San Patricio County News (Sinton, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 28, 1910 Page: 7 of 8
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"Vine
,,. Controlled Newspapers. ; ?
* The Atchison. Globe says that no ad-
vertiser has ever tried to control its ed-
itorial policy, the remark being oqcar
sioned by-the charge often mad'e nowa-
days, that the big advertisers direct
the editorial policy of newspapers.
The experience of the Globe is the
experience of most newspapers; The
merchant who does a great deal of ad-
vertising is more interested in the cir-
culation department of a newspaper
than in the editorial department. If a
daily paper goes to the homes of the
people, and is read by them, he Is satis-
fied, and it may chase after any theory
or fad, for all he cares. He has troubles
of his own, and he isn’t trying to shoul-
der those of the editorial brethren.
There are newspapers controlled by
people outside of the editorial rooms,
and a good many of them, more’s the
pity; but the people exercising that
control are not the business men who
pay their money for advertising space.
The newspapers which are established
for ,political purposes are often con-
trolled by chronic officeseekers, whose
first concern is their own interests.
There, are newspapers controlled by
great corporations, and the voice of
Sii6h newspapers is always raised in
protest against any gentiine reform,
. The average western- newspaper usu-
ally is controlled by its owner, and he
is supposed to be in duty bound to make
all ..sorts of- sacrifices at all sorts of
times; there are people who consider
v, A BAD THING TO NEGLECT.
• ••.-sis?:**, f.Kv
J>9n’t neglect the kidneys when-you
notice lack of control over the secrer
lions. Passages become too frequent
or scanty ; urine is discolored and sedi-
ment appears. No medicine for such
troubles like Doan’s
(1 Kidney Pilia. They
quickly remove kid-
I 'L ne3r dlsorderS-
ynlSpT R Mrs. A. E. Fulton,
|j 311 Skidmore St.,
\ JjJ Portland, Ore., says:
swelled
The Mighty Traveler Goes Buoyantly Through «
Long and Trying Reception-Parade, Showing
Lively Interest in Everything American
My limbs
terribly and I was
bloated
The White Company Receives Unique Compliment
for the Sturdy Reliability of Its Steam Car
From Mr. Roosevelt and Family
over the
P»gJ \ ^ stomach and had
. 1 *\ puffy spots beneath
| ^ - *" *^1 the eyes. My kidneys
were very unhealthy and the secre-
tions much disordered. The dropsical
swellings began to abate after I began
using Doan’s Kidney Pills and soon I
was cured.”
, Remember the name—Doan’s.
For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a
box; Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
H ■ ^
ATTRACTED BY THE GOSPEL
Koreans Have Shown Themselves
Willing ahd Anxious to Hear
ithe Word.
Rev. C. T. Coliyer writes as follows
in the London Christian:
“It is more than twenty-one years
since I first left home for the mission
field. NeverKnbwn of people
being so ready; ttt hear the Gospel as
are the Koreans just how. i have had
the privilege of doing a good deal of
persbnal work during the past few
| one, who regularly takes the air
^omeone’e else touring car', presents
uirself these days In bon net. and L
Protecting cqgt which fastens Into a
ffibat-dress.” This garment Is qf pon-
■jw or linen, very practical, dainty and
protection ggaiinfct the dust from
MRtur to hem; .-jt is shaped in such
EBariety of ways that one may choose
Ham among .tbei (pattern books the
■wt becoming style. , The elmplest
raes remain the best and the coat-
4|m should be .plain. . Brilliantine,
Bit. the washable variety, is another
■pice In fabrics, where the wearer
weeks. Without stretching the point,
I can say I have had personal con-
versation with several hundreds of
heathen. Not one to whom I have
Bpoken but has acknowledged that he
must become a Christian. The young
empress of Korean has not been ma-
king good progress with her studies,
so; it was felt she ought to have some
young lady companions who are used
to study. A young lady from our
school was chosen for this position.
She has been in the palace less than .a
mqnth, but she has found many oppor-
tunities of witnessing for her Lord,
with the result that her majesty has
definitely set one hour each day for
the study of Christianity, and ordered
•that a Bible and hymn-book should
be procured for Her;.f it has been my
privilege to order a specially bound
copy of the New Testament for her.”
Theodore Roosevelt and Party In White Steamer.)
After fifteen months’ absence, exact-
ly as scheduled, Colonel Theodore
Roosevelt disembarked from the Kai-
serin Auguste Victoria. Saturday morn-
ing, June 18, at 11 a.'m. To the keen
disappointment of a large group of
newspaper correspondents, Mr. Roose-
velt absolutely refused, as heretofore,
to be Interviewed or to talk oh politi-
cal subjects, but his rapid fire, of ques-
tions showed the same virile Interest
immediate party landed, they r were
whisked awgy in While Steamers to
the home of Mrs. Douglas Robinson at
;433 Fifth avenue; A little later, whett;
the procession reached the ©orner of
Fifty-ninth street and > Fifths. avennet
Colonel Roosevelt again showed. hie
preference for the1 motor"'cat't#gtrn^
eraland: the White cars-in particular,-
when he, Cornelius Vanderbilt and Gol-
that Is ungrateful for-the . patron-
age Of his friends. .It is a funny com-
bination when you think it over.
Emporia Gazette.
03j*pes the * land abroad, and has al-
T§ady‘arrived over seas to us. Skirts
are narrow to Inconvenience at the
bottom and figures |^^^t that the
'Ctirset is about to D^^mrgotten—In
effect—but not of course in reality.
African women have ceased to ac-
cept everything P&r#B chooses to hand
tout to them, however, and It remains
'to -^J^eifeJaithow the banded skirts
and coats will be received. Hut there
is no doubt about the liking for soft
draperies, and old- classic models
never fall of spme degree of wel-
come. The manner of draping fine
■ bits of old Chantilly Is shown in the
picture just as a suggestion to some
one who may own a mantle or Bhawl
or a long scarf. There are any num-
ber of ways by which it may be made
to become a part of {he costume.
Shawls are arranged with the point
-vr-------- ” — * fastened to the bodice at the hus$. line,
gloves enable the* plaited In at the waist on each side of
the front, but hanging free at: this
point, , and tacked to the skirt at the
sides. This is not the only manner
of placing them. With trained gowns
the £ne shawl of old laee may play
THE REASON,
is ma4« of Madagascar
ficttr on a supporting veil frame and
does .not crush--the hair. - The- crown
M made of an oblong piece folded in
aai the bonnet 1*
sblrred.ta^sm^;^Tles of
lector Loeb transferred from theircary,
riage to White Steamers, ■whick were
in waiting for them. 1 .1
After luncheon at Mr,-Robinson’s
house, fbe, ..entire party, r Including
Colonel
cars and were driven to Long Island
City, where they were--to take a spe-
cial train to ^ ex^sidqet’js
at Oyster Bay.
The supremacy of the White cftrif
with the Roosevelt party was a&Spk>
demonstrated on Sunday, when the
party was driven to church: in the
in public affairs as before.
If the welcome tendered by the
vast throng may be considered a
criterion upon which to base a “re-
turn from Elba,” surely there was no
discordant note in the Immense recep-
tion-parade, nor In the wildly clamor-
ous crowd which cheered at every
glimpse and hung on his very Word.
The incidents of the day in New
but perhaps none
to taffeta, made from pieddtoifk, are'
§exat-£:
►rt these bonnets hardly deserve the
imer for there is so llttlto.to them.
Mclbthls-a wiry fabric .jahlch
led* little help to rtotain ft In place.'
It the bonnet Is designed to be cod
id the wire supports are made to
sit end;. It must not Set too clone to
(p heed. These pretty head pieces
ok very elm pie and they ape—as
York were many,
better illustrated the nervous energy
and vitality of the man, the near-mania
to be up-and-doing, which he has
brought, back to us, than the discard-
ing of horses and carriages for the
swifter and more reliable automobiles.
The moment the Roosevelt family and
provided dean
matter wta ’httf.?
ifcAnnlndltv T p-nooa
.t beaut;
| f by marketing fake . tablets. similar: in
,i; appearance to Carcarets. Care should
• always be exercised in purchasing well
advertised goods, especially an article
that has a national sale like Casqar-
eta. Do not allow a substitute to be
palmed off on you;
\ ! Well, Wasn’t He Right?
The minister was addressing the
Sunday school. “Children, I want to
talk to-yoU for a few moments about
One of the most wonderful, one of the
most important organs, in the whole,
worlds’ he said. “What is that that
throbs away, beats away, never stop-
ping,’-never ceasing, whether you
wake or sleep, night or day, week in
and week out, month in and month
out. year in and year out,. Without any
volition on your part, hidden away in
the depths, as it 'were, unseen by you,
throbbing, throbbing rhythmically all
your life long?” During this pause
for orato-rieat effect: a.srnall voice was
heard: ; “1 know. It’s the gas meter.”
all the money put |n pur.polio^/*
tor‘c-ttutoi:. cloth
^=j I is an absolute savings that no .
/ I .disaster* or financial strain can
I Mpi J force out of your hands?
I I It ii your?;;spur>:feV:ani'
/ m L ctlldren’s absolutely, and no- ,
I 1 V % FBm thing can force it out of yoi*r-
\ \\ J and their hands. This i-sthto
, kind ^protection that protects^
This Is the Kind of: Policy Offered by ttio> a
iT FOR YOUNQ GIRL.
INGENIOUS -COAT HANGERS
Good Substitute fer a Regular Article
When Suqh It Not at . ... .
Hand.
Looked Like a Pattern.
“My dear,” asks the thoughtful^ hus-
band, “did Vou notice a large toheet
of paper -with a . lot of diagrams on;it!
abopt my desk?” ; >
“You mean that big piece with dots
and curves and diagonals and things
ail over it?” •' ^ . •;
“Yes. lt% was my map of the path
of Hailey’s Jc6\iiet.'' I wanted to—”
; lMy gdbdhfesfe! 1 -thought’ It- was that
paftern ^ ^sk^jd yeti: to get- -and the,
dressmaker is cutting put my. pew
shirtwatsh by it!”—^Chicago Evenipg
/.) ,5*fl 1 ba'A .70-a.
A coat or jacket of any description
should be JtepD on « coat hanger—
when not being worn. If a regular
hanger does not chance-to be oh hand
a good substitute can be evolved by
making a tight roll of wrapping paper
or newspaper and tying about the cen-
ter a string, with-loops left. to> hang
it on the book. f r - ^ - -
, The Paper roll if ,,s.Uflifii£Utly.....thick.
will keep a coat In shape nicely.<
Most w’aists are also Jbett^r hung up,
. .The Miser of Sag Harbor. .
“Economy,” sai4 Daniel W. Field,
tbs'.millionaire shop' manufacturer ofri*
Boston, who at the age of forty-five /
lias entered Harvard, “economy is es-
sential ;to w.^ajtp, b.util)y economy I
don't haean’ higgardllhessi
1 i “Two many men fail to attain to' ’
Wealth because they practise a
cheeseparing ilinil- mean 'economy that
gets, everybody dowp. ^n.them1.- .oil; ;
“They pracfise, in faot,..an economy
like that of old William Brewster of''
.Sag Harbor. William, you know, would
never puy oysters.; because he couldn’t
eat shells.and. al)”r ■fr.
tq nishion good "hangers v/itli only a
X &w old papers, a bit of string and
. Vjus* a monle^t's time and %6fkf
For travBlfcg’ Tfif sifidll; ' of ex-
■ tension hangers are delightfully com-
, pact and a great convenience. These
>,jp c'Sh alBo be bought separately
and a bag of silk or dimity ma(ie. for
them to be xtarried in^'' ' ,v
; Statistics . Go Lame.., :v.d J ‘
" ’Peafs t’ me thar’s somethin’
wrong with sterti&ficks,” remarked the
oldest inhabitant as he dropped;'into
32610 ^
5£;yeT ioiftojrsA
his us up 1 pi ape. on the loafers’ bench;
“Whm’a Wrong with ’em ?” queried
the vinbg'e grbeer.: • •
be. x^arried\in.
Oldest and Best T«ntt; for Malaria and Debility.
^ no bad elfects. Tak* no substitute. FRIK*—
' ; :c o °f
-7 ;r 'r • - • >
.- Trying *o:!satisfy HiVtol VfibiH'7
- Squeamish Gueft (as waiter places
i ?svatfcc-:pelovbhim)^-iWttitefl- ■ arte you
;sure this is boiled distilled water? ;
Waiter—I am positive, sir.
• c Squeamish^Iueat -tputting it to his
lips)—But it seems to taste pretty
har^. for distilled water; - ) v ■ ': ? *.l
w \y.gjter—That’s .. because-, it's hard-
A Flounce Finish. r ... ! “Is that so?" said tb«;Srt
Tmtfnleh tiler upptor edke of a flounce “Yaas,” answered the: ■
onj a delicate white? Atiock there is sug- bjr ginger, wb ain’t had ’em
gested a new Idea in a Bpray of silk ' > ;i i mh < .........
flowert. .Ml'in# and’ trailing 'tendril Rose;to ivV:
made of a milliner’s fold of delicate 'rD«. you know,” said
pipk-eaMir is-tacked'along tlii» TBie of rflve' tfo a companion the oth
JoinJ^; Where the, chiffon. or. tulle - lsr father knd L know everyth
fastifo the'kklrtT Tlanging' from f don’t know my fathep. l
thl^aa distances qf three or fqur inch- ^ bat my father don’t know
es; tore BifeaHest \ \ IMA11 right! Let’s see, thi
imaginam#,"‘’«aae"of pink ribbon and the older child, skeptically.
•re pleated, the two are connected by
A malarial waltUbaod which haw-the-
F debt end pointed, and fastened over
/• on the left; cord ornaments and but-
t<m.
aatin might be nsed to fqqe. collar and
\ euHfHxkcrMO htu* *6 ".r.tta*
Hat of iUH.etraw; trinsmed CWlth
velvet or rosss. Vi ornttiq nai
, Materials required: 3 : yards 48
^ Inches wide. ^ dozen buttons, %
yard ailk or velvet.
boilM distilled w(ater, sir. , .
I :■ ■ ■- M- : ■ j -7" U:
Caring f drj t.hfe la by.
Old Lady—W’hat a nice boy, to
watch your. • little brother ^care*
fuify!:;-J ■■ ;; . ;;;
Nfce Bcry—Yes. ’iim/- H6 jukt Swal-
lowed a dime and I’m afraid of kid-
napers.
Rich relatives bare a mania for liv-
ing to a ripe old age.
CI«Me<luA?b) tbe C. S. War Eit^rtaeii. - ’ Goauihit« D. &. 4jr*7 Ofj^yi^
Third successive yew winners of championship competitive drill v ’’ **
San Antonto.Internationa! Jgir. . r> lo ' .'*
Only miRtary school in Texas'whose graduates are admitted.' *
.- r to State Uhivenety wigySM^ exandnatoMk l * ; ) ;",V X •> .7..
Thorough work. ; Small classes : lndmduatattte»aa» -- -;
Athletics and outdoor sports. NcW buddings next year. ‘ r ------
Boys from homes of refinement only destrod.- -<■ < l • > ■
Prepares for College, Government Academies oc .
, - n;- ■■ -*» siir y
IlluoratM caulac tml an request tA*Anm
ANGUS McD. CRAWFORD. M. A., Principal Box 16 San Aatocdo, Texas
Notes and Comniants.
rhtirch—Does your, neighbor play
that cornet Without notes?
Ootham-“Yes; but not without com-
ments.—Yonkers Statesman.
To Inaert Rlhben.
. When removing ribbon from soiled
Corset covers fasten a piece of twine
& on one.end. and pull through, take off
the ribbon, leaving the string in the
* cortfet coVer while it is being laun-
V 4eitod. *? Then .by tying the ribbon on
ton# end Main it is easily pulled back
ContottpaflGn causes many serlons diseases. It
is thoruuRtily cured L>y l>r»ctor Pierce's Pleasant
Peliets*. One a laxative, three for cathartic.
•> i
yr&D
WSAU ANTONIO,
. (j 7T. .
The morning after is responsible
for many good resolutions,
Many a man enjoys a pipe because
his wife bates it.
place.
m #•' flinV «<
Because of tho®« ugly, grizzly, gray hairs. Use “LA CREOLE” HAIR RESTORER. PRICE, Sl.OO, retail,
>v> '
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McCauley, W. S. San Patricio County News (Sinton, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 28, 1910, newspaper, July 28, 1910; Sinton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth718806/m1/7/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sinton Public Library.