and in-
flammation and stops itching Instant-
ly. Resinol ointment cures eczema,
psoriasis, barber's itch, rash of poison
Ivy, herpes, scald head and all skin
eruptions. Resinol ointment is free
from any injurious Ingredient. It’s
as good for baby ns for the older mem-
; bers of tho family. Resinol ointment
| is put up In opal ja’-s; price fifty cents
| and a dollar. At all druggists Real-
I nol Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md.
To Pray for the Rich.
Two women prominent In St. 1 anils
have started a movement to induce
AOO.OOi) of (heir sex in tlie south to
pray every day for the rich. They ex-
plain they hope by organizing system-
atically groups of women who will pray
often and well lor the more affluent,
wealthy persons will be led to contrlb-
ute to a fund for the evangelization
of (lie world. Belle H. Bennett, presi-
dent of the woman's missionary council
of the Methodist Episcopal church
south and Mrs. R. W. McDonnell are
the originators of the plan.
He Got It.
“Won't you give me an order?”
pleaded the too-persistent traveling
salesman.
"Certainly. Get out!"
/rWrr ar r^ppi/rsjm t
m anil A f//'|
MANILA
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS |
¥L
ft I
U:./!
-v
’■it ?
&
Wk
- -
Cook—My dog took tirst prize at the
cat show.
Hook—How was that?
Cook—He took the cat.
Politician and Preacher.
A politician in n western state, long
suspected of crookedness and noted
for his shifty ways, was finally In-
dicted and tried. The jury was out a
long time, but eventually acquitted
him. After the verdict was in and
the politician was leaving the court-
room. a minister who had been In
part responsible for the indictment
and trial approached the politician
and said: "Well, my friend, you have
escaped; but you had a close shave
I trust this will be a warning to you
to lead a better life and deal more
fairly with your fellow men."
"That may be." the politician re-
plied. "That may be: but I ain’t
pledged to any one."—Saturday Even-
ing Post.
Tlie herb laxative, Garfield Tea, prompt-
ly overcomes constipation, biliousness,
tiick-licuduche and insures better health.
Many a fellow who falls into a for-
tune goes liRht through it.
THE KEYSTONEi
TO HEALTH
IS
HOSTETTER’S,
STOMACH
BITTERS
ZJo#r>
y/f«£2
ri°H
ptrNCH
Argument iu favor of an American origin, as
stated by De Candolle, is as follows: The trade
winds of the Pacific, to (lie south and yet more
to the north of the equator, drive floating bodies
from America to Asia, a direction contrary to
that of the general currents. It is known, more-
over, from the unexpected urrlval of bottles eon
taining papers on different roasts, that chance
bns much to do with these transports.
His arguments contrary to an American origin
of the coeoanut palm and in favor of an Asiatic
are ns follows:
First.—A current between the third and fifth
parallel, north latitude, flows front (lie islands
of the Indian archipelago to tho Gulf of Panama.
To the north and south of tills are currents
which take the opposite direction, Imt they origi-
nate in regions too cold for the coeoanut, and
do not touch Central America, where It Is sup
posed to have been long Indigenous.
Second. Tlie Inhabitants of Asiatic Islands
Were far bolder navigators than the American
Indians. It Is very possible that canoes from
tho Asiatic Islands, containing pn C Ions of cocoa
nuts, were carried by storms or false maneuvers
to the Islands of the west const of America: the
contrnry Is highly lmpeb.il>>.
Third—The area lor three centuries lias been
much vaster in Asia than In \inerlca. and tic
difference was yet more considerable before that
epoch, for it la known that the cocoaiml lias not
long existed in the cast of tropical America.
Fourth. Tin- Inhabitants of the islands of Asia
possess an Immense number of varieties of the
paint, which Indicates a very ancient cultivation
illume enumerates eighteen varieties In Java and
adjacent Islnnds, and thirty-nine in the Philippines
Nothing of a similar nature has been observed
in the Americas.
Fifth.—Tlie uses of the coeoanut are more
varied and more habitual In Asia.
Sixth. — It Is not probable that tee ancient Mexl
rans and Inhabitants of t'eatril America would
have neglected to spread tlie coeoanut in several
directions had It existed among them from a
very remote epoch. Tho little breadth of the
Isthmus of Panama would have facilitated its
transportation from one roast to tlie other and
the spec ies would soon have been < stalilislied in
the West Indies, as It has since heroine natural
ized there since the dlseovety of America.
Seventh If tin coeor.nul in .America dated
from a geological ,‘pitch anterior to the Pliocene
or even Eocene deposits It Europe, it would
probably have been found on both coasts and
the eastern and western islands of tropical Atncr
lea equally.
Eighth.—-No ancient data of the existence of
the coeoanut In America have been found, but
Its presence In Asia three to four thousand years
ago Is proven by several Sanskrit names.
From these tacts tlie most ancient habitation
In Asia would he in the archipelago and In Amer-
ica In the islands west of Panama. Its Introduc-
tion Into Ceylon, Indian and China. De Candolle
slates, does not date further hark than three
thousand years, but the transport by sea to the
const of .America and Africa took place perh.vps
In a more remote epoch, although posterior to
those epochs when tlie geographical and physical
conditions were different from those of our day
In curly botanical winks rocommts are men
Honed, being derived from an East Indian word,
cor or cocue, used to indicate tile fruit of the
cores Xueiferu. or coeoanut of a fancied resem-
blance of the three circular depressions to the
lacc of a monkey, whose conversational powers
are limited to uttering n sound like "coo"
At the pn sent day. on the Islands of the Dav
of Pn n a nut such as Collin, Colhita. tlcnrnn, Mon
ttioKit, Lmlroncs, ami along the southwestern coast
of Cliil'iqui in I’.nanm, ami Punla Ituriea and
Golfo Dull c in Costa lilcn. arc found dense groves
of wild coeoanut palms, the lullcn nuts piled up
around their base, in many instances to a depth
of two and three feet, washed hack and forth
by tin su iil of the great tides of these coast»
until hurled against some jagged rock the pro
I acting husk is torn awav ami the b ndor kernel
becomes the prey of the myriads of soldier crabs
patrolling these great sandy stretches at low
tub Others are carried hy swift currents to
nonrb> consts. where, thrown high on the lunch
it flood tide, they may germinate and take root:
"fliers i tune as floating manna and beealmed
pearl fishing crews, supplying at once food and
drink to the divers whom the tides carry far
from their base of supplies an analogy to the
aphorism of the ill-wind
Accepting lie Candolle's theory as correct, flits
same process of distribution from tlie low lying
■oast, of the eastern archipelago to these Islands
of the Bay of Paiinma. mentioned by Dumpier
md Vancouver in their expiorings. might have
been seen taking place a thousand years before
the Christian era, or In Columbus' successors
In the Dukedom of A'eragtms. off which coast
they lie; theme carried hy human agency to
long, and millions of nuts are shipped annually
from tills country to the- United States and
Europe. Mexico reduces much of its product to
oil and ships to the United States in tills form,
although a good trade in raw nuts is maintained.
Of those exported from Cuba, Honduras, Ntcs
ragtta, Panama and Jamaica, the greater part is in
the raw state.
Trinidad reduces much of its product to copra,
for Europe, and oil. principally for the local
consumption of Its large East Indian population
In 1908 the approximate estimate of area un-
der cultivation in the coeoanut palm in all parts
of the world was .1,140.00" acres.
Of tliis vast area there are probably 220,000,000
palms bearing fully 7.000.000,000 tints annually,
the majority of which are consumed for food pur-
poses where produced.
The coeoanut pnini flourishes near the equator
and ns far north as 80 degrees, especially along
low coasts, although many are found in India
at an elevation ol ",000 feet, and eases are
known whore the palm does well at an elevation
of I,."00 feet above the sea.
As a rule a coeoanut tree throws out a spathe
and a leaf every month, eacli (lowering spilth !
yielding from 10 to 25 ripened nuts. The product
of a healthy tree properly tended may be from
Ml to 120 and even 2.">0 nuts annually,
Tlie prim ipal products of the coeoanut palm
are raw nuts, from which tlie desiccated meat
Is made; copra, or the dried kernel, from which ,
in turn oil Is expressed; pnonac, or the residua
after extracting the oil, und coir.
The uses oT these products, os well as of every
portion of the palm Itself, are almost innumerable.
Twenty-eight per cent, of nil the cocoanuts
raised In the world are grown In the Americas,
where, however, they are scattered over n mum
greater ares for each palm than Is the case In
the orient, thereby making the work of collecting
and shipping more difficult and expensive. Due
principally to this fact, (he vast stretches of
coeoanut groves of Brazil, A'cnezuela. Mexico
and tho western coast of Central America have
never been extensively exploited for cocoanuts
Increasing demand, higher prices than In former
years, and the approaching completion of the
I’anamii canal, which means new markets brought
about by Improved transportation facilities, are
rapidly bringing these fields within the radius of
profitable exploitation. In addition to stimulating
the scientific culture of this palm throughout trop-
ical America
How He Did It.
At the dinner Saturday of the Mili-
tary Order of Foreign AA'ars, Captain
| Carlyle L. Burridge told of a man
who, returning to ills domicile at
' cockcrow, underwent an inspection by
his wife, who desired to know how
lie came to have a large bump on his
forehead.
"That? Oh, that's where I bit my-
self," explained he of the nigtit key.
“Bit yourself?” the lady repeated
after him. "How could you bite your-
i self away up there?"
"Why, I stood of a chair," he said.—
Cleveland Leader.
Shouldn't He?
A very good natured broker, who is
very much larger than ids wife, and
who likes his little joke at someone
else's expense, was sitting in the the-
ater. A man behind him, not know-
ing who he was, leaned forward and
whispered, "Will you please ask your
wife to remove her hat?”
“You’d better do it yourself. I'm
afraid."
Whereupon the man behind became
angry, arose, protested und left the
them er.
FEED YOU MONEY
Feed Your Brain, and It y/ill
You Money and Fame.
Feed
Is watermelon a Fruit?
Bout hern fleUt, which Ik at onrp ft joy
to #ho northern millionaire and at
the same time affords full and serene
satisfaction to "Uncle Sambo" and i Invented modes of expressions' Vliat
his brood of pickaninnies were eminently In keeping with the
And again, If you believed In s demoralizing and depraving exhlbl
porter, 2fi.'t. ts both a fruit and a
vegetable - From the Docket.
Language of the Ring in 1830.
The language of tlie ring " had Its
peculiarities and the sporting reporter
When you eat an apple yon know
that you are eating fruit, and when
you partake of cabbage you are cer
tain that you are doing away with a
vegetable; hnt what are you eating
when you sink your fore tn a nice,
big. Juicy watermelon ? The fact of strictly v« getnble existence, you would I (Ions they described
"Ever since boyhood 1 have been
ckiw etolly fond of meats, and 1 a tn con-
vinced 1 ale too rapidly, und failed to
masticate my lood properly.
' P.io result was that l found mysclt,
a lew years ago, afflicted with ail-
ments of the stomach, and kidneys,
which interfered seriously with my
hilt iuess.
"At last 1 look the advice of friends
and began to eat Grape-Nuts Instead
of tho heavy meats, etc., that had con-
stituted my former diet.
"1 found that 1 was at onco bene-
fited by the change, that 1 was soon
relieved from the heart burn und indl-
gostlou that used to follow my meals,
that the pains in tny back from my
kidney affection had teased.
"My nerves, which used to be un-
steady, and ir.y brain, w hieh was slow
and lethargic from a heavy diet or
meuis and greasy foods, had, not in a
moment, but gradually, and none tho
less surely, been restored to normal
efficiency.
\ew «verj nerve is sts*4y and my
Inula and thinking faculties are quick-
1,1 i'e-'d cn one side with a chop er and more acute than for years past,
heard all over the ring " Alter my old style breakfasts l used
A shower of hlowr, on his already lo suffer during the forenoon from a
damaged nob." feeling of weakness which hindered
'Ills brain seemed addled from iho me seriously in my work, but since 1
lie, sunt ha mm i rln ig of liurbe's began to use Uiape-Nuts food 1 can
mawleys upon Ills sconce "—Hall— j work till dinner time with all ease
Retrospect of a Long Life. and comfort." Name given by I’os-
------ turn Co., Battle Crock, Mich.
the moist paper an absolutely cleat
Imprint of the coin In a brownish
black. He describes the print as oven
clearer than if lie had inked tlie coin
and applied tlie inked surface to the
paper by careful pressure.
Following his questionings he pro
cured a few linotype lines of print
assembled them, and placed the type,
face down, on a like sheet of moist
paper resting upon a like sheet of tin
When the battery wires were connect
ed with the type metal and with the
tin sheet and current applied, every
letter showed from the type lines with-
out blur or blemish.
Taking a sheet of zinc in lieu of the
tin, again the electrical influences
brought the same general effect,
though the crudest of hand methods
were used in applying the type to the
paper. Dry paper was not affected;
moisture was required for the propet
conductivity
After proving to his satisfaction
that, regardless of the pressure upon
the paper in contact, the clearness
of the lettering was satisfactory, Mr.
Brem bridge sought to discover a
chemical moistener for the paper
which would give the jet black effect
of ordinary printer's ink and at the
same time preserve the whiteness ol
the paper.
The great, trouble was to se< ure per-
manency in the electrical Imprint.
For ten years Mr. Bembridge wrest
led with the solution of his problem
Today he announces that everything
is accomplished and proved, not only
In the mat ter of a Jet black print with-
out ink. but asserts that lie is able tc
print a newspaper in all hues of the
rainbow and with tho one contact.
As explained by Mr. Be'.ubrldge, ills
long searchings into chemical com-
binations lor producing jet black
prints led hint on into electro-pigmen-
tary combinations producible by oxi
dlzlng processes. More than all ol
this, however, the assertion is made
that in treating the white paper some
of the cheapt st of chemical elements
serve the purpose admirably and at a
cost far below that of (he costly print-
er's inks.
As lor the presses for turning out
the newspaper, they are greatly sim-
plified, the ink troughs and rollers
disappearing altogether. The stereo-
type plate is use 1 and in position on
the press is thoroughly Insulated be
low, while the roller surface which
guides the moist paper also Is Insu
iated. The paper rollers are connect-
ed with the positive magnetic pole,
while the stereotype plate is linked
with the negative and from the electric
power that runs the press the elec
tro-chemlcal action Is set up. making
the Imprint as desired upon the pa>
per.
UtilP
When the digestive
system needs toning and
strengthening take the
Bitters promptly.
It doe3 the work.
Try a bottle today.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
? r’letr.i*** ami b<amific* the balr.
I i*r imotei a lninriant ftowtl .
Falla to Kestor* Gray
B Hair to ita Youthful Color.
I Cure* gra'p disfaseg k ha?r 1 aikng.
m
m
€i»e* qu'fk rr!l«f (• *7* IrrUafltma ca tt
Thompson's
F.ye Wafer
Texas Directory
McCANE'S DETECTIVE AGENCY
Houaton, Taxaa, operaki the largest force mf
nt doteclivea in th« South, they
npiniona i
ble rataa.
wn
Re.
mpetent <
ritton opi
niona in caaea aoi
AOuth, they render
it handled by them
ED. E1SEMANN THE TAfiK MAH
i'ht.no 4tit ITeston. 708 Franklin Ave., Houston
Anything ita tho Sheet Metal Line.
t WANT YOUR BUSINES3
KODAK rtwssjiifte
Eu Mall |iavo prompt
Attention. All kinds of HU|»t»llpn. McBRIDE
PHOTO SUPPLY CO.. 1012 Capito. Ave.. Houston. Te»..
KEEIE1
Inntltutrt of Tuxnn.
Scffiilcpn yearn iu
T)a 1 Iuh. After SC
yearn' aueceauftil
treatment 0/ Drunkenness, Drug ami Tobacco
Using needs no roui inme.nd&ttou further than
ti e thousands of cured patient*. Don't eon-
fuse “The Only < i 'mitim Keeley Institute of
Texas*' with any of the tmvny reputed ones.
t Write f »:• particulars. J. II. Keith* Manuger,
ISn Hughe* Circle. Dalian. Texas.
As our pnsent moral activity r* "There's a reason."
, , .1.1 1 ... . 1 Itiole a ft w illustrations from the I luxes, the things done In the mist rush Road the little book, "The Road to
diet .0 fruit «nd n,;«hJn* "• ««••««• « yu>rv,*m. accord newspaper reports of the period: in and assal „s; and woe him who AVeliville ' In pkgs.
could not Indulge in the ravishing ol lng to the opinion In Massey vs. City "A nasty crack on the left Jaw rat , have- the door of hD heart open for i Nver read .he „h«.e Mori A aew
tied the Crispin's Ivories and knocked trie past t„ enter ..no On., , i,.,„ •“* ,,mr
the matter Is that If you confined your -till be barred from the watermelon
tfcU most luscious product of lh“ of Columbus, 70 ftcuthvuetcro Re-
nrr k .*ii n I nr, (rue. nng (ull u( huuiaa
Isl.M.t.
Wanted tc Wed by Proxy.
Chicopee, Mass.— A plan of Stents-
Ians Uadnox lo marry by proxy tho
other day received a sotbank. .Stan-
islaus. with a buxom young woman,
who, it was explained, would Imper-
sonate the future Mrs. Uadnox, and
with attendants and witnesses, de-
scended Impressively upon ttie city
hall in taxicabs hired In Springfield.
Uadnox gasped when City clerk
Buckley explained that he was In a
fair way to become a blgan.la*. lie
explained that the idea was his own,
that he had thought to surprise III#
sweetheart or her arrival from Eu-
rope with the news that she was al-
ready married.
J
V
y -h*
J
HOUSTON, TEXAS
Is a Comfortable Hotel.
&;0L£ANIftQ,DYE1Kfi
m LAUfcmr work
\Vc I’.ivt finest laundry In tbo I’nlicil state*.
1 iue.si cleftnititf anti U.vt in# work in Mate.
Model Lrur.dry ‘'.TCiT/sl:
SHIPPERS WANTED. K0UST0N, TtX.
Will buy fob loading stations:
PflTATOiiS, mms,
C£iBB46c, HELCKS
to t my prices or. POTATO HAGS
J. fi. ZIEGLER KuusIor, Texas
is a wonderful new liq-
uid headache and neu-
ralgia remedy. It will
- .. /-a make your head “light ’
“..r-c’-yiX in a few tninuie*. It i".
*bslutt!y SAfr a.-d
.tWpJw, harmless. 10c, 25c ant i
50c bottles st all dug |
store*.
THE HEP-LYTEC0.,
„ M!rD»l!«». Hunt |
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Herman, George C. The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 25, 1911, newspaper, May 25, 1911; Batesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1108737/m1/4/?rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .