The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 18, 1910 Page: 3 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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Texas Directory
HIACATEE hotel
■uropoen plan. Uatei
Caf* Prices KeesonebL
Depot, Uuuatoo. Texas.
~.i^j£stns!A’itisvsa
PATENTS
Obtained an>l Trade-Marks registered Consul-
tation and Information free. Write forlnrent-
or’a Quids Book. Offleta at Houston, tot-10
Moore Building, San Antonio and Washington.
Main office Lumberman's Bank Building.
Phone 4790. Houston.
HARPWAY & CATHEY
No matter how good your oil or
water strata is without the
STANGLIFF STRAINER
your production is not what it should be.
8TANCUFF WELL SCREEN «. MFC. CO.
806 Walnut 8trsst Houiton, Tsxat
SHIP YOUR
CLEANING, DYEING
and LAUNDRY WORK
TO
MODEL LAUNDRY
IQII Prairie Ave. Houston, Texas
CliCC-M& AMBtKUL5-CI>L'p
1 1\LL Hverr owner of an EDI- lllCC
SON PHONOGRAPH
can secure free sii special Atnberol records by
aiding us in sales of Phonographs Send list
ef prospects and we will co-operate for sales and
mail you plan for operation.
HOUSTON PHONOORAPH CO.
Edison Distributors
HOUSTON TEXA5
Complexion Soap
If you want a aoap that
cures pimples, chaps,
chilblains, sunburn, ec-
zema and all cutaneous
affections, use
Freckeleater
Soap
It %the SPECIAL aoap
for the PARTICULAR
person. Price 25 cents.
All Dealers
Plowing—rSwtfc
of. Cln) A ifferin
Had Lost Faith In Doe-
ton and Mndieinoo
hVCrflffY OXEN
'
S-V
i .#
...... .
A
Baker-Wheeler Mfg. Co., Dallas, Tex.
The Drink of Quality
The Texatone Boy
AT FOUNTAINS ADD IH BOTTLm
■■XATONB COMPANY DALLAS, tutu
Keeping It Dry.
An old woman of a wealthy New
Jersey family was going visiting. The
coachman, who had not been In thla
country long, had Just been equipped
with a new uniform and a new ellk
hat. Before they had gone far It be-
gan to sprinkle, and the old woman
told the coachman to fasten down the
■lde curtains of the wagonette.
He drove up to a hitching post be-
alde the road and, dismounting, hung
hts new hat on the post, and began to
fasten the curtains.
The old woman noticed hls bare head
and asked him where hts hat was
"01 took It oft me head, mum, so as
It wouldn’t get wet," the coachman re-
plied.
Another Tradition Exploded.
Two Englishmen were resting at the
"Red Horse Inn” Ht Stratford-on-Avon.
One of them discovered a print pic-
turing a low tumbling building under-
neath which was printed: "The House
In Which Shakespeare Was Born.”
Turning to hls friend In mild surprise
he pointed to the print. Hls friend ex-
hibited equal surprise, and called a
waiter who assured them of the ao-
curacy of the Inscription.
“ 'Pon my word,” said the observ-
ing Englishman, shaking hls head du-
biously, "I thought he was born In a
manger!”—Success Magazine.
The secret of life is not to do what
one likes, but to try to like that which
one has to do; and one does like It—
In time.—D. M. Cralk.
Convenient
For Any Meal
Post
Toasties
Are always ready to
serve right from the box
with the addition of
cream or milk.
Especially pleasing
with berries or fresh
fruit.
Delicious, wholesome,
economical food which
saves a lot of cooking in
hot weather.
“The Memory Lingers”
POSTL'M CKRKAL CO., Ltd
B»ul« Crash. Mich.
K TOOK our ease at our lun.
my friend Frampton and I.
The road In front of us led
where our boat lay, and
I ” ” left-handed to the creek
right-handed to the main part of
the village, Including the church
and station. A hedge, just break-
ing Into green, skirted the road,
and over its brim we could see a
plowman guiding hls team leisurely
up and down a broad, flat Held. The
man In hls drab corduroys and the
horses, a big brown and a gray, made
a picturesque group. They gave one,
too, the pleasant sense of restfulness
an Idler feels In watching other men
work. In the fulness of my content
I murmured something silly about the
dignity of labor, which roused my
companion from hls comfortable si-
lence to retort: "That’s because you've
never done any.” I looked up to
where a small, dark speck was rapidly
rising In the windy April sky and
flooding the air with joyous melody.
"Just listen to that lark singing,” I
said "Just listen to that signboard
creaking! We shall have It down on
our heads,” retorted my practical-
minded friend; not without reason, for
a strong breeze was briskly swinging
the old sign to and fro, and the storm
of the night before had left dangling
by a single rusty hook. "The Plow
and Anchor!” I muttered, as I eyed It
and warily edged along the bench
from under It. “I wonder what came
first at the beginning of things, and
when the first furrow was turned?”
"That will be something for you to
think about till I get back,” said
Frampton benignly.
"That chap with the plow somehow
takes roe back to Algeria.”
My friend grinned with a good-hu-
mored sarcasm. “Most things seem
to do that,” he said. "But If you
want to ruminate on plowing, here's
something for a start that takes one
to the back of beyond.” As he spoke
he detached a coin from hls watch-
chain and tossed It to me. Next mo-
ment he looked at hls watch and
rose hastily to hls feet. "Jove!” he
exclaimed, “it's ten to! I must run
for It” And swinging hls coat across
his shoulder, he picked up hls bag
and disappeared at a trot round the
bend of the road to the station.
Frampton was right. Numberless
Incidents of the most trifling kind suf-
ficed to carry my thoughts back to
Algeria. Life in the desert, life In the
towns, life In the Tell, each had im-
pressed me vividly with Its strange
and distinctive attraction. In the lat-
ter district particularly I had studied
the process and progress of farming
carried on there In a way I should
never have thought of doing at home.
There was such a glamour over it all;
over even the poverty and reckless-
ness of tho fellah and hls primitive
methods of agriculture. Like farm-
ers all the world over, what he did and
what he left undone was the result not
of personal Initiative, but of faithful
adherence to precedent. In spite of
the efforts of the French government
| to Introduce Innovations and Improve-
l ments the native cultivators of agra-
rian land plow, sow and reap as men
did when the world was young. To
see an Arab steering a yoke of oxen,
one hand pressed upon the single stem
| of the plow and the other holding the
long, slim goad. Is to see a living il-
lustration of how Elisha looked and
moved when Elijah found him plowing
and cast hls cloak upon him In signifi-
cant symbolism of his destiny. Only
In some such Insignificant details as
the names of the months In the Kabyle
dialect Is the stamp of Home still vis-
ible, and In the system of hiring labor
In the Tell there survives a custom |
belonging to the early days of the Ho-
man republic.
This Is what happens. A farmer
finds hltnsclf In debt, or he wnnts a
lump sum of money In order to marry j
and settle down. He forthwith bor |
tows the required amount of a richer \
neighbor and signs a contract by which
he practically enslaves himself until
he Is able to puy off the loan. Hls
master must provide him with a plow
and a pair of oxen, the seed for the
crop and the necessaries of life. He
also receives a fixed allowance of oil,
wheat any barley per month, besides
a yearly supply of clothes and foot-
wear, the price of them going to in-
crease the original debt. In harvest-
time the khamme'B, as he Is called, Is
entitled to un assistant, but he often
prefers to take a small Indemnity and
set hls wife and children to work in-
stead. Usually he Is free to seek em-
ployment on hls own account from
January to April, and then he hires
himself out for day labor In the vine-
yards and olive groves of the French
colonists. But In the districts now
given up to olive growing the kbammes
are few, as their wages soon enable
them to free themselves; and before
long, it may be safely prophesied,
the Arab will relinquish this ancient
usage In favor of modern European de-
vices for tiding over bad times. Per-
haps, too, It Is hard to believe, he
may be gradually Induced to Becure
himself a richer return for hls la-
bor by using tools of modern shape,
and In particular by exchanging hls
picturesque but Ineffective wooden
plow for the powerful up-to-date ma-
chine of steel and Iron which the
French have brought Into Algeria.
Three thousand years and more lie
between the two, and In the extraor-
dinary slowness of the evolution of
the plow and the fundamental Identity
of its first and latest shapes one rec-
ognizes the genius of Its inventor.
Osiris or Bacchus? Triptolemus or
Buzyges was It? We only know that
the ground was tilled with a share
drawn by oxen In the age when every
kindred had a god for an ancestor
and the golden myths of Qreece were
In the making.
At this point In my meditations I be-
came aware that I still held Frarnp-
ton’s coin In my closed palm. I took
It In my fingers and began to examine
It. My little Greek just enabled me
to decipher Its superscription and gath-
er that It was of the coinage of Slce-
llotae, or early Greek settlers In 81cily,
dating from about 600 B. C. On one
side It bore an almost obliterated head,
of Demeter presumably; on the ob-
verse the figure of a plow drawn by
two serpents. With such a plow the
sacred line enclosing Greek and Etrus-
can cities must have been traced, and
with such a plow did Romulus draw
hls circle round Mount Palatine, lift-
ing it from the ground wherever a gate
was to be. It differed but slightly
from the crooked hoe held by Osiris,
or from the hand plow with which
Samgar, Judge of Israel, fought the
enemies of hls people, being all of one
piece, with pins or plugs Inserted In
the stem to which the leathern thong
of the yoke might be attached. A
tree trunk with a bent knee was an
obvious necessity, and, as to this day
in Algeria, the holm oak seems to have
been a favorite for the purpose. Hes-
iod, writing 700 years before the Chris-
tian era. advises a husbaffidnian to
cut down a tree of Rultame shape
wherever he may encounter it and
straightway bear it home.
C. H. T. WOODBURY.
Remarkable Forest Work,
In point of variety and scope the
forest work done on the Blltmore es-
tate In North Carolina is remarkable.
The forests, which cover 130,000 acres,
ar made profitable by the production
of various forms of material. Four
million feet of lumber, five thousand
cords of tannic acid wood and fuel,
one thousand cords of tiu bark, and
several hundred cords of pulp wood
are cut every year. At the same lime
the forest through wise management
is bettered and Is steadily Increasing
In value. Workmen employed along
the boundaries of the forest do duty
as fire guards. Thus fire protection Is
secured throughout all the accessible
parts of the tract—Hay. Flour and
Feed Journal.
A Grand Rout.
It Is not always the largest foe who
can make the greatest disturbance and
cause the most confusion. In his
"Hunting Grounds of the Great West”
Richard Irving liodge tells of a little
Incident of the Mexican war which
proves that It Is quality, not quantity,
which Is most effective.
The Reform He Needed.
Earnest Ilut Prosy Street-Corner
I Orator—I want land reform; I want
| housing reform; I want educational re-
form; I want-
Bored Voice -Chloroform.
“1 wish to thank you for the sample
of Reslnol Soap sent me several
I weeks ago,” writes Mrs. M. F. Clem-
mer, Sunbury, Pa. “At that time my
baby's face was like a raw and bleed-
ing piece of meat. Medicine from
three different physician*, beside* va-
rious salves recommended by friends,
all seemed to make tho Eczema won*.
Then another mother recommended
Reslnol Ointment which I procured at
once, although I had no more faith in
It than in the rest I had tried; but
never did I spend fifty cents to better
advantage. The first and second days
1 noticed a remarkable change, and
now at the end of the third week, my
pretty blue-eyed, roey-cheeked baby la
perfectly well again. I think the cure
was surely something remarkable.
Reslnol Ointment and Soap did In
three weeks what everything else
failed to do In four months. My baby
had been positively disfigured, now
hls complexion is all right again.”
Reslnol Ointment cures all skin
troubles, from pimples to the most dis-
figuring eruptions and rashes. The
first application stops the intense itch-
ing of Eczema. Itching Piles, Pruritus,
etc., and subdues the pain of a burn
or scald instantaneously. It Is sold
In every leading drug store In the
world.
Booklet on Care of the Skin and
Complexion sent free. Write for It.
Reslnol Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md.
ABOUT THE LIMIT.
aeaRSw
fiAmft.
Jim—Gruet is terribly absent-mind-
ed.
Jack—I should say so! I’ve known
him to telephone to hls office and ask
if he was In.
Cross-Bred Indian Names.
Minnehaha, laughing water—what
prettier name, In sound and In sense,
could there be? Hut the saddest
thing about American nomenclature
is the way In which languages have
been cross-bred, with deplorable re-
sults. All these Indian "Minnie”
names are delightful when left alone;
and the white man did well In naming
the state of Minnesota after the river,
which, being Interpreted, Is "sky-tint-
- d water.” But then he must go and
contrive "Minneapolis" for Its chief
town—a shocking mixture of Indian
and Greek. Wlint lovely names they
must have missed when they Imported
their Jacksonville's to dispossess the
red man's language!—London Chron-
icle.
LEG A MASS OF HUMOR
"About seven years ago a small
abrasion appeared on my right leg
Just above my ankle. It irritated me
so that I began to scratch It, and It
began to spread until my leg from my
ankle to the knee was one solid scale
like a scab. The Irritation was always
worse at night and would not allow
me to sleep, or my wife either, and It
was completely undermining our
health. I lost fifty pounds In weight
snd was almost out of my mind with
pain and chagrin as no matter where
the irritation came, at work, on the
street or in the presence of company,
I would have to scratch It until I had
the blood running down Into my shoe.
I simply cannot describe my suffer-
ing during those seven years. The
pain, mortification, loss of sleep, both
to myself and wife Is simply inde-
scribable on paper and one has to ex-
perience It to know what It Is.
"I tried all kinds of doctors and rem-
edies but I might as well have thrown
my money down a sewer. They would
dry up for a little while and fill me
with hope only to break out again just
as bad If not worse. I had given up
hope of ever being cured when I was
Induced by my wife to give the Cutl-
cura Remedies a trial. After taking
the Cutlcura Remedies for a little
while I began to see a change, and
after taking a dozen bottles of Cutl-
cura Resolvent In conjunction with
the Cutlcura Soap and Cutlcura Oint-
ment, the trouble bad entirely disap-
peared and my leg was as fine as the
day I was born. Now after a lapse of
six months with no signs of a recur-
rence I feel perfectly safe In extend-
ing to you my heartfelt thanks for the
good the Cutlcura Remedies have done
for me. I shall always recommend
them to my friends. W. H. White,
312 E. Cabot St., Philadelphia, Pa., Feb.
4 and Apr. 13, 1909.”
DRIVEN ALMOST CRAZY.
Bakersfield, Cal., Woman’s Awful Suf-
fering.
Mrs. H. W. Heagy, ISIS L St., Ba-
kersfield, Cal., says: “Doctors felled
to help me and I was In despair. The
kidney secretions scalded terribly and
passed too freely. I
often staggered as It
drunk. I could not
He In bed over half
an hour. M-y side was
numb, sight affected,
and a tingling sensa-
tion covered my
body. It actually
seemed as If I would
go crasy. I was
saved from fatal Bright's disease by
Doan’s Kidney Pills and my health Im-
proved wonderfully.”
Remember the name—Doan's. For
sale by all dealers. (0 cents a box.
Foster-MUburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
In ths Desert.
Here Is a glimpse of the horrors of
a western desert, taken from the Gold-
field (Nev.) News: "Another desert
victim Is reported, and Archie Camp-
bell, manager of the Last Chance
mlutng property near Death valley,
came to Goldfield yesterday to en-
deavor to establish the Identity of the
unfortunate.
“Mr. Campbell encountered the un-
known man on the desert In a fright-
ful condition. He was In the last
stages of desert exhaustion, devoid
of clothing, Bunburned, blistered and
crazed, with hls tongue swollen enor-
mously, a pitiable object, and unable
to speak.
"He was tenderly conveyed to camp
and everything possible done for him.
but kind aid came too late, for an
hour after he had absorbed the first
cup of water he expired.”
A Bernhardt Trlok.
Mme. Sarah Bernhardt, who Is sup-
posed to be something of an artlBt as
well as an actress, was recently call-
ed upon In one of her marvelous crea-
tions to enact the role of a sculptor,
and to model a certain bust In view of
the audience. This fairly electrified
the critics, but when going Into rhap-
sodies over the technical skill In han-
dling the clay which Mme. Bernhardt
exhibited they showed that they knew
little of the artistic tricks of actors
and actresses; as a matter of fact, she
does nothing of the kind. The bust
Is modeled and baked, and over It Is
placed damp clay of the lame color.
This the talented actress merely pulls
off, exposing the beautifully modeled
head underneath.
One Side Enough,
Senator William Alden Smith tells
of an Irish justice of the peace out
In Michigan. In a trial the evidence
was all in and the plaintiff's attorney
had made a long and very eloquent
argument, when the lawyer aotlng for
the defense arose.
“What are you doing?” asked the
Justice, as the lawyer began.
“Going to present our side of the
case.”
“I don't want to hear both sides ar-
gued. It has a tlndency to confuse
the coort”—Washingtonian.
More Likely.
It Is said that the Nicaraguans
would rather fight than eat.
But don’t Jump at the conclusion
that this Is an Indication of great
courage.
It may mean poor cooking.
One of the first necessities of our
life Is that we grow upward like men.
When we cease to aspire we descend
In the scale.—Freston.
LTHE KEYSTONEj
TO HEALTH
13
HOSTETTER’S
STOMACH
BITTERS
! While General Taylor's lltle army
was inarchliiK from Corpus Chrlstl to
Matamoras, a soldier on the flank of
llie column fired at a bull. The ani-
mal charged, and the soldier, taking to
: Ids heels, ran into the column The
bull, undaunted by the number of the
i.-neiny, followed him headlong, seat
tiring several of the regiments like
chaff, and finally escaped unhurt, hav
.ng demoralized and put to (light an
it my which, a few days after, covered
Itself with glory by vlctorloualy en-
countering five times Its number of
human enemies. Youth's Companion
Doll House Library.
A search for a child’s short story, j
"The Griffin and tho Minor Canon," |
In a volume all by Itself revealed to a
persistent city shopper the thought
and money that are expended on the
furnishing of dolls' houses. Book |
stores had not the story in a single |
volume, but in a department store |
one young woman Interviewed bad re- j
cently been transferred from the toy j
department and was able to contribute ,
a helpful hint.
“I think,” she said, “you can find It j
in one of the dolls' houses downstairs." [
Curiosity bad by that time become
a sauce to literature, so the shopper |
hurried downstairs to Inspect the doll
bouses. Three of the most expensive
houses contained libraries consisting
of a score of diminutive bookR and
each book contained a child's story
complete. One of them was “The
Griffin and the Minor Canon."
Blest Be Nothing.
Wife—The doctor writes that In
view of our poor circumstances he will
not present hls bill Immediately.
Artist—We are lucky that our cir-
cumstances are no better; If they
were, we might have to pay at once!
T>r. Pier** « riFaaant Pellets lint pot op 49 thn
Pfr< They r*tfu)»t* *n<J Invigorate e'g.rnAeb, lives
pod bowel*. Hugor-cosUKl tiny Annul**.
Its great merit alone hasl
enabled the Bitters to con-
tinue before the public fori
over 57 years. You re.illy I
ought to try a bottle fori
Poor Appetite, Indiges-I
tion, Headache, Cramps,!
Diarrhoea and Malaria.
TUBERCULOSIS IN THE PRISON
Per Cent, of Sufferers le Enormous
and There Seems but On*
Remedy.
From several Investigations that
have been made by the National As-
sociation for the Study and Prevea-
Uon of Tuberculosis, It la estimated
that on an average about fifteen per
oenL of the prison population of tbo
oountry le afflicted with tuberoulosls.
On this basis, out of the 80,000 prison-
ers housed In the penal Institution*
of the United States at any given
time, not lose than 12,000 are Infected
with this disease. If the Philippine
Islands and other Insular possessions
were taken Into consideration the
number would be much larger. Some
of the prisons of Pennsylvania, Kan-
sas and Ohio show such shocking con- I
dltlons with reference to tuberculosis j
that many wardens admit that these ;
places of detention are death traps.
Similar conditions could be found In |
almost every state, and In the major- ;
Ity of cases the only sure remedy Is
the destruction of the old buildings
and the erection of new ones.
Constipation
Vanishes Forever
Preept Relbf-Pi
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS ■
Isd. Pwsly \
Lx mmtij *a
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTOR1A, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that It
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
Ths Summer Girl.
"How’d you like to be eugaged to a
millionaire?”
"I was engaged to one all last sum-
mer, and be seldom spent a dime. I
want to be engaged to a young man
who 1b down here for two weeks with
about $300 In hlB roll.*'
TO DRIVE j
Stain* In N star*. Pitt* «0 Malt.
Didn’t Want Hls Chawed.
BUI—Don’t you like to see a dog
chewing a bone?
JU1—Yes, If lt'a not one of my own.
There can be no greater mistake
than to suppose that the man with
$1,000,000 le a million times happier
than the man with one dollar.
McCANE’S DETECTIVE AGENCY
Htuaton. Ttaat, astral** Ik* l*rs**l far** ml
competent detect!*** la tka South, the* r*nd*r
writlaa opinion* la CBMa aol kaaflaf a, Ikaaa
R*aa*n*kl* rat**.
A business man's leisure Is simply
the time he doesn't know wbat to do
with.
IX '"glj'pA
Genuine mutbae Signature
p || p p Bend postal (or
rlittSESSr
■otter aid more economical
than liquid antiseptics
FOR ALL TOILET USES.
pAXTINE
1 TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Gives one a sweet breath; clean, whiter
germ-free taath—antieeptically clean
mouth and throat—purifta* tho broath
after smoking—dispols ail disagreeable
perspiration and body odors- much ap-
preciated by daiaty woman. A quick
romady far soro ay a* and catarrh.
il l "aji* A littU Paxtiaa powder <£».
lutioa, po***Muq extraordinary
■ drv cUanang, ganaicldal tad baaL
IS!
large ben at dnqgid* or by auiL
THE PAXTON TOILITOO.. Boston, Maos.
FOR OLD AND YOUNG
Tutt's LiverPUI* acta* kindly ea the child,
tk* delicate famalo or Infirm old ■(*, a* upon
tin vlrorou* man.
Toffs Pills
Siva tana and strength to tka waak stomach,
bowel*, kidney a and Madder. —
High Sii. ?ny7*’nU?fi®“,o";j!i9jf*!3Lol,J|
7*ara tttoo***. National reputation. Business. Ntei*
ographlo, ■ngliab and Spanish qonrsea. roll t*rm
MANTELS-TILE--GRATES
LIGHTING FIXTURES
Largest stock In Tezae. Bend or oall for catalog asd
prices. Wbolssal* and Rstall.
W. N. U., HOUSTON, NO. 34-1810.
We Give Away
Absolutely Free of Cost\
The People’a Common Sente Madioal Advlaar, in Plain
Bnglieh, or Medioine Simplified, by R. V, Pieroo, M. D.,
Chief Consulting Phyaioian to tho Invalid*’ Hotel and Sur-
gical Institute at Buffalo, a book of 1008 large pages sad
over 700 illustrations, In etrong paper cover*, to any oao sanding 21------*
stamp* to oovar eoat of mailing ao h. nr.in French Cloth binding for 31 stems*
Over 680,000 copies of this complete Family Doctor Book ware told la ninth
binding at regular price of $1.50. Afterwards, on* and a half million
war* given away aa above. A new, np-te-date revised edition la now raadv
for mailing. Better sand NOW, before all are gone. Address Woblo’s Dis*
pbnsaxy Mbdical ASSOCIATION, R. V. Piero*, M. D., Preaidant, Buffalo, N. Y.
DR. PIERCE'S FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION
THE ONE REMEDY for woman's peculiar ailments good enough
that it* makers ar* not afraid to print on Its ontsidn wrapper lie
every ingredient. No Secret*—No Deception.
THE ONE REMEDY for women which contains no aleobol and
no habit-forming drug*. Had* from native medicinal forest roots
of well established eorative value.
O' I
A*
FAULTLESS
^ STARCH
FOR 5HIRTS COLLARS CUFFS AND FINE LINEN
West Texas Military Acade
You can shave first time you try
with a
Ola*8*4"A”by ill* UJ.Wir Dip<r(*$il. 0*RR**<la*l * D.l. krmj Officer.
Third successive year winner* of championship competitive drill
San Antonio Inter notional Fair.
Only military school in Teas*.whose graduate* are admitted
to State University without examination.
Thorough work. Small clsaaes. Individual attention.
Athletic* and outdoor-*port* New building* next year.
Boys from home* of r*fln*m*nt only desired
Prepare* for College, Government Academies or Buainea*.
Illustrated Catalog earn an raauaat < Addreaa
ANGUS McD. CRAWFORD, M. A., Principal, Bo* >0 ' San Antonio, Texas
SAN ANTONIO. TEXAS
WINTERSMITH’S
Oldest and Best Tonic; for Malaria and Debility.
KNOWN THE
WORLD OVER
netter a naglcss wile than a horse- The lamb that plays around a mint
less carriage. bed tempts fate.
KNOWNsince IB36 asRELI ABLE
ftfjgs
u ** CAPSULES
SUPERIOR REMEDY FOR MEN etcetc
AT DRUGGISTS TRIAL BOX BV MAIL 5<K
PLANTtN 93HENRY ST BROOKLYN NY
' Thompson’s Eye Water
Gfjod Intentions are always hot
stuff, that Ik why they are used for
paving material In a certain locality.
Mr*. Wln*lowf* Nonthlnf Syrup,
Forrhluirt-n ti’Pihiriti *ift«*na th** *ume, r**<]uc*a In-
n*niui*fi<<n.ali*feb*iD.cor*awio«looUo. ’Ac* bolU*.
rl’ *ucc**«. Oontalna
nlik* quinlna. It I *av*a
i substitute. FRII—
laa aant to any address,
t pbtbb a GO., e**’l AgteU,
LOUISVILLE. BV.
Nature’s Vegetable Laxative
APIfsiant Suhtlitulr lor Sails Oils or Pill*
Grandmas T ea
CURES CONSTIPATION
ACTS GENTLY
LV Cl 6ANSE8 THOROUGHLY |
2'ic 41,1. Illtl HI.IMS
Doesn't Talk Back,
"Did you enjoy your travels?"
"I rertalnly did, and my wife quite
fell in love with the Sphinx.”
•alio did?”
"Yes, It's such • fine listener.”
You Look Prematurely Old
■•OBUM of thOM Uffilv, grizzly, gray hairs. Use **LA ORIOLE” HAIR RMTORKR. FRICK, 8I.OO. retell.
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Herman, George C. The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 18, 1910, newspaper, August 18, 1910; Batesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1108742/m1/3/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .