The La Grange Journal. (La Grange, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 12, 1902 Page: 4 of 4
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i * » taw tarai A
A <
Slate nd Cosily Dimtery.
•BMBF.
day
Trial Bottle Sent Absolutely Free on Receipt of Postal.
Mow to Relieve Choking.
Popularity of Our Kid Leather.
How to Clean Cut (Hass.
L
I?
THK MOST WIDKI.7 BRAD NKWSPAPKH IN
AMKMICA.
Asthmalene Brings Instant Relief and Permanent
Cure in AH Cases.
5 50
8 OOi
IO 00
12 001
L4 001
22 (X>
42 00
io go .:
22 00 j
28 00 j
34 W1
10 00 1
120 00 ’
Happy Time in Old Town.
'•We felt very happy,” writes B.
N. Bevil, Old Town, Vs., “when
THE NEW YORK WORLD
THRICK-A-WKKK KDITIOW.
1 inch,.....
2 inches,....
3 iuehea, ..
4 inches, ...
inches,
inches,.. .
J4 column,
I column,....
SENT ABSOLUTELY FREE ON RECEIPT OF POSTAL.
WSin TOCS AMD ADDUM FU1SLV.
CHAINED
FOR TER
YEARS
How to Keep the Hands White.
—A preparation to keep the hands 1x3’’ these « quarter of an
soft and white- is made by dissolv-
ing a little white wax in almond oil
Apply this mixture while warm,
and gloves must be worn to keep b<‘‘led <*> a PlllP- warm the whole
the wax in place, as it soon cools
and will peel off. If ammonia is
used to soften hard water, a little
| cold cream must be rubbed On af-
| terward, as ammonia destroys the
natural oil on the surface of the
skin. It also makes the nails brittle.
How to Keep Violets Fresh.—It
is worth remembering that a cor-
, sage bunch of violets may be worn
several rimes if a little thin cotton
batting which has been dipped in
“ait water is wrapperl around the
stems each time before the tinfoil
is wound about them. When not
I in use take of the toil and batting
and put the stems in a glass of
: water which is slightly salted. The
a root
without boiling.
---—■ —
How to Use Soap.—Under ordi-
nary conditions ordinary methods
serve, but when the skin is very
dry or we desire to attack black-
heads, soap should be worked into
a paste with the hand and be well
rubbed over the surface for some
seconds; then using a little hot
water, say half a pint, the skin
surface must be rubbed into a
lather, washed in another supply of
hot waler and finally be rinsed in
cold water.
Raising the left arm high as you
can will relieve choking much more
rapidly than by being thumped on
the back. And it is well that ev-
ery one should know it, for often a
person gets choked while eating I its'form but“not"ite.Lee's.,
when there is no one»near to thump
him.
How to Tell the Age of Eggs.—
The following method of determin-
ing the age of eggs is practiced in
the markets of Paris: About six
ounces of common cooking salt is
put into a large glass, which is
then tilled with water. When the
salt is in solution an egg is dropped
into the glass. If the egg is only
one day old it sinks immidiately to
the bottom; if any older, it does
not reach the bottom rtf the glass.
If three days old it sinks only just
below the surface. From five days
upward it floats. The older it is
the more it protrudes 'out of the
water.
of a weekly and you can’t afford to be
Republican and democrat alike can
read the Thrice-a-Week World with
absolute confidence in its truth.
In addition to news, it publishes first
class serial stories and other features
suited to the home and fireside.
The Thrice-a-Week World's regular
subscription price is only #1.00 per year
and thia pays for 156 papers. We offer
this unequalled newspaper and Thk
Jonmnal together one year for #2.00.
The regular subscription price of the
two papers is #2.50. •
Address, THE JOUVNAL,
LaGxancb, Tax as.
“ Common is the commonplace. - The
mow valuable of civil be neats is such a
commonplace matter, that we scarcely
give it a thought It would take a win-
ter oe a whaler nipped in au ia* Boe to
make u* truly appreciable of the worth
of the postal service. What a wonder
fill thing it ia! Wonderful in its organ-
ization, with its vast machinery lor the
collection and distribution of letters, its
railway mail cars, its route riders, the I
unfailing order and precisson of ita
methods. Wonderful it ia too in its re-
mits. It knits together families widely
Do not Delay. Write at once, addressing DR. TAFT BROS’. MEDICINE
COMPANY, 79 East 130th Street, New York City.
It brings instant relief, even in the
worst cases. It cures when all el*
fail*
The Rev. C. F. Wells, of Villa Ridge,
I1L, says: “Yonr trial bottle of Aathma-
lene received in good condition. I cannot I
tell you how thankful I feel tor the good ,
derived from it. 1 wan a slave, chained
with putrid sore throat and Asthma for I
ten years. I despaired of ever being cured. ,
I saw your advertisement for the cure of I
thia dreadful and tormenting disease, and 1
thought you had overapoken yourselves,
but resolved to give it a trial. To my as-
tonishment the trial acted like a charm.
Send me a full-sise bottle.”
Rev. Dr. Morris Wectesior,
Rabbi of the Cong. Baal Israel.
Nxw Yosa, Jan. 3d, 1901.
Dus. Taft Buds’. MxnieiMX Co.,
Gentlemen:—Your Asthmalene ia an ex-
cellent remedy for Asthma and Hay Fev-
er, and ita composition alleviates all trou-
bles which combine with Asthma. Its suc-
cess is astonishing and wonderful. After
having it carefully analysed, we can state
, morphine, chloroform or ether. Very
REV. DR. MORRIS WECHSLER.
How to Walk Properly. — In
walking endeavor to take a long,
graceful, gliding step, rather than
the short, choppy motion which
one so often sees. Walking oo the
toes gives a mincing, dancing
schoolmaster gait. Let the weight
fall on the balls of the feet, turn
the toes out a trifle and transfer
the weight of the body from oue
foot to the other as each step is
.taken. Avoid balancing the body
by throwing the hips alternately
out and in. This produces a walk
that is neither graceful nor refined,
and no woman should care to im-
itate it.
How to Make Orange Custard.—
If you like a touch of the bitter
orange, boil the rind of a small
orange until tender and then mash
to a pulp. Add to it the juice of
two oranges and the yolks of four
eggs beaten with half a cup of
sugar. Pour on a pint of scalded
milk ^nid stir uutil the sugar is dis-
solved and the custard cool enough
to pour into custard cups. Set
away to stiffen. Just before serv-
ing rub some lump sugar over the
rind of two oranges and then crush
it; sprinkle this sugar over the top
of the custards. Chopped almonds
may be used instead of the sugar.
Avoir Shings, New York, Feb. 1, 1901.
Da. Taft Bros’. Mxdicink Company.
Gentlemen:—I write this testimonial from a sense of duty, having tested
the wonderful effect of your Asthmalene for the cure of Asthma. My wife has
been afflicted with spasmodic asthma for the past 12 years. Having exhausted
my own skill as well as many others, I chanced to see your sign upon your
windows on I30th street. New York, I at once obtained a bottle of Asthmalene.
My wife commenced taking it about the first of November. I very soon noticed
a "radical improvement. After using one bottle her Asthma has disappeared
and she is entirely free from all symptoms. I feel that I can consistently re-
commend the medicine to all who are afflicted with thia distressing disease.
Yours respectfully, O. D. PHELPS.
Da. Taft Haos’. Mbdicinb Co. l. Feb. S, 1901.
Gentlemen:—I was troubled with Asthma for 22 years. I have tried num-
erous remedies, but they have all failed. I ran across your advertisement and
started with a trial bottle. I found relief at once. I have since purchased your
full-sized bottle, and I am ever grateful. I hr.ve family of four children, and
for six years was unable to work. I am now in the best of health and am do-
ing business every day. This testimony you can make use of as you see fit.
Home address, 235 Rivington street. S. RAPHAEL,
67 East 129th st.. City.
Ho j to Make Horseradish Sauce.
—Slice ,two onions, fry them in
butter and when they begin to
color put them into a saucepan
with the juice of half a lemon, a
cupful of broth, two slices of lemon
peel, two cloves of garlic, a bay
leaf, thyme, basil and two cloves;
hour |
and then strain it; add capers and
an anchovy chopped, pepper, salt
and a spoonful of horseradish
My little son had an attack of
whooping cough and wan threat-
sued with pneumonia; but for
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy we
would have had a Mriooa time of iff,
It alm, imved him from several ae-
Cut glass should have the great-
est possible care in handling. A
wooden tub should be used for
washing, and the water iu which it
is cleared should never be too warm
tor the hands. The deeper the
cutting the more liable it is to be
broken. Cut glass should never
be left upon stone or marble, and
in rinsing the water should be of
nearly the same temperature as that
used for the washing. It should
always be drained on a soft towel
or cloth. Decanters and water bot-
tles often get discolored, but a soft
cloth guided by a wire will gener
ally remove the sediment. When
this is obstinate bits of paper with
shot and strong soap suds will do
the worlf. Beans are sometimes
used instead of shot. Glass that
is ornamented with gold should be
washed with castile or a good white
soap—that is, a suds—and should
be wiped as dry as - possible. All
the fine glass should be kept in a
closed cabinet and handled very
little.- A damp place is not advis-
able for glass, especially that with
gold decorations.
! 1 winch should be kept ii
room, with tissue paper
COMMISSIONERS.
Beat No. 1.. Chas.: E. Hackebeil
Beat. No. 2..... Kossuth Zupp
Beat No. 3 C. A. Young
Beat No. 4 .... Joseph Fietsazn
The commissioners’ court meet*
every second Monday in February
Muy, August mid November.
Time has demonstrated that the
Thrice-a-Week World stands alone in
its class. Other papeis have imitated
____________t “:====. This is
tiecause it tells all the news all the
time and tells it impartially, whether
Very frequently children that news be political or otherwise. It
get choked while eating, and the “• in fac,\’ a daily at the price
, of a weekly and you can’t afford to be
customary manner of relieving without it.
them is to slap them sharply on
The effect of this is to
set the obstruction free, so that it
The same thing
can be brought about .by raiding
the left hand of the child as high
as possible, and the relief comes
much more rapidly. In happen-
ings of this kind there should be
no alarm manifested, for if a child
sees that older persons or parents
get excited it is very liable to get
so also. The best thing is to tell
the child to raise its left arm, and
immediately the difficulty is over-
come.
Justices and Constables
Precinct No. I—II. C. Ledbetter, I
justice; Lee Smith, constable. Court j
last Monday in each month at the JS
courthouse.
Precinct No. 2—Tom Hruska.jus- '
ties; F. C. Knippel, constable. Court 1
second Thursday after the tint 1
Monday in each mouth at Fayette- - '
yille.
Precinct No. 3- Charles Schiege, |
justice; Adolph Becker, constable. ‘
Court meets the first Monday of i
each month nt Round Top.
Precinct No. 4—Alex Ramsey, jus- J
tice; Sam Redfield, constable; court 1
meets every Thursday after the first j
Monday in each month at Winches- |
ter. -I
3
Governor J, seph 1) havers f!
LieuLGovernor J. N. Browning^'
Attorney-General (' K. b3m
Comptroller B. M. Lev*
Treasurer Join’ W. liobbi*
Com. Lund Office Geo. W. Fiuwr
Supt Public Instruction .^4.
•—...................Arthur LeFev*
American kid. leathers are grow-
ing iu favor abroad, especially in
Australia. Recently one of the
largest morocco manufacturers in
Lynn, Mass., made a shipment to
that country of 3,500 dozen skins,
which shipment is said to be the
largest ever made from there for
foreign parts. It is not so very
long ago when the best kid shoes
were made from skins imported
from Fryice. Now France is buy-
ing large quantities of kid from
this country.
I
separated. It carries acrom the sea
acme tender lover's inevaage or perhaps
a little flower picked from the daisied
grave of an English churchyard. Every
hour of every day the mail haff is packed
with words which waken love and laugh I
ter, and words which deepen the furrow
in the cheek and dim the failing sight I
with bitter-teari
But with all this there ia going on
through the mail service a dissemina-
tion of human knowledge, a reaching
out of human help which is one of the
crowning blessings of our century The
correspondence schools led by Chautau-
qua, are sending to every village aud
hamlet the broader knowledge which is
so eagerly craved by many who are shut
in to the homely duties of a Humble
life. Without the mail system this plan
of education would be impracticable.
Every mail, too, carries from the great
centers, the advice of great physicians,
which it would be impossible for the
distant public to obtain were it not for
the mails. Few people- realize how
many thousand people depend on the
mail service for medical treatment Not
long ago when some postal affairs were
being discussed in connection with the
erection of the new pos-ofiice building
in Buffalo, N V., some light was thrown
on this subject by the statement that
the mail by Dr. R V. Pierce amounted
daily to something over 1,500 pieces.
Of course thia is not a common case: be-
cause Dr. Pierce’s relation as chief con-
sulting physician to Buffalo’s famous
institution. The Invalids' Hotel and Sur-
gical Institute, makes his advice and
that of his staff of- nearly a score of
skilled and experienced specialists much
sought after, especially by women, to
the treatment and cure of whose special
diseases Dr. Pierce has devoted over
thirty years of almost constant labor.
But though this example is out of the
ordinary, it may serve as an evidence of
the amazing benefits reaped by the pub-
lic from the mail service. It puts every
outlying hamlet in touch with the most
advanced medical specialism of the day
It gives at a cost of a two-cent stamp,
the skill and experience that it has taken
years to acquire. Literally at the cost
of a two-cent stamp, since Dr. Pierce
invites sick women to consult him by
letter without charge. And this would
seem to be one of the most remarkable
services rendered by the postal system,
perhaps the supreme service of all. For
while it is a splendid thing to be able to
shop in New York while living in Kan-
sas, and a grand thing to be able to the back,
command the learning of great pro- ■
feasors while working in the Michigan i
woods, it is a <ill grander thing that by | can be swallowed,
means of this cheaply supplied service,
men like Dr. Pierce, who have the dis-
position to be helpful, are enabled to
place their skill and knowledge at the
disposal of those who are being dragged
down by disease, without the possibility
of help from those about them. When
one contemplates the vast and far -each
ing benefits of the mail service, so briefly
touched upon in this article, it makes
the familiar gray uniforrrf of the postman
the most glorious of all uniforms, for it is
worn by the soldiers of the army of peace.
It makes one feel like taking his hat off
to the on-rushing mail train, and cheer-
ing the work and wisdom of Uncle Sam.
DISTRICT OFFICERS.
Judge L. W. Moo* ]
Attorney James L. Storey J
Ulerk..........................Joe Bak*
District court begins on the fif- (
teeutb Monday after the first Mon-
day in January and on the four- ‘1
teen th month after the first Monday I
in August
COUNTY OFFICERS.
Judge Joseph Ehlinger 0
Attorney Sam C. Lowrey
Clerk..... Rudolph Klatt ;
Sheriff August Loeasin
Treasurer. R. T. Bradshaw f
Asseeror 0. H. Steinman® j]
Collector Neul Robison J]
Surveyor L. Vogt |
School Supt G. A. Stierling<|
County court begins on the first I
Monday in January, April July and I
October.
ADVXaTISING BATBS. 1
Advertising, 50 cents per inch foe
There in nothing like Asthmalene. insertion, and 25 cents for -ack
-- SldtaaMMrt iaaertiou, for any time less
than three months. Local notice*
per line for first insertion, and 5 cent*
per Hue for each subsequent insertion.
*ACB. I 3 MOS. I 6 MOS. | 12
# 3 001# 5 50 # io *
' 9 00 ‘
12 50
16 00
IM 00
21 00
34 00
r>2 00
- ..............
TBBMS 0» WSSCXIITION.
A* year, paid in advance .... a. .
“paid .tend of year
throe months
Chief Justice R. R Gain^
Aasocittts Justice T. H. Brown
Leroy G. Deninoa
APPELLATE COURT.
J. H. Hurt, P. J.
W. L. Davidson A J, N. Henderson
Associates.
I«M
that Asthmalene contains tio opinm,
truly your*.
The Boll WeevH.
-arrange Honmal
3UY THE
CHASB BARLEY MAU WHISKY
1
How to Make Orange Snow.
WASHINGTON. 0. C.
SI
li
summer ia over, and if procured
Beady to Yield.
B. F. HARI6FL. Proprittor.
nswi— 1-1 M ~ i
LaGhangk, Junk i», 1903
It makes
a difference
DO YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
How to Cure a Headache.—The
juice of half a lemon iu a cup of
s
I
i
IV. f . SCVCflA.
V£OAR RAPIOS. IOWA
FOR SALK BY
Hackebeil & Wessels.
SOuS
Patents
now may *avs yon a trip to town in grotion. fine appetite. Only 25e nt
J. Msyenbnrg’s drug store.
Saved From an Awful Pate.
“Fzerybody said I >md coneuinp
tiou,” writes Mrs. A M. Shields of
Chambersburg, Pa., "I was so low
after six months of severe sickness,
caused by hay fev.r and asthma,
that few thought I could well, but
I learned of the marvelous merit of
Dr. King's New Discovery for Con-
sumption, used it, and was com-
pletely cured.” For desperate lung
and throat diseases it is the safest
cure in the world, and is infallible
for coughs, cohls and bronchial af-
fections. Guaranteed bottles 50c
and $1; trial hotties free at J. M'ey-
enberg’s drug store.
Bead it in Hi# Newsp&par.
George Schaub, a well known
German citizen of New Lebanon,
Ohio, ia * constant reader of the
Dayton Volkszeitung. He knows
that this paper aims to advertise
only the beet in its columns, and
when ha saw Chamberlain’s Pain
Balm advertised therein for lame
back, he did not hesitate in buying
a bottle of it for his wife, who for
eight weeks had suffered with the
most terrible pains in her bnek aud
could get to relief. He says:” Af-
ter using the Pain Balm for a few
days my wife said to me, T f< el as
though born anew,’ and before us-
ing the entire contents of the bot-
tle the unbearaole pains had en-
tirely vanish^! and she could again
take up her household duties.” He
is very thankfnl and hopes that all
Buffering likewise will bear of her
wonderful recovery. This valuable
liniment is for sale by Win. Hermes'
drug store.
Spring Paver. 1
Spring fever is another name for I
biliousness. It is more serious than <
most pec pie think. A torpid liver 1
and inactive bowels mean a pois- (
■ med system. If neglected, serious .
11 hi ess may follow such symptoms. (
DeWitt’s Little Early Risers re- ■
move all danger by stimulating tb<
liver, opening the bowels and cleans- (
ing tbs system of impurities. Safe
pills; never gripe. ”1 have taken
DeWitt's Little Early Risers for
torpid liver every spring fur years,”
writes R. M Everly, Moundsville,
W Va. “They do me more good
than any thing I have ever tried.” |
—Win. Hermes.
PATENTS
Lunches Bring on Diseases
The “baainese Innch” threatens
to accomplish the destruction of the
human race—ar so much of it aa
dwells in large American cities—if
the statistics adduced by eminent
physicians and surgeons, at a meet-
ing of the Chicago Medical Society,
are found to be the nnfhiling mir-
rors of destiny that the doctors
promise.
In the alarming increase of intes-
timd or “gastric” ulcere such emi-
nent medical practitioner* aa Dr*.
N. S. Davis, jr., W. A. Evans, J. B.
Herrick and E. W. Andrews an-
nounced ia a symposium that they
feared the American stomach would
give out in the course of time unless
the public becomes wise enough to
curb aud regulate the lunch coun-
ter method of hasty eating.
It would seem that danger from
gastric ulceration ia not confined
alone to the men, who are the con-
sumers of the business lunches, but
that women are also threatened. To
the woman’s habit of eating a few
bites at many hours of the day then
imminent peril Is ascribed.
Everyone should counteract the
danger brought aliout by too hasty
or overeating by taking at meal
times Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin
and Herb Laxative 0< mp mnd. Thia
wonderful medicine will keep tb<-
atomach in a perfectly healthy con-
dition, preventing aud permanently
caring indigestion, constipation, bil
lotisneiH, sick headache, and II com
plications arising from stomach tr<m
bles. Try it todiy. Ita pleasnnl
taste and almost immediate effect
will be a revelation to you. 50c and
91 bottles at J. Meyenberg's drug
store.
persuaded me
immediate telief.
anything I want
gestion is good,
immend Kodol.”
stomach trouble by dieting,
only further weakens the system.
You need wholesome, strengthen
ing food, Kodol enables you to as-
similate what you eat by digesting
it without the stomach’s aid.
Leads Them AIL
“One Minute Cough Cure beats
all other medicines I ever tried for
coughs, colds, croup and throat and
Inng troubles,” says D Scott Cur-
rin of Loganton, Pa. Oue Minute
Cough Cure is the oniy absolute!}
safe cough remedy which acts im
mediately. Mothers every when1
testify to the good it has done
their little ones. Croup is so sud-
den in its attacks that the doctor
oftens arrives too late. It yields at
once to One Minute Cough Cure
Pleasant to take; children like it;
sure cure for grip, cough, bronchi-
tis.—Wm. Hennes.
Virulent Cancar Cured.
Startling proof of a wonderful
| advance in medicine is given by
druggist G. W. Roberta of Eliza-
beth, W. Va. An old man there
t had long suffered with what good
! doctors pronounced incurable can-
cer They bel;eve<t^M case hope-
less till he used Electric Bittera and ,
1 applied Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, certain to be needed before the
i which treatment completely enred
“I Mnd DeWitt’# Witeh Hazel him. When Electric Ritttero are
Rnlv for ptlea and ftmnd ita cer J used to expel bilious, kidney and
How to Manicure the Nails.—
Otie of the secrets of good mani
curing is to keep the nails wet and
well greased while the work is
being done. Soak the nails thor
onghly and file them. Cut out
any hangnails, but use the scissors
for no other purpose. Ou no ac-
count cut the cuticle or any part of
the flesh. If you do, it will thick-
en the flesh around the finger tips
and reduce them to a hopeless con-
dition. Remove the roughness on
the nails and all griminess or stains
with the pointed stick wet with
ongaline.
Of what does a bad taste in your
mouth remind you ? It indicate*
that your stomach is in bad condi-
tion and will remind you that there
is nothing so good for such disor-
der as Chamberlain's Stomach aud
Liver Tablets after having once
used them. They cteanse and in-
vigorate the stomach and regulati
the bowels. For sale at 25 cents
per box al Hermea’ drug store.
How-to make peanut cookies.—
Peanut cookies, it is said, will
prove a delight to most mem-
bers of the family. To make them
remove the skins from two cupfuls
of shelled peanuts and put them
through a meat chopper. Cream to-
gether three texspoonfuls of butter
and one cupful of sugar; add three
eggs, two tablespooufuls of milk,
one saltspoonful of salt, the nuts
and enough flour to make a soft
dough; roil them on a floured
board, cut them with a small cut-
ter and bake iu a moderate oven
FUthy Tempi## ia India.
Marred cows often defile Indian
temple*, bnl wotm y*k ia a body
that'* polluted by coaatipation.
Don’t permit it Cleanse your sys-
tem with Dr. King’s New Life PiHe
and avoid untold miaary. They give
lively liven, aciiva- bowala, good di-
SEWING MACHINE
Don' t be ihwlvcd by tlxme who ml
vertioe a $60.i;0 Hewing Machine for
This kind of * machine can
be Ixwii-ht from us or any of our
dculuiw froni*l5.<M)to <18.00.
wc msks » VAairrv.
TH£ KT HONE IS THE BEST
The Feed determlnea the strength c
wrokiUMU of Hewing Machine*. Th
ItaHilnle Feert combined with otln
xlroug pointe makin the New flout
the tewt Hewing Machine to buy.
WiforCIMUflSSS:
ir<< inanufUciuni aud priuui bvioit# parvbuMln
THE NEW HO’IB iE’.YINK MACHINE g(
ORANUI, MA3M.
I ’nl >nH<|e N. Y., Clduaijo, Jtl., Atlanta, #
bL >to.» D.4lhw»,T«»x.,Mnn Franclucr-, ■
• e
Carl Moslg.
aillilllllllllli For Stt. u IIHMUMIIIII:
•J. Ml* YENBERG, Jr..
13. WHITE.
How to Avoid Troubl#,
Now is the rime to provide your-
self and family with a bottle of
Chambarlotn's Colie, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy. It ia almost
f be night or ia your bumrot season,
microbe poison* st the same time {It ia everywhere admitted to be the
thin sslve exerts ita mutch leu* heal- most aueesenfui medicine in n*e for
ing power, blood diseases, shin | bowel complaint*, both for shii-
•ruption*, ulcere and awM vanish dm and adwlte. No family <um black coffer, without sugar or milk,
The following ten rules, says the Foor PronMors Claim That Quick
New York Journal, have been com-
piled by a committee of eminent
physicians as the best to follow for
the preservation of health:
r. Don’t leave your rooms in the ,
morning with on empty stomach. :
2. Never expose yourself to cold |
tain cure,” say* S. R. Mcreiiith,
Willow Grove, Del Operation* un-
necaoaery to enr* pile*. Tbev al-
ways yield to DeWitt’s Witch Hnz-I
Naive. Caras akin djasesra, s'l kind*
A Baal Friend.
‘T suffered from dyapep^ia for
fifteen years,’’ says W. T. Sturde-
vant of Merry Oaks, N. C. “After 1
hud tried many doctors and medi-
cines to no avail one of my friends
try Kodol. It (fhve
I can eat almost
now and my di-
I cheerfully rec-
Don t try to cure
That
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
This preparation contains all of the
digestants and digests all kinds of
food. It gives instant relief and never
fiills tocuro. It allows you to eat all
the food you want. The most sensitive
stomachs can take it. By its use many
thousands of dyspeptics have been
cured after everything else failed. It,
prevents formation of gason the stom-
ach, relieving all distress after eating.
Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant to take.
It can't help
but do you good
Prepared only by F. <1. DeW pit A Uo.» Chicantx
Tbull. bottle contain* 2H r imes the 50c. size.
Wm. HERMES, Jr.
Cd CHASE'S
9ll Iw R*H'’ Mul< wt|lkr
'.Wl-allB-rtey nory-nw
>3- 1 corn, nor olber train. Abo r_
N__11 ho Chau aritew o< porlHcz- \T_V
S| Ilo* la the ealy tyrlrai that
■LnM ellmlaateo every trace ol yen
S' mA 4ltria aad tuoeMI. Bay *
W'Oyle which there la
Ic onlhint to coanteract
■ —-JK “• Nh»»*lda* ^lz***^
. 3 1oaliU«B^^Oej=S
How to Wash Chamois Gloves.
—Make a strong suds with white
castile soap or any other kind of
good white soap, and to two quarts
of suds add one teaspcxmful of bo-
rax dissolved in half a pint of hot
water, says the Ladies’ Home Jour-
nal. When the suds are cold put
the gloves on the hands and wash
th- m slowly and gently, as if w .sh-
i'lg the hands. Rinse in the same
manner in clear water; then draw
o.T gently and hang in a shadj’
place to dry, drawing them into
shape when they are almost dry.
When perfectly dry, rub them be-
tween the hands to soften them.
&----------------------
promptly procure, 0B B0 TBJL Send modal, •featrb,
<rr photo for free report on p-itentabiilty. Book • • How
®W»Ohtni»U.S. and Foreign PatentaaiidTrnda-Marka.”
WFBU. Fa I reel term# eror offered to inventor#
IVrATKWT LAWTHBS OF Iff TXAM* FBAOTICB.l
♦ 20,000 PATEMT3 PROCURED THROUGH THEM.
VAII buninem «*M«tttial. Mound advion. Faithful (
Mm ma *lue. Moderm* eharpea. (
A. SNOW & CO.
RATKNT LAWYERS, £
Opn. U. 8. Patffnt Office,
How to. Clean Shawls.—Soap
should never be rubbed on shawls
or other knitted garments, but a
good lather should be made of soap
and warm (not hot) water, and the
articles pressed and squeezed in
this until they are clean. They
should be well rinsed in several
waters of the same temperature as
the suds. When the water has
been pressed out (not wrung) as
far as possible, let the shawl lie in
a heap on a clean cloth to dry.
Turn it about occasionally to expe-
dite matters, but do not stretch it
by hanging it up. If these in-
structions are carefully carried out
the shawl ought to be as soft and
fluffyjas when new.^
Washington, D. C , June 2.—
Chief L. O. Howard of the ento-
mdogical division of the agricultu-
ral deportment says that prepam-
tious are going forward satisfacto-
rily to begin the experimental
work in Texas of the extermina-
tion of the cotton boll weevil. Vic-
toria, in charge of W. D. Hunter,1 air immediately after you have par-
expert entomologist, with two as- taken of a warm liquid of any
sistants, will be the headquarters, kind.
Other points of operation wiU be
at Calvert and in Washington
county. W. H. Haaris will super-
intend the field work. Near Cal-
vert and Victoria two fields of 150
and 200 acres respectively will be
used on a contract with the owners
to reimburse them for any shortage
below the general crop average for
the state. Agents for the depart-1
ment will conduct all remedial ex
periments with expectation of en-
tire success and without loss to the
landlords.
In the fall, L. H. Schwary, the
oldest entomologist in the depart-
ment, and another expert will go
into Vera Cruz and Laguna, Mex-
ico, tq study the insect iu its orig
inal habits and to ascertain why
the pest has been more destructive
in Texas than in Mexico, and from
these observations to glean a rem-
edy for the arrest of its ravages in
the former region. Expert Hun-
ter has prepared an exhaustive
treatise on the weevil just publish-
ed in advance of the department
Year Book, in which he says unless
promptly arrested this plague of the
cotton plant is bound to spread be
yotid Texa», but that the success
of experiments thus far used war-
rants the befief that the damage
can be materially minimized.
1
Copyright® Ac.
Aaronn r #k«trh and •tMcrlptlnn mat
qiik kly a*' 'rtaln onr •pinion fr«» wnethar an
inv«nHnn u# probably nRt©ntahl«.
uiHAAiiuiotljountMftntlal. Handbook <»n Patenu
sent fm< (Rdevt xpanry ft>r»^nnngpatrtnta
l»;uonta taken thmnnlf M«um A bo. receive
#1 'dal notion wtttamt ehanre. in the
SdtMilic HmmcaN.
A h»nd*nmely tllurfrMed vreeklv. Larweet ctr-
How to Make Cream Nut Fudge,
—Two cupfuls of granulated sugar,
two-thirds of a cupful of milk, but-
ter the size of a walnut, vanilla to
flavor and one cupful of chopped
nut mea’s. Put the sugar and
milk together into a granite sauce
pan and heat rather slowly to the
boiling point. Boil hard, stirring
constantly, and when it is al-
most done add the butter. Take
the mixture from the fire, add the
vanilla and the nuts and stir until
it is smooth and will keep in shape.
Put into a buttered pan to th
depth of a half inch, then check
in squares. If desired, several
kinds of nuts may be used together.
Always blanche almonds before
chopping.
Take the strained juice of three
large, sweet oranges and the grated
peel of one lemon. Soak a pack-
age of gelatin in a cup of cold
water and soak until gelatin is ten-
der; add the fruit juice and a cup
of granulated sugar and’ pour over
these four cups of boiling water.
Stand over hot water and stir until
clear. Strain through thin muslin,
and when quite cold whip into it
the beaten whites of four eggs un-
til the mixture is a beautiful white
sponge. Wet a fancy mold in cold
water, then pour in the pudding
and set away to stiffen. Turn out
and serve with orange jelly cut
into blocks and heaped at the base.
3. Don’t leave yoqy abode in
cold weather without warm wraps
around yonr shoulders and breast.
4. Begin respiration in the cold
by breathing through the none.
This will give the air a chance to
get warm before reaching the lungs.
5. Never place your back near a
heated oven nor against a wall,
warm or cold.
6. Don’t stand before an open
window in a railway carriage, nor
take a drive in an open carriage
after violent physical exercise.
7. Don’t remain motionless in a
cold room, and do not stand in an
open space, on ice or snow.
8. Talk only when you must,
for the old phrase, “Speech is sil
ver, silence is gold,’’ holds good,
even in hygiene.
9. Don’t put off your regular
bath. When the skin is not kept
fresh and soft the cold draws the
pores together and you are render-
ed susceptible to pulmonary troub-
les of all kinds.
to. Don’t retire with cold or wtt
feet. Nothing prevents sleep with
so much certainty as the neglect of
your pedal extremities.
Cost of Martinique Horror to the
Papers.—The public has no con-
ception of what the Martinique dis-
aster is costing the newspapers,
says the New York Herald. The
average man pays little attention to
; the “special cable’’ line and reads
the stirring news without a thought
as to the cost of it. When it is
known that cab'e messages from
Fort de France cost $2 15 a woid,
atul urgent messages J6.45 for
every word, some conception can
be had of the cos’ of covering this
calamity. But that is not all.
I There are the tugs, the special men
11 and the photographers. All this
; mounts into the thousands, but
after all the big papers in New
York feel that it is worth it, and
no expense has been spared to get
this immense story. e
CAVEATS, TRADE ' K8, !’
COPYRIGHTS«:-> • SIGNS. :
< Srtml your !»«■<■••• direct tn TV Mshln*ton, 1
saves time, c«#ote !•••« better service.
My Mkrv rile Is V. B. Meat OMaa FTSB srvli nis - < •
„---—----Attftffiks —tksesilR—
I tSMcvr L FUtrNKB Afnraaa«XWt-l»YIAM< '
n.aw *a«.l*l ••>(.., WM <kaa** * Uu
•HyjENIiyE ACE
2'1
3
|
E which qf the sprtag medicine* S
3 you select. As long as you 8
— have to take some, you should g
E takeone thatisGUARANTEED H
3 to be made of the PUREST is- ■
S gradients. This is
Severa’s
Blood Purifier
g atonic for the nerves, a build- £
S er of new, pure end rich blood #■
E and a specific for all ailments s
arising from impure blood, as 3
eruptions, loss of energy and S
fatigue.
Price $ LOO*
How to Make Rice Fritters.—
Wash one cupful of rice and boil
for five mintes in plenty of water;
pour off the water and add one pint
of milk and one tablespoontul of
salt; boil until the rice is tender;
turn it into a bowl and when cold
add three tablespooufuls of sugar,
the yolks of three eggs, five table
spoonfuls of flour, one teaspoonful
of baking powder, then th* beaten
whites of eggs; drop by the spoon-
ful into hot fat and fry a good
brown. Pile on a platter; Serve
with vanilla sauce.
our daughter of a bad case of seahi
head.” 14 delights all who use it
for cuts, corn*, burns, bruise*, boils,
ulcer*, eruptions; infallible for piles.
Duly 25c at J. Meyenberg’s drug
store.
For btlioumtras use ChamberIsin’e
Stomach and Liver Tablet*. They
cteasM the atomech end regelate
th. bowste, effecting a quick and
1
A,
S. A. A A- p-Tlmo Table.
WKST POINT, TBXAB.
sournwAiu.
No. 42, local pz*-
A Bad Breath
A bad breath means a bad
stomach, a bad digestion, a
a.,.*’* Pilht are
NORTHWARP.
r_ No. 41, local pas-
senger, 11:44 A.M. senger, 4:10 P.M.
No. 44, “Hap-Katy No. 43, ”Hap-Katy
<A.M. Flyer,” 11:50 P.M.
I liver. Ayer’s Pills are
ir pills. They cure con-
ion, biliousness, dys-
i, sick headache.
2»c. A’l 4rarri“«-____
MSCALL/na
PatternsW
M tom ANaw«4 aa4 errlaratlm
tke Outrt ant frwlau I low.
On), io a«4 is Wfoa aath »oo, higher
Aik <l .m S"IJ In miiIv niir «>•»
*■<<1 town, or m I froi.i I
THE MoCALL CO.,
ns-ns-ifr Wait 31it tt. «W vow.
No. 44, "sap
Flyer,” 4:43
Nos. 41 and 42 make immediate con-
nection at Yoakum for Houston arm
aif-point* south. Ticket office at West
Pvast open day and night. For any
information regarding excursions,etc.,
call o* or write to any of the under-
signed, J. F. tiowBXB, Agt.,
Weal Point. Texas.
K. J. Martis. G. F. Luptom.
Gt P. A.. A. G P. A.,
San Antonio, Texan.
A LADIES' MAGAZINE.
A <em; bvautiLil colored >!■!«•; latest
fashion*; dressmaking •mnowiiaA ; (ffary
work ; household hint#; ffcnuN, etc. Sub-
scribs to dbv, or, ««ad M for l#te«t copy
I<Ady agent# wanted Send lor term#
8tyH«h, Reliable, Simple, Up-to-
date, Economical and Absolutely
, Parf«ct-FiUiug Paper Patterns.
r50
JEAR
A FREE PATTERN
(your own selection) to every ffub-
acrlber. Only* 50 cents a year.
MSCALL’S,
MAGAZINES
HEADS,
H i i i 1H
PROFESSIONAL.
Teana
Office Over The First National Bank.
l.aGruiiae, - Texna.
Tesras.
»
h
TexftH
For the Transaction of all Bankinf
Buaineaa.
LuGrnnge,
—DENTIST.-
LuWrauge, < - - Tcxn*.
Crown and bridge work a tpecialty. Of-
fice over Mi>yenberg*» drug ator*.
g H. JARMON,
..........AtUn ney-af-Law
Xja.Ora.B.g’o, - - Texes
^OLTERS, 1.ANE & LENERT,
..... LAW YF.itl*
'^KX.
..
Taxa*.
0TTO KHL1NGKK, Ph. G. M. D.
Physician and Surgeon,
Office:—Old Bank Building, next to
poetoffice.
LnGrunye,
| V C. LUNN,
I'lil'alciuii und Murgeon.
SpeHnl attention given diaeaae^m wo.
nmu and childien t'tifnnlc di.rauie treats^
i>V the month in my offi w on the north aide
of puhli ’ a<|uar>*,
l.uGrauae,
Dr. Seymour will treat the whisky
habit with the Gold Cure.
1
1 id
! NOTE HEADS,
BILL HEADS.
STATEMENTS,
' CIRCULARS,
DODGERS, ETC.
g H. MOSS,
’ ATTO R N K V-AT-L A W.
tl -----
Special Attention given to Collection*.
Probate Matter, etc.
Office over Iron Front Buildiu;
17-1 LAGRANGE.
| > K. KING,
H. SEYMOUR. M. I).
Physician and Surgeon.
Waura-ontoii. - • Texaa,
W. *. nolttOH. 4. T. IIUMCAH.
J^OBSON & DUNCAN,
Attorneys at Law,
(Office: Bcbuhmacher Bank Building.)
LaG luxon. .... T__„
Will practice in all Stale and United ♦
State* vourta.
LEO FBEDE & CO.,
WHOLESALE
GROWERS
— ABD DIALKRB IM
Western Produce
Will practice in all courta in state of
Texas. Office with Brown, Laue 4
Garwood and Lane 4 Krause.' 17.
L; :.,jM
Em -
ph
JOHN SCHUHMACHER
L
J!
I
k
iL
JI
Wdlrich, .
lb* ieeoud Monday in each month.
vto inventors
Second ward
M U
Third ward
TOWN OFFICERS
Mayor. .........
Marahal
Treasurer..«...
Secretary
Attorney. ......
Wn
to wrtte tor our oouildentlal letter Iwfor. up.
pramXo "teia -T.,
wm promptly injmin u. ». aa<l rorrurn
PATENTS
"swift aTco,
latent La*vy«rtt,
ffW- U-S- Pxtert Mte*,WaaWa#tea, D.C.
Good Advico.
Th* moat miaerabl* being* in ih*|
world are th<**e anffaring from dy»-‘1
papal * aad liver complaint Mor* |
than raventy ffv* per eent. of th* j
people in th* United State* ar* *M
dieted with these two di*e**es and j
their effect*: *nch •• sour stomacbJl
sick heailnehe. habitual co*tivene<J
palpitation of th* heart, heart hurnj
walar-brnah, gnawing nnd huminfl
pain* st the pit of the Htomach, y*Sl
low akin, coated tongne and dirndl
«gre* ble taele in the month, eomO
np of food after eating. I<>^|
•pinta, ala. Go to your druggkfl
..Robert Sample |
Will Loesrin 1
....Ed. Mattingly j
Flunk Roaenthal j
E. H. Mora I
ALDlUUiKN.
Firnt ward B L. Zapp 1
W. M. McKinney]
I. Rosenthal |
------------Gus Werth j
...Chae. Helmcamp 1
Lothar Rom j
Fourth ward F H. Wagner J
“ “ J. M. Byrnra i
Precinct No. 5—G. W. Cole, jna- j
tice; N. R. Cole, constable; court j
meet* on Saturday after the first ]
Monday in each mouth at Muldoon. J
Pre. No. fl—Bob Menefee, justice; ]
Torn Seller*, countable; court meet#]
every second Monday in each month j
at Flatonia.
Precinct No. 7 P. J. Janacek, 3
justice; Robert McGill, constable;v
court meets on Saturday after th* I
second Monday on each mouth at ’]
Amniannaville.
Precinct No. 8 c. t.
justice; Robt. Williams, constable; j
court meets cn first Thursday after |
V Tbtepbone K;
422.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The La Grange Journal. (La Grange, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 12, 1902, newspaper, June 12, 1902; La Grange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1304891/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fayette Public Library, Museum and Archives.