The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1912 Page: 6 of 10
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—
GREAT OPPORTUNITY.
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Important to Mothers
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Adv.
FOR SALK BY DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS
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to
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efforts
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off
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She has
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ashes.
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4
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AND
2
WEST
eaten
A
A Million
Persons
Post
Toasties
c.
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A “Tempting
Dinner
Breakfast every morn-
ing on
ATTENTION TO DETAILS WILL INSURE
PROFITABLE RETURNS FROM POULTRY
Experience of Louisiana Raiser Proves That Clean Quarters, Fresh
Water, Good Food and Systematic Care Are Few of Essenv
tials Required With Fowls.
S^UTJ
EAST
has no attraction for the person
with a weak stomach.
You have no appetite and what
little you do eat distresses you.
Try a bottle of
mo-
the
DR. CALDWELL’S GUIDE
TO GOOD HEALTH
Every mother is firmly convinced
that she is capable of picking a better
husband for her daughter than she did
for herself.
One great value of initiative is the
conquering of fear.—Blanche Bleealng.
L
or
the
a
Sold by prac-
tically every
tobacco dealer
tn the U. S.
1
eave
bills.
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Suppose you try the
food with cream and
sugar, as part of break-
fast or supper.
You may be sure it
will be a delicious part.
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Diplomacy In Small Things.
Little Eloise Cave, aged seven years,
was visiting her grandmother in Madi-
son, Va., and was sent to carry a
saucer of Ice cream to a neighbor. By
the exercise of infinite care she con-
veyed her burden safely to the house
and gave it into the hands of the lady
for whom it was intended. The lady,
however, was less careful than Eloise
had been, and dropped the saucer and
broke it.
“You needn’t mind about that,’’ said
the little diplomat, without an instant's
hesitation. "I don’t think grandma
has a cup to match the saucer. If she
has I will go right home and break it
myself."—Popular Magazine.
/
Open Air Schools Grow In Favor.
With the opening of’the fall school I sheds
! should . be
Thus, the real growth in this
lovement has been within the last
Massachusetts noW leads
There
no
Rhode Island Red.
The Only Way.
“No use to woo that girl,
a heart of marble.”
“Then leave it in statu quo."
Accelerated Brain Activity.
In the early days of Wisconsin, two
of the most prominent lawyers of the
state were George B. Smith and 1. S.
Sloan, the latter of whom had a habit i
of injecting into his remarks to the
court the expression, “Your honor, 1
have an idea.” A certain case had
been dragging along through a hot
the”
solitary confineiu/' ’y—Popular Maga-
zine. e
■■H
ih'U'Wl v
BM
11iM i
As a summer tonic there is no medicine
that quite compares wii li OXIDINE. It not
only builds up the fvi-tem. but taken reg-
ularly. prevents Malaria. Regular or Taste-
less formula at Druggists. Adv.
L_
«i«E
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~.....;*'-wh.T.
notice the improvement in
your general health. Your food
will taste good and do you good.
WFIp
feet, with his remark, “Your honor, I
have an idea."
Smith Immediately bounded up, as-
sumed an Impressive attitude, and in
great solemnity said:
"May it please the court, I move
that a writ of habeas corpus be is-
sued l>y this court ftnmedlately to take
’zied gentleman’s idea out of
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“Hi, Eddie! Come an’ help me se-
lect a cent’s worth of candy, an’ I’ll
let you stand by and watch me eat It.”
becomes
to keep
HOSTETTER’S
STOMACH BITTERS
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTOR! A, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that It
Bears the 7/V/? ■_
Signature of (
In Use For Over 80 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
At a Distance.
“She certainly tries to obey her
mother's Injunction not to let the
young men get too near.**
“Why, I saw a young man with bin
arm around her last night."
“I know, but she had a faraway look
in her eyes.”
!/,&
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A book of ’
"papers" free | '
with each 5c.
muslin sack.
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- • 4* ■> . 1 y. »y, ■ *
1 ;The”T that satisfies every party
LIPTON’S TEA
in tach S-cent muelin each
North Carolina tobacco. The purest form
of tobacco human skill can produce.
Try a sack of this grand old tobacco
today. See why more men smoko
“Bull” Durham than all other high-
grade brands' combined. See why for
uiree generations men have gone on
smoking this glorious tobacco year after
year, and will not be satisfied with any-
thing else.
**
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■.........
Steamboat Memories.
London Opinion, commenting
■I'D
t x
a pair of scissors or sheep
shears pinch off the blackberry canes
when they reach a height of three or
four feet.
if you want a little fun leave the lot
gate open. But the stock will get
more fun out of getting out than you
will get out of getting them In again.
It is poor policy to allow a young
boar to cover more than one sow a
day. Thus it Is not advisable to allow
the young animal to run with the
sow ’
T breeder of pure bred stock of
any .And cannot ignore the market for
common stuff, the sort of stock de-
manded by the buyers and the types
that are most in tavof.
r
, C. ' T-y 'r-
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Liquid Measure.
It was the time ot the Hinging les-
*‘The Memory Lingen”
i —
Po«tnfn C«ve«l Company. Ltd.
, BalUaOrsek. Mich.
For the Sake of Variety.
Customer—This, I suppose is a fold-
ing bed.
Merchant—No, str; we call this an
unfolding bed. I’ll show you . (Un-
folds it).
any one section.
- ‘ rolled ” into
f I totMimtw "•"••Mt MIMI
I FREE!
* A FULL 5Oc BOX OF
* Dr. Coonley’s FAMOUS ORANGE LILY
i The standard REMEDY for over 25 year*
X for I^-ucorrboea, Profuse or Irregular and
* Painful Periods, Falling of the Womb, In-
S flammation, Congeatiou, and Ulceration of
s the Womb and Overlea. Send for it to-day.
i A.idreaaThe COONLEY MEDICINE CO.
a 300 Casa Street Detroit. Michigan
J
genuine:
Bull Durham
SMOKING TOBACCO
Forty "rollings
This famous old tobacco is packed in
a plain, homely, muslin sack that has
become familiar to smokers the world
over. It is not handsome or showy, but
its cheapness permits just that much more
goodness to ge in(p the tobacco itself.
The Purest Form of Tobacco
"Bull” Durham is simply the gran-
ulated leaves of bright golden Virginia and
To prevent Malaria is far better than
to cure it. In malarial countries take a
dose of OXTDINE regularly one eaeh week
and save yourself from Chills and Fever
and other malarial troubles. Adv.
:'A:
f?
of thing, just try my plan and you
will have good success.
I make nests of clean leaves, straw,
cotton seed or light trash with plenty
of tobacco leaves. 1 give a broody
hen one old nest the first day or
two until 1 am satisfied she really
intends to get, and then place 12 or 13
eggs under her. I always select the
quietest hens for brooders and shut
up the others In a well ventilated slat-
coop and feed lightly on green cab-
bage leaves or other green gruff with
plenty of water.
Baked corn bread is excellent for
broody hens.
I'mave the alat coops every day.
always placing them In the shade. 1
believe success in raising poultry is
- "
it .i. iw- r ririBiiiift'iMiir’’iiL^,!
son at the local council school, and
the teacher was explaining to the
young hopefuls that if a “treble,” and
“alto," a “tenor" and a “bass” sung
together, their united efforts would
constitute a quartet.
There seemed no trouble abopt that,
and the teacher thought the class was
getting on very nicely.
“Now, Jimmy, leave off pinching
your brother’s leg and listen to me,”
‘If a bass and a tenor sang
•together, -what would you call that?”
Jimmy was the son of the local
milkman, and a bright lad withal. His
answer was not long in coming.
"Please, miss,” said he, "that would
be a ‘plntette.’",
on
the recent celebration of the centen-
ary of the steamboat, remarks that
It is Interesting to note that the Brit-
ish admiralty of that period rejected
the Invention with the declaration
that “a paddle wheel steamboat could
be of no use tn navigation,” and that
a Dr. Lardner, a pundit of that day
who proved that "no steam vessel
could ever cross the Atlantic, lived
long enough to bolt to America In a
steamer along with another man’i
wife!”
The natural tendency of people in
this busy age to demand of the di-
gestive organs more than nature in-
tended they should perform, frequent-
ly results In throwing the entire di-
gestive system into disorder. When
the stomach fails to freely digest and
distribute that which is eaten, the
bowels become clogged with a mass
of waste and refuse which ferments
and generates poisonous gases that
are gradually forced Into the blood,
causing distress and often serious ill-
ness.
Dr. W. B. Caldwell says that If the
bowels are kept regular there will be
much less sickness, and prescribes a
combination of simple laxative herbs
with pepsin that Is most effective In
relieving any congestion of matter in
the bowels. This compound can be
bought In any drug store under the
name of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin,
and costs only 60 cents a bottle. It Is
mild in its action, pleasant to the
taste and jiosltlve in effect, a dose at
night bringing relief next morning,
naturally and without griping or oth-
er discomfort. A bottle of Dr. Cald-
well's Syrup Pepsin in the house will
many times Its cost In doctor
Your name and address on a
postal to Dr. W. B. Caldwell. 203 West
St., Monticello, Ill., will bring a free
trial bottle by return mall.
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The popularity of " Bull ” Durham is not confined to
It is smoked everywhere—and, whether smoked in a pipe or
a cigarette, it is the favorite everywhere.
Not a rich man’s tobacco—not a poor man’s tobacco. It is the tobacco
for every man who wants a pure, mild, sweet smoke—regardless of price
or package.
(By Pearl C. Stegall, Ixiulsiana.)
I built all my poultry houses 10
by 15 feet and let the cover extend 6
feet in front and 8 feet on each side.
J I find this a good style of house for
this climate,’ as it gives good sheds
for nests or coops for the young-
sters
1 make the roofs of strips
Inches wide, not over three feet high.
I and fasten them slightly at each end
and by cleats so they can be removed
summer day when Sloan sprang to hltg for cleaning.
•——i.x. i_,_------1. ..xr----i..... . i f]ot)r8 Of my houses and the
sheds as well ivre made of dirt pack-
ed smooth and then covered w'ith wood
After this I has been sprinkled
with water a few times it
quite hard and is easy
clean.
The floors of the houses and sheds
are somewhat higher than the ground
outside. There is a door on each side
and one in front and two windows
j placed rather high in the back above
roosts. The doors all open into the
under shelter. The doors
made of wire netting In
order to prevent mink and other
animals from Carrying off the chick-
ens at night. /
Nests are made movable and are
placed on low benches in the sheds.
A house of this size will give room
enough for 100 hens. The houses are
ke.pt open ail the time except In cases
of very severe storms.
Two feed coops for biddies and the
young chicks are kept under the front
shed, where they are always dry and
which allow the young chicks to run
out on the ground in tile garden
I divide my poultry yard into .two
plots, one of which contains ’ Born ?! fig
and peach trees,. I gow oats in the
fall and field peas in June. ’The plot
i next to the poultry yard is sown in
' oats in October and they furnish the
great deal of green food during the
winter, and may be cut if not
j off by June.
I give my chickens free range after
they are three weeks old, but take
great care to keep them out of the
rain and early dew.
If you aro unable to have poultry
house and scratching shed, separate
due as much to absolute cleanliness ~
anything else. It requires a great deal
of work to keep your coops and poultry
houses and drinking and feed vessels
perfectly clean, but it pays better than
any other kind of work a woman can
do in the farm.
For grit in winter I save every
piece of broken dishes and with a
hammer and old piece of railroad Iron
I pound it up fine and keep a supply
before the chicks all the time. I use
this piece of Iron as a dinner bell and
my chicks all come running the
merit they hear the strokes of
hammer upon it.
Sometimes I trade a fat hen to a res-
taurant or boarding house for a bas-
ketful of broken dishes.
Let me urge farm women folk to
keep but one breed of chickens—the
kind you like best, and the best for
your purpose—that Is for eggs or
meat.
If you keep turkeys, duqks
guineas do not let them Into
chicken yard, but keep them in
I separate place. Everything about the
duck and turkey yard must be kept
as clean as possible all the time. If
the drinking vessels and feed troughs
of the ducks and turkeys are allowed
to become sour and dirty, trouble will
surely follow.
be used
? WLEY KIDNEY PILLS
Ara Rkbnt is Cunitiva Quahtia*
FOR BACK AC HE. RHEUMATISM.
L ? KIONKYS AMO BLADDER
----
L, t Xltow of no manner of speaking so
^jB*«nzlve as that of giving praise, and
HtHHOMne it with an exception - Steele
’ Regular practicing phvsicmn* recommend
ffwaBMprsecnl* OXIDINF. for Malaria lie-
JR it is a proven re rued i bv yeara of ex
"TSffiMtF 'C«. Keep a bottle in the medicine
"nd adminiater at first sign of Chill*
and Feveri Adv. (
" Dull.
' “Was your aviation meet a tuc-
ceMF’
•*No. not much of a one.
were only three accidents and
fatalities."
Part of the Truth.
“Robert, dear, how do you suppose
these dozens and dozens of empty
bottles ever got into our cellar?"
"Why, I don't know, my dear. I
never bought an empty bottle in my
life."—Fun.
■ ’*'»• ••••'., •.J**+ ■■■
term, over 200 open air schools and
fresh air classes for tuberculous, and
anaemic children, and also for all chil-
dren in certain rooms and grades, will
be in operation in various parts of the
United States, according to the Nation-
al Association for the Study and Pre-
vention of Tuberculosis. All ot these
echools have sbeen established since
January, 1907, when the first institu-
tion of this character was opened in
Providence, R. I. On January 1st,
1910, there were only 13 open air
Bchooh- in this country and a year
later the number had increased only
29
1
- A wo years.
he states with 86 fresh air schools
Ind classes for tuberculous, anaemic
^y^^And other school children, Boston
V alone having over 80. New York comes
■ ^Dext with 29, and Ohio Is third ’.vith |
^"21. Open air schools have now been
E®,- established in nearly 50 cities in 19
|K;- different states.
ME . % ■ IM—— ■■■ ■ 1 ■ 11
White Plymouth Rock Hen.
i nesting house, roosting house, bonp
cutters, self-feeders and all that sort
Txlutx nnil Vnil
-^^EN-EPAL
TAW-WES
Cut out old wood in currant bushes. I
Everyone should have a strawberry
bed.
The bulk of the dairy co*vs fall to
earn their board.
The pruning shears can
every month In the year.
The beef cow ought to produce
enough milk to fear her own calf.
When we all adopt the pure food
law on our farms there will be less
hog cholera.
To increase the supply of cattle It
will be necessary to stop the slaughter
of heifer calves.
Get rid of the windfalls as fast as
possible. It means the destruction ol
many insect pests.
The Shorthorn-Angus cross, produo
ing the so-called “blue grade," is very
popular in Scotland.
The raising of winter lambs Is t
specialty that yields good returns and
which makes pleasant work.
In packing grapes discard all green
overripe or shriveled specimens. Us«
ten pound baskets. Strive for neat
ness
Horticultural work goes on forevei
and is hard labor. If you don’t like
the work you will not make a success
of it.
Unless you have more than you can
profitably dispose of nearby you will
find it best to sell In the home mar-
ket.
The cow that always looks wild out
of the southeast corner of her eye
surely has a master that needs edu-
cating.
With
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The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1912, newspaper, October 25, 1912; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1265789/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.