The Jacksboro News (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 8, 1906 Page: 10 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Gladys Johnson Ritchie Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
The Ideal Family Laxative.
Is one that can b« used by the entire
family, young and old, weak.- and
strong, without any danger of harmful
effect*. It abould have ., properties
which Insure the same -dose always
THE HOUSE THAT BAKER BUILT.
CHAPTKB VI.
The Chocolate Girl, known under
the Preach name of “La Belle Choco-
latiere,” is familiar all over the world
at the trade-mark of Walter Baker A
Co., Ltd., the famous manufacturers
of cocoa and chocolate. r“
romantic story connected with the nt shopping,
charming young woman who posed
for the original picture. This is
given brlellly in a booklet printed by a hand-bag
Walter Baker t Co. in connection
with some interesting sketches for
advertisements made by children. A
copy of tbe booklet and also a copy
of a new and very attractive little
book containing a choice collection
of recipes by Miss Parloa and many
of the leading cooking school teach-
ers in this country will be sent free
to any applicant. Address Walter
Baker A Co., Ltd., Dorchester, Mass.
Pat Bealft
in Your Hot Bread
of him," said one of the group of
women who were refreshing them*
ls. * selves in a tearoom after a morning
Bach woman dived for
her money, and each Into a different
place. One pulled her purse from
another produced her
money from a chain coin purse which
hung around her neck; still another
opened a big envelope pocketbook to
get at her billa, and another blushed
ever so slightly, as she surreptitiously
dug into her stocking.
“Funny how we all carry our money
in different ways,” said the woman
who had spoken drat. “But It’s not
having1 the same effect, otherwise the
quantity .will have to be increased and
finally lose-its effect altogether. These
properties can be found In that old
family remedy, Brandreth’s Pills, be-
cause Its Ingredients are of thq purest
herbal extracts, and every pill is kept
for three years before being told,
which allows them to mellow. We do
not believe there is a laxative on tbe
market that 1* so carefully made.
Brandreth’s Pills are the same fine
laxative tonic pills your grandparents
used. They have been In use for over
a century and are for sale everywhere,
either plain or sugar-coated.
I Pot health in the good things ^
' made from floor; let the ton- Oj
shine through them; make IT
them light, sweet, wholesome I I
and digestible by nsing L
I£ /% BAKING E
W W POWDER a
2B OUNCES PON 2fi0 H|
It is false economy to risk Hi
your family’s health by nsing
a cheap baking powder. K,
Give them good things ^
made with K C, the
baking powder of known
quality and pnrity.
Before beginning to wait for a dead
man's shoes it might be well to in-
duce some easy mark to board you
while you wait.
Romanes in Writers’ Lives.
A strange comedy and tragedy was
woven Into the lives of Ibsen and
Bjornaon. As young men they wenr
great friends; then politics flung them
apart; they quarreled and never met
for years wnd years. Strange fate
brought the children of these two
great writers together and Bjornson’a
daughter married Ibsen’s only child.
The fathers met after a quarter of a
century of separation at the wedding
of their children.
It isn’t very much consolation to
the. homely girl to be told that beauty
la only skin deep.
/agues M ft, Co.
Chicago
do I take Cardin”? writes Mrs.
Mm II ym Jelemma Mullins of Odessa, W.
H | Va. "Because, after suffering
Hill for several years with female
trouble, and trying different doc-
tors and medicines without obtaining relief, I at last
found, in Wine of Cardui, a golden medicine for all my
ills, and can recommend it above all others for female
complaints.”
Cardui furnishes safe relief for backache, headache,
periodical pains, irregular, painful or unhealthy cata-
menial flow, and all ailments from which sick women
suffer. A perfect tonic for delicate women. A pure
vegetable medicine for girls and women who are subject
to the complaints peculiar to their sex. Has benefited
over a million who used to suffer as you do.
At every drug store, in $1.00 bottles.
Walter** Modest Raquaat.
Melba admires the Independence of
her fellow Australians, but on one oc-
casion she had rather a pronounced
experience with what she «-»lls their
, “delightful impudence.” She had wait-
ed a long time for dinner at her hotel
In a large mining town and finally
made a sharp complaint to the waiter.
“Well, ma’am,” said he, coolly, “you
might sing ua a song to pass the
time.” This to a vocalist who one
evening received $5,000 from William
Waldorf Aator for Binging four aougs
la his Loudon mansion.
English Lace for America.
The United States Importtd $4,284,-
883 worth of lace In 1005 from Not-
tingham, England.
MMd portion of the ear. There I, only one irejr to
cure denfneet.aaS that It by eonetltntlOMl remedial.
Dea/ncie le earned by an inflamed condition of thn
mneona Unla* of the autteeblen Tube. When tbla
tube la Inflamed yon bare a rumbling aonnd or Im-
perfect beariaf, and when it la antirely cloeed, Deaf-
new la tba reran, and unlaw tbe inflammation can ba
taken ont and thia tube reetored to Ita normal condi-
tion, bearing will bn deatruyed forerer; nine casee
out of ten are caaaod by Catarrh, which la nothing
but an Inflamed condition of the mneona aurfacea.
Wa will gfra One Hundred Dollars for any cata of
Deafness (caused by catarrh) tbat csonot be cured
by Hall’s Catarrh Cura. Sand for circular*, free.
F. J. CHENEY * CO., Toledo, O.
nosed milk pitcher that we never
use.”
“I keep mine In the toes of a pair
of slippers,
said another, “and when
I go away ! always put my money
at night in the toe of my shoe. No
burglar would ever think of looking
there lor it.”
“My money Is safely stowed away
in my stocking bag,” chimed In an-
other. “And I keep mine in a match
box that I bought for a Christmas
present for a man, and then got mad
at him before Christmas came,” con-
A Particularly Painful Form of This
Dissaso Yislds to Dr. Williams*
Pink Pills.
Of the many forms which rheumatism
takes, that which is popularly known as
sciatic rheumatism probably tortures its
victim more than any other. Tiiat Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills have cared this
stubborn as well ns painful trouble is a
fact proven by the following statement,
aud no sufferer who rends this can af-
ford to let prejudice stand in the way of
trying these bipod-making pills.
Rheumatism is now generally re-
cognised as a disease of the blood. Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills make—actually
make—pare blood. When the blood is
pare there cau be no rheumatism. Mrs.
Thomas Bresuehnu, of 64 Mill street,
Watertown, N. Y., says:
“ My trouble began with a severe cold
which I took about a week before
Christinas iu 1904. I began to have
rheamatio pains iu my back and limbs
Olid after a time I couldn’t straighten
up. I goffered the most awful pain for
mouths and mnoh of the time was un-
able to leave the house and I had to take
hold of a chair iu order to walk and
sometimes I could not stand up at all.
“ The disease was prouonuced sciatic
rheumatism and, although I bad a good
physiciau and took his medicine faith-
fully, I did not get auy better. After
some six weeks of this terrible paiu and
suffeving I tried Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills and that is the medicine that cored
me. After a few boxes tbe pain was
less intense and I could see decided im-
provement. I continued to take the pills
until I was entirely cured and 1 have
never had any return of the trouble.”
All druggists sell Dr. Williams’ Piuk
Pills, or the remedy will be mailed post-
paid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per
box, six boxes for $2.60, by the Dr. Wil-
liams Medicine Oo., Schenectady, N. Y.
Plenty More!
Russell Sage was much opposed to
drinking. He would often rail with
homely and humorous wisdom against
drink.
“Men drink,’ he said one day to a
broker, “because they are happy, be-
cause they are sad, because they &/c
too warm, because they are too cold.
Is there any logic In that?
“When I see men drinking I think
of a little boy at tbe seashore.
“.This little boy, at play with his
bucket and shovel in the sand, sudden-
ly ran to the edge of an advancing
wave, and, scooping up a handful of
salt water and foam, drank it greed-
ily.
“‘Ob, don’t drink that,’ said his
nurse. ‘It will make you thirsty.’
“ ‘What if it does?’ said he. ‘There’s
plenty more.’”
wins US A ion
dncrlMn* fully all your < lytnptoms
and wa will wad you Fra# Advlca
In plain Mated envelope. Ladles*
Advisory Dept,, The Cluttanoota
Medicine Co., Chattaooora, Tenn.
Treatment of Weak Wrist.
Not very long ago a well-known
schoolmaster declared of a highly
promising pupil that he would, never
be able to write well on account of
his wrist being too weak. This condi-
tion is by no means rare. For the
benefit of such sufferers tbe following
hints are given: During two full min-
utes, night and morning, let the cold
water tap run with some force on the
affected parts. Dry thoroughly, and
then use friction with a soft towel, al-
ways rubbing from the hand towards
the elbow. The best exercise for
strengthening the wrist is fencing with
foils. Another excellent plan, when the
wrist has become stronger, is to face
a companion, interlock the fingers of
your right hand with those of bio
right hand, and to try to so force his
wrist down that if the effort is suc-
cessful he sinks to the floor.
You Cannot
CURE
all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con-
Keeping Parents in Subjection.
In the life of the very rich some
parents still seek to r#,enable those
curfews Incarnate in humble life wbo
keep the. girls at home and the boys
out of the barrooms. Middle life and
‘old age are too hidebound to ^et ac-
customed to the manners of the new
generation of young men wbo are old
and worn before they graduate and of
young women wbo win or lose large
sums at gambling. Children have a
right to expect from their parents do-
cile obedience. At first this may be
difficult, but, as Aristotle says, “Vir-
tue 1b a habit,” and it can be acquLwd.
—N. Y. Evening Post.
meuth or Inflamed eyes by simply
dosing the stomach.
But you surely can cure these stubborn
affections by .ocal treatment with
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
which destroys the disease germs,checks
discharges, stops pain, and heals the
Inflammation and soreness.
Paxtine represents the most successful
local treatment for feminine ilia ever
produced. Thousands of women testify
to this fact 50 cents at druggists.
Send for Free Trial Box
TUB a. PAXTON CO. Bums, Mas*
Chinese Sayings.
Some of the ordinary expressions of
the Chinese fire very sarcastic and
characteristic. A blustering, harmless
fellow, they call a “paper tiger." When
a man values himself overmuch, they
compare him to "a rat failing into a
scale and weighing itself.” Overdoing
a thing, they call “a hunchback mak-
ing a bow.” A spendthrift they com-
pare to a rocket which goes off at
once. Those who expend their charity
on remote objects, but neglect their
family, are said “to hang a lantern
on a rope, which Is seen afar but gives
no light below.”
iCAFTEKSll:^
trees from Dyspepsia, In-
fflSWITTLE digestion and Too Hearty
■I jt/rn Eating; A perfectrem-
■ I V Lfl edy tor Dimness. Nausea.
H PILLS Drowsiness, Bad Taste
■ in the Month. Coated
■nBMMMB Tongue, Pain In the side,
-I TORPID X2VKB. Thflg
ngalite the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
Even When the -Facte About Coffee
Are -Plain.
W. L. DOUGLAS
'3.50 & *3.00 Shoes
MIT IN TMB WORLD
W-LOwglttH BUt Up
MNMtkNffNlldttMJlriM//
It Is curious how people will refuse
to believe what one can clearly see.
Tell the average man or woman
that the slow but cumulative poison-
ous effect of caffeine—the alkaloid in
tea and coffee—tends to weaken the
heart, upset the nervous system and
cause Indigestion, and they may laugh
at you If they don’t know the facts.
Prove It by science or by practical
demonstration tjx the recovery of cof-
fee drinkers from tbe above condi-
tions, and a ’arge per cent, of tbe
human family win shrug their shoul-
ders, take the drugs and—keep on
drinking coffee or tea.
“Coffee never agreed with me nor
with several members of our house-
hold.” writes a lady. It enervates, de-
presses and creates a feeling of lan-
guor and heaviness, if was only bv
leaving off coffee and using Postum
that we discovered the cause and cure
of these Ills.
“The only reason, I am sure, why
Postum Is not used altogether to the
exclusion of ordinary coffee is, many
persons do not know and do not seem
willing to learn the facts and how to
prepare this nutritious beverage.
There’s only one way—according to
directions—soil it fully 15 minutes.
Then It l« delicious.” Name given by
Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read
the little book, “The Road to Well-
vlll* la pkgs. “There’s t reason."
Made Under U.S.
Government Inspection
Hobby, of Columbia Profoosor.
Tbe favorite recreation of Prof.
8mith, of Columbia university, seems
to lie along' tbe line of collecting
mathematical “antiques,'' In which
pursuit be has spent some months of
European travel during the summer
holidays.
Ik Sutton CottnOICoww
SPALDIRB’S ATHLETIC LIBRARY.
Uss Denatured Alcohol.
Denatured alcohol is used in a hat
factory at Manchester, England. The
manufacturers use the spirit, recover
it, and restlll the product In their
own factory, and use It over again
until It is used up.
There is no satisfaction
keener than being diy / > /
and comfortable »// a
when out in the LyfSkH
hardest storm
YOU ARE SURE!
•wTffiK
Time fer a Real Thrill.
H. O. Wells, otherwise an scute aud
interesting observer, says that poker
is a slow game. Mr. Wells has evi-
dently never sat behind a pat full oa
aces and watched another man draw
two cards.—New York MalL
Buchan’s GRESYUG Ointnim!
b • Positive Mctuit* to mu cattleman, wilt
Negative Advantage at Least
There Is this In favor of the automo-
bile, says Mack Cretcher. It doesn’t
get Its tall over the line or shed Its
hair in your face on a windy day.—
Kansas City Journal
msfita sss’.asarjr/.'fcjs
wos flret premium at Tun State Pair and for
Nyeais* Mi beta the standard remedy for
SCREW WORMS AND FOOT ROT
jfSvss
[CARTERS
HfcTTlH
Gaming Must Boar
Fac-Simila Signature
m
imam
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Marks, Tom M. The Jacksboro News (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 8, 1906, newspaper, November 8, 1906; Jacksboro, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth734091/m1/10/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Gladys Johnson Ritchie Library.