The Sealy Semi-Weekly News (Sealy, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 8, 1914 Page: 7 of 8
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127
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mm
IN STERLING
W
Short Curls Back in Favor
LIVES A GIRL
a
I
up fresh from
cut. Tender
r
F
PICKED OUT THE RIGHT TIME
I
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The doctor
$
nad
Dominant Note in New Millinery
pecially for Malaria or Chi/ls and
L
*
1
• 1
l 2
2z
Cuba’s 191 3 imports were valued at
X
-
/
bm. nnci'i pt gen awt roxwi THE LVER
A Sound Sleeper.
Minns this the shape is practical ant
A sailor shape is pictured so that
I'
ie
r
dlhm
taggkuddkmmak
emachaaue
!
Wintersmith’s TONIC
Death Lurks in A Weak Heart
1
Fougereof France received eight bul-
let wounds, a broken arm and other in
juries, and although shot In the calf,
thigh and ankle, escaped being cap-
tured by Germans and limped ten
miles to his regiment Another French
soldler received six bullet and- thrae
R. F, D. No. 2, Johnson City, Tenn.—
"Some time ago my head became cov-
ered with small sores which they said
aroun.
•Rid I
2*
terior, recalled an incident that hap-
pened in a western state. •
Doah’a KLney Pilia
They cur«d .ne an,
I • r «• r haven t
gufored since.""
R
Li
11
sclatic
I took
reme-
ttle
I used
Approaching. But Not Close.
■ "When I left Havre on my way back
I
Who Suffered As Many Girls
Do—Tells How She
Found Relief.
Old Charon Must Explain.
His boat ’ made fast after the last
trip of the night, Charon, homeward
bound, encountered a stranger in one
of the ill-lighted streets along the
waterfront.
"What’s the idea?" asked the old-
sailor.
"Summons," the stranger replied,
producing the papers. "The Interstate
commerce commission wants to know
how you killed off all competition.
You public-service corporations are in
for a hard winter.”
M
Sterling, Conn.—“I am a girl of 22
years and I used to faint away every
DIDN’T APPRECIATE THE JOKE
Girt Made Victim of Hoax by Mis-
chlevous Friends Went Homo
In a Fury.
Relieved.
She—I hear small checks are to be
favored for dresses this season.
He—Thank heaven!
W.n
vy ■ j
h
ggat-3*
What It Takes.
‘Tre got lung power enough to learn
the corpet."
"Have you got courage enough?"
Schoolboy a Good Deal More Thought-
ful Than Most Youngsters We
Ever Heard Of.
I fail. Purely vegeta-
eble — m • surely A
French war ofice estimates only two
men. are ‘killed out of every one hun
n batter taste than with it.. The ha:
It trimmed with bands of silver baad
l|
.A-
This R is for You g
22
0,8
T*,%
fheumnttem 1
all kinds of
die. but COt
ruef until I
I
I
I j
n the garden as soon as
and flavory. White or green
This Is Not the Way. -
Wife (with magazine)—Here’s an
article on "How to avoid war.”
Hub—What does it say—remain sin-
gle?
r —
r) )
F ) .
—--=c.
Constipation
•FsljonNe.
"One blessing; Tehst,
$594
MEA,‛
—=9)
Birthplace of Froissart and Watteau.
Roth Valenciennes and Malines, two
of the latest towns to come into
prominence in the western theater of
war, have now little association with',
the'production <Jf lace beyond giving
their names to the famous varieties.
At Valenciennes, Indeed, the manufac-
ture has been discontinued, but the
place has an alternate fame as the
birthplace of Froissart, the historian
-(nearly six centuries ago) and of Wat-
teau, the artist (230 years ago.)
—Take CAPUDINE—
For HEADACHES and GRIPP., it’s
Liquid—Prompt and Pleasant.—Adv. ;
Approval.
“Are you still Interested in garden-
Ing?" ..
"Yes,’’ replied Mr., Crosslots. "I
like to see gardening' get every en- i
couragement. I have bought an in
terest in a hardware store."
ERYSIPELAS AND CHILRLAINS
Alleviated and cured by the use of
Tetterine. It is an old established and
well known remedy for Hezema: Tet-t
ter. Ground Itch (the cause of Hook- !
worm Disease), Infant Sore Head. !
Chaps. Chafes and other forma of skin |
diseases.
Escapes in Heat of Battle,
Reports Indicate it sometimes takes
a lot- to kill a modern soldjer, the
New York TWorl states. Sergeant
CARTERS
• ITTLE
■ IVER
Vanishes Forever -
Wedt through two soldiers and lodged Trunjpt Relief Permanent Cure
CARTER’S LITTLE 25
LIVER PILLS never MN; > .
iinent and new features are
ted to the eye. Although
"Everu Pieture
zu u as-n, “
—peeled or unpeeled. Insist on Libby’s. If WA
your grocer cannot supply you, send us his name. N2
Try thia racipa:—
Asparagus with Eggs—Salt and pepper well one can of
Libby’s Asparagus. Beat four egga just enough to break up
the yolks, add a tablespoonful of melted butter, pepper and salt,
and pour upon the Asparagus. Bake eight minutes in a quick
oven, and serve immediately. ' - •
Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago |
2 ____________________________
Found He Was Mistaken.
A man from the. country, in charity
one will say from th country, although
I he may have been a Bostonese, en-
tered a New York restaurant the other
evening, and while waiting to be
served, gave his attention to an elec-
tric fan revolving just above his head.
It was a high pressure fan, noiseless,
and almost, if not quite, invisible be-
cause of its rapid motion. The stran-
ger gazed at it for some considerable
time and was heard to mutter: “I don’t
believe there is anything there at all.”
With that he put up his hand to con-
firm his belief. Immediately there was
a yell that almost threw the place into
a panic. The man sprang into the air,
rushed out of the door and, as he dis-
appeared, was heard to say: "I mon-
keyed with the buzz-saw, all right"
ALMOST BALD WITH ECZEMA
/ ■ .
4
and an ornament of spangles re
sembling small wings.
JULIA BOTTOMLEY.
s
TO. unermr-ooea uu
set In foliage and ferns are mounted
against the brim in a manner that
convinces one that the maker of this
hat was an artist.
A wide-brimmed velvet hat with a
section of the front brim cut squarely
away, making a short. straight line in-
stead of a curve, is trimmed at this
point with two short ostrich plumes
and a short loop and ends of, velvet
ribbon. The. ribbon is fastened to
place with two jet bands. The big
black hat has a warm place ‛m the
regard of women, and deserves it.
A small and striking hat very
frankly draws its inspiration from
grim-visaged war. Mounted above the
blithe countenance of a young girl
one may forget the associations that
are suggested by its likeness to the
soldier's helmet. The most extreme
development shows the chin strap
if You Suffer From Hot flashes or dizziness, fainting
---ou-rtencrom spells, hysteria, headache, bear-
ing down pains, nervousness—all arc symptoms
" of irregularity and female disturbances and are
not beyond relief. • _____
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
Euiaiama Cqperage Cu Flegmemineliaa.Vang: ’
ek, Uur svecinity As compiete mutched sel
| MuuolhbtelandlunluUpN. Weik ueyonr reguiromente
‘God Save the King’ in English.” By
the nine gods of war! as our own Gen
eral Bingham wduld say. this incident
taken in connection with the Belgians
stepping to the front chanting, "It’s
a Long Way'to Tipperary." seems to
indicate the approach of the much-
touted brotherhood of man."
Yes, perhaps. But wouldn’t it be more tlnued frost or snow in England re-
accurate to call them take-offs?’” suits in the idleness et*000,000 work
. --------- men.
Strong Man’s Weakness.
Speaking of great feats of strength
Franklin H. Lane, secretary of the in-
The Human Automobile
The human body, like an aptomobile,
changes-fuel (food) Ino power. When the
fuel is too rich, or the mixers and valves
are out of erder, waate products clog the
machinery and reduce the power.
-The kWneys, like sxtizuM r»Iv«, sEbnld ’
Carry off the waste (urie acid), but weak
kidneys can't Uric acid In excess causes
headache, weak eyes, rheumatic pains,
gravel, dropsy and fatal Bright’s disease.
Donn’s Kidney Pills help the kidneys,
fight off uric acM. It is the best-recor-
mended special kidney remedy.
A Texas Case
Fever. Hivosor six doses will break
any case, and it taken then as atonic - dred lrit. The penetration is so clean
the fever will not return. 25c.—Adv. one soldier did not know he had been
—---- ' hit tor three hours, and another bullet-
vi..
a-
DM.e ' a ....
among that great number classed as
sailors, or as “the.canotier," the brim
is irregular. It widens at the left
side and shows a small upward curve
at the front. The brim edge is bound
with silver braid and a pretty and
distinctive touch is given by the little
bow of this braid. which is mounted
at the back, as If it terminated the
binding.
Roses in silk and metallic effects
is directed to the reel equse and promptly removes the disene,
suppresses the pairs and nervous-aymptoms and thereby brings
comfort in the place of prolonged misery.
It has been sold by druggists fo over 40 years, in fluid form, at
11.00 per bottle, giving general satisfaction, It can now be had in
sugar coated tablet form, aa modified by R V. Pierce, M. D. Sold by
all medicine dealers or trial box by mail on receipt of 50c in stampa.
Every sick woman mar eomnsult us by letter, abaolutety without charg,
Writg wjthqnt-seer t Without few to Faculty of the Invalids’ Hotel
Dr. R. V. PIERCH- Prmaident,608 Mnih Street. Buffalo, Now York
It Helps a Lot.
। Eve, for the first time in their mar-
ried life, was telling Adam just what
she thought of him.
- - “This is the original rib roast,"
chuckled Adam.
And that was the beginning of the
, saving griice of humor.—Judge.
California
—— Asparagus
if you've never tasted Libby’s California a
Asparagus, there is a treat in store 24
for you. Grown on the islands of /2
the S. ramento River, the finest
Asparagus region in the world. Put -*KE
P VERY one will welcome the re-
XL turn, after a brief absence, of the
fashion for short curls, worn at the
side of the face, for evening coiffures,
and at the back of the head whenever
• those who like them care to add their
charm to the hair dress. They are
the easiest and most "fetching" of lit-
tie finishing touches, when they can
be worn at all. It is said by those
who ought to know that some women
cannot wear curls. Just why this is
Bp is apparently among the unknow-
able things. But every woman can
experiment for herself and be influ-
enced by the result.
The little curl may be made at the
time the hair is dressed, and of the
natural hair. If one has naturally
curly hair, it is easy to manage. But
few people are so blessed, and the lit-
tle curl is generally a very satisfac-
tory bit of artifice. At the hair deal-
ers short curls are made in clusters
like a new girl and I am now relieved
of all these troubles. I hope all young
girls will get relief as I have. I never
felt better in my life. ’ ’—M iss Bertha A.
PELOQUIN, Box 116, Sterling, Conn.
Massena, N.Y.—"I have taken Ly-
dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
and I highly recommend it If anyone
wants to write to me I will gladly tell
her about my case. I was certainly in
a bad condition as my blood was all turn-
ing to water. I had pimples on my face
and a bad color, and for five years I hsd
been troubled with suppression. The
doctors called it ’Anemia and Exhaus-
tion, ’ and said I was all run down, but
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound brought me out all right”—Miss
La visa MYRES, Box 74, Massena, N.Y.
Young Girls, Heed This Advice.
Girls who are troubled with painful or
irregular periods, backache, headache,
dragging-down sensations, fainting
spells or indigestion,should immediately
seek restoration to health by taking Ly-
dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
A popular member of a certain
school board tells a good story of a
certain schoolboy who enjoys the
unique distinction of having attended
one school for 11 years without being
once absent or late.- in evidence of
this, the youth is the proud owner of
11 medals. When the eleventh medal
was conferred the boy’s mother was
asked whether her son ever had any .
illness.
“Oh, yes,” she replied.
“Measles?"
"Yes.”
"Whooping cough?”
’’Yes’’
"How Is It, then, that he has been
able to make so remarkable a record
at school?”
"Well, he generally had ’em Jn
his holidays,” was the proud mother’s ’
interesting reply..
FO"rOWN PEGGISE WLFw.RH’wXOV
j SpFin"*k,
by Mil Free. Mrthe Mye hemmedy Ou- hicago
to us from this dreadful war. We •
shan’t be inundated with shocking Not All Sunshine
French fashions.” Flatte— Didn’t Jod say if you but gentiyon
The . spea ker was a leading Club- married me it wi th! be all sunshl,? the liver.-
woman. She resumed: , Mr. Flatte—Yes, I did. " Stop after A
“At a club dinner the.other evening “Well, I suppose )oq,.realize that dinner dis.
J. R. Maxwell, Atlanta, Ga., says: "I )
One afternoon an elderly woman., suffered agony with n severe case of
visited the penitentiary, and on paus-anaws mrtadspiir.dwherent remgetor
ing before a certain cell was told that i told me to try Shuptrine’s Tetterine.
the inmate had been imprisoned for AnaesoapnFam Wmplerly curcartrerine
stealing a piano. ' । not say too mu% in its pralse."
« .m Im + eo. .. no- •• . Tetterine at drusgista or by malt 50e. ,
I am very sorry to see you here, Soap 26c. j T. shuptrine, savannah.
remarked the woman turning to the Ga. Adv-
convict. "Is it true that ’you stole a . •
fell
No. SIX-SIXTY-SIX
This is a prescription prepared es. —bayonet wounds and is recovering The
to England.”’ 8as Representative 43, 826,869 ; exports, $165, 125,053.
Gardner of Massachusetts, "600 French ,
soldiers lined up on the dock and sang
of three, or more, fattened to a steel
or strong wire pin. Of all the pieces
made to be pinned on they are the
easiest to keep in order and the eas-
iest to adjust.
An example of what short curls
will do in accomplishing a dressy
coiffure is shown in the illustration
given here. This hair dress is no-
ticeably pretty, but imagine it with-
out the curls and it will not be no-
ticeable in any way.
Some people cherish a prejudice
against wearing false hair of any kind.
But women have helped out scanty
locks for as many ages as history re-
cords, by supplementing them with
extra pieces, to very good effect. There
seems to be nd objection to a false
tooth from any quarter. Anything
which really improves the appearance
will always be used and with the best
reason in the world.
JULIA BOTTOMLEY.
month and was very
weak. I was also
bothered a lot with
female weakness. I
read your little book
‘ Wisdom for Wo-
men, ’ and I saw how
others had 'been
helped by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegeta-
ble Compound, and
decided to’try it, and
it has made me feel
will come in a cavalryman’s saddle..
GASHION decrees that the choice of
I millinery shall have an almost un-
limited scope during the coming fall
and winter seasons. When we con-
sider fabrics one may elect to wear
velvet or felt or plush or satin, and
also combinations of these materials
As to size, hats proceed from the
small, brimless, close-fitting turban to
.the wide-brimmed picture type,
____’through all graduations in width of
brim. Shapes are as varied an the
fancies of those who design them.
There are, therefore, hats big and
• little, brims wide or narrow, and
crowns tall or short.
For street wear the small hat is
sensible and smart. The snugly-ft-
ting, well-shaped turban reaches its
highest dcveRpmc.it when made for
wintry weather. With a variety of
trimmings, at treat as that in shapes,
and with particularly brilliant novel-
ties at hand, the turban is a flourish-
ing thing of beauty decked out in
decorations that are simple but et-
fective.
Something of the diversity in size
and trimmings and styles is more
plainly set forth in the illustration
given her than can be conveyed by
mere words. These are all velvet
hats, new in shape and excellent in
piano?”
"Yes, ma’am,” was the frank admis-
sion of the convict. Then he added:
"I did it in a moment of weakness.”
“In a moment of weakness!” gasped
the elderly ’ visitor. , “Mercy me! I
presume that had you had your usual
strength you would have walked away
with the whole house!"
design. Each one is a style of many N
of its particular kind and each is well: A
worth consideration.. ; 1 I >i
Mustn’t Be Quoted.
"Dolphin looks so Important you
would think he was crammed full of
state secrets.”
“So he does. If Dolphin makes a
prediction about the weather he ex-
pects you to treat It as strictly confi-
dential."
. If ‛oue " fluttering or weak, um "ENOVINE" Mada by Van Viet-Mansfletd Drag Co. Memphis. Tenn. Prloe s1.00
pm-dez*SN
28 > 7999922622
e-a
One day several of my girl friends
called to see me. We started to make
some candy when I discovered that
we didn’t have any chocolate in the
house and said that I couldn’t possibly
make It without “a speck of choco-
late."
Mary, one of the girls said: "Why
what kind of chocolate is that —
couldn’t you use any other kind?”
One of the girls gave me a punch
and I said: "Oh, no, I couldn’tttse any
other kind. It’s just a new kind. You
telephone the grocery and order some,
Mary, and we’ll start the candy. Now
be sure and order ’Aspecka.’ ”
So we filed to the kitchen and left
Mary to telephone. We sat in the
kitchen holding our sides with sup-
pressed laughter while she called up
one store after another trying to get
"Aspecka chocolate.” She finally gave
up in despair and then we told her.
Needless to say, she went home in a
fury, as mad as a wet hen. She bare-
ly spoke to us for weeks after that.-
Chicago Tribune. ! "
How Europeans Get Our Gold.
Do you know just how Europe re-
cently got that 1125,000,000 in Amer-
ican gold. Well, here is the way it
was done: Europeans hold great
amounts in American securities, which
is to say they have bought bonds is-
sued in this country. When the war
crisis came they saw the need of ac-
tual money Inplace of. these bonds.
They cabled to their American bro-
kers to sell at the market price. They
took whatever they could get, but
there was always something offered,
so the sales were heavy.
The purchasers of these bonds gave
their checks. These the brokers
cashed at their banks and got curren-
cy. This currency of the United
States is made good by the deposit,
of gold in the treasuries. For every
gold certificate in existence there is
the actual metal in the treasury. So
the brokers, getting the currency from
the banks, went to the sub-treasury in
New York and asked for the actual
gold. They received it and sent the
gold to their customers abroad.
Get Donn’s at Any Store. 50e a Box
DOAN* 8 ", PLL"‛
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N.Y.
ItB
"My old nag has one advantage
over an automobile. It does’t re-
quire any intricate mechanism to
start her."
Mrs J E. Cor, TO!
St Francis St., Ter-
re 11. Texas, say*
“After an attack of
grip, I had such se-
wre ■ backaches I |
could hardly get
cured." (Signed) J. W. Fisher, Jan.
L 1914.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-
enrd "Cuticura, Dept L. Bo»ldn.“—Adv.
Mors of IL
“Juno was an ox-eyed beauty.” 1 1
"I guess if she lived in these days
she would be a peroxide one. too." I
— was eczema. They were red and in- ,
flamed and when I would comb my
head they would break and run a yel-
foyish matter. My hair wae-coming
ou by handfuls until I was getting
almost bald. My hair was so dead and
— dry it seemed as if it would break off.
"I put on---and —- and several
other remedies without getting any '
help. I got a ca^e of Cuticura Soap
A-and some Cuticura Intment and used
A them. Ia a short time the pimples
■ dried up and my hair stopped falling .
7 ' out and is thick and glossy. I am
11
> Matt1 ■'fashtom—wrliur— num fashion rve A'of a lot of rain-checks coming to tress-cure j
writers are tih"best—said to me: me!” indigestion,
mafatrenmtenenren forelen moden: megcycostoraaawensnas ■ SZnix^^" pS
“’Caricatures?’said I. ‘Caricatures? It has been figured that a day’s, con- Genuine must bear Signature
6
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$ 44 h
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The Sealy Semi-Weekly News (Sealy, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 8, 1914, newspaper, October 8, 1914; Sealy, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1494485/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Virgil and Josephine Gordon Memorial Library.