The Savoy Star. (Savoy, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, March 26, 1909 Page: 2 of 4
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UP-
TURN ABOUT FAIR PLAY.
■• - -iiki;'*. , *
Somehow Mrs. Newlywed Couldn’t
Xj, See the Point.
' * A young friend of mine, a jolly, con-
sort of a chap, got married re-
and at the end of the first
ipon receiving his salary of $20,
it home, gave his wife $18, and
i for himself.
j she thought that was love-
to her astonishment at the
week he handed her
f dollars, keeping $20 for him-
to here, John,” she said, in-
“how do you suppose I am
manage on two dollars a
know, I am sure, my
rered. sweetly. ‘‘I had
time of it, last week, my-
rv 4 -<.i
but vajm’t he the mean old
“—Argus. »
mi.
INADEQUATE.
I
ik—Did those mustard
that I left seem to relieve the
your chest to any consider-
I? /
Tell, no; I can’t say that
, but (apologetically) I’ve
i only five of them!
Humiliation. .'
small hoy of six is rapld-
; manly ways. Not long ago
at school planned an en-
There were to be little
recitations and a myste-
The small boy waxed
concerning the. coming gh>-
r, and more especially
he would take.
> morning of the entertainment
suggested that he should
little sister, aged four, with
hung his head.
want to take her?" his
fftm’t.” he answered.
' v
came quickly.
ain’t none of th' other
■*.*»brlM lMr <a““tr”1"
Will Be Interested,
i have pains Hi the back. Urinary,
’ <W Kidney trouble, and want a
gleasant herb cure for woman’s
otter Cray’s AU
_a_§afe and never-ftqiingreg
BACKACHE 13 KIDNEYACHE.
Usually There Are Other Troubles to
Prove It.
Piin in the back is pein in the kid-
neys, in most cases, and it points to
the need of a spe-
cial remedy to re-
lieve and cure the
congestion or in-
flammation of the
kidneys that is in-
terfering with their
work and causing
that pain that
makes you ’say: j
”Oh, my back.”
Thompson Wat-1
kins, professional
nurse, 420 N. 23d
St., Parsons, Kans.,
says: "For some time I was an-
noyed with sharp twinges across the
small of my back and irregular pas-
sages of the kidney secretions. Since
using Doan’s Kidney Pills I am free
from these troubles.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milhurn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
GOOD NEWS EPITOMIZED
HAPPENINGS OF UNUSUAL IN’
TEREST TO OUR READERS, IN
READABLE SHAPE
BOTH FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
■cure for woman's
Grays AUSTRALIAN
^ 9 and never-failing reg-
At all Druggists or by mail 50 eta.
package FREE. Address. The
Gray Co.. Le Roy, N. Y.
A Bad Break*. .
■ a bad break Dr. Oreeu
ur r ;■
our traveling man to
tor a while And travel
l"—Detroit Frpe Press.
Slightly Mixed.
Little Oliver, six yeaps old, had
learned the song in which is oft re-
peated the refrain: “Glory, glory, hal-
lelujah.” and for some time he had
been singing it with great enthusiasm
and vigor. Finally he became silent,
and after a brief period of cogitation
he said: x
"Mamma, what does ‘hallelujah’
mean?”
As simply as she could his mother
explained that it was a religious ex-
clamation meaning “praise the Lord.”
He seemed rather surprised at the
information, but his next question of-
fered ample explanation of why he
had thrown so much vigor into his
singing. ."If that’s whgt it means,” he
said, “why do they throw corn and
have j&ek' lanterns on hallelujah
night r _
Piecing Out the Prayer.
Of curious prayers a writer says: "1
have heard a layman utter this petition
during the prayer: 'O, Lord, be thou
with us in our upsittlngs an our down-
risings’—a variant of the text in the
psalms. ‘Thou knowest my downsit-
tlngs and mine uprisings.’ A minister
occasionally introduced a Latin sen-
tence into his prayCr, and forthwith
proceeded to translated. Another min-
ister in his early days experienced con-
siderable difficulty with the long prayer
before the sermon. In nonconformist
churches this usually occupies a quar-
ter of an hour, but long before this pe-
riod had been reached he was wound
op. On one occasion, while in this di-
lemma. he startled his hearers with the
words: ‘And now, O Lord, I will re
late unto thee a little anecdote!’ “
-A — • * ■ i
• Beware of Ointments for Catarrh
that Contain Mercury,
| u mereary will cutely destroy the eeoee of smell
and completely derange the whole system when
entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such
I erodes should never he used except on prescrip-
tions tram reputable phystdana. as the damage they
vM do la ten fold yp the good you can possibly de-
rive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by P. i. Clutter A Co.. TWedo. O . contains no mere
easy, and is taken Internally, seeing directly upon
‘ *• internally and made in Totak*
y A Co. Testtmou tala tns
if It Was of Sufficient Importance
You Will Find It Recorded
Here.
WASHINGTON NEWS.
The Secretary of the Treasury at
Washington, says: There is no foun-
dation for the widely circulated report
that the payment of over $50,000,000
of claims against the Government,
now due, has been passed by the
Treasury for the want of ready cash.
The new tariff bill was introduced
Wednesday by representative Payne.
It provides for an inheritance tax, in-
creased internal revenue tax on cigar-
ettes, a $40,000,000 issue of Panama
Canal bonds, Increased issue of$150r-
000,000 in Treasury certificates and
imposition of duties on a maximum
and minimum basis.
Representative Morris Sheppard of
the First Texas District Thursday out-
distanced all entries in the great race
for the distinction of having intro-
duced the most bills. He dropped
fifty-one bills in the hopper at one
drop. > , e.
That President Taft will probably
recommend to Congress in his mes-
sage in December the pasasge of an
income tax bill, the proceeds Of which
are to be devoted entirely to water-
ways improvements, is the assertion
made Friday by -Representative Ste-
vens of Minnesota after a talk with
Mr. Taft.
Undaunted by the fact that there
will be no legislation except tariff,
and possibly census, at the extra ses-
sion of Congress, and that no com-
mittees are to be apoplnted for the
consideration of bills except Ways and
Means, Mileage and Accounts, Con-
gressmen are feeding bills into the
Congressional hopper at a rapid rate.
Government officials will soon hear
of a plan to utilize airships and aero-
planes for saving life rather than de-
stroying it. This plan, which is now
being worked out, contemplates the
establishment of experimental serial
stations at some of (the Government
life-saving stations, with the ultimate
view of using aerial craft to aid ves-
sels in distress.
The new' American ambassador to
Austria will be Richard C; Kerens of
St. Lonis. The State Department at
Washington has cabled to the Austrian
government asking if he is persona
'grata. A reply in the affirmative has
been .sent. »'
time a married man tets.oot
that he is free from woqgy
married men give him
Erin. ' r* * '
Troche*” *(ve relief
LUn* Troubles. A stra-
ins a box. Samples seat
i A 8on, Boston. Maes.
out of a possible ten wear
after they have been mar-
fc. Yon
of duty runs parallel with
i happiness. •
Fiery Courtesy. v
In a Canadian town a few days ago
a dry goods firm was burned ont In
the moreing. In the afternoon a com-
peting flnn*fnserted the following ad-
vertisement In a local paper:
“We desire to extend our sympathy
to oar respected competitors in their
loss by fire and to express the hope
that their affairs may soon be so ad-
justed as to enable them to continue
business without undue loss of time.**
And It Was Overruled. .
Judge Hoar and Gen. Butler were
opponents in a case of a new trial. Gen.
Butler quoted: “Eye for eye. skin for
skin, tooth for tooth, yea. all that a
man hath, will be give for his life.” To
which Judge Hoar replied: “Yes, the
devil quoted that once before in a mo-
tion for a new trial.*’
Why Paint?
Natural roses are far more beautiful than arti-
ones, and though it may be fashionable for pale
le to use the rouge pot, the results are more at-
tive and lasting, if you will follow the more
ral fashion and take Cardui.
Cardui enriches the blood, through the nervous
r the main connecting link of which, is in the |
ly organs, like the exchange board of a tele-
line.
CARDUI
The Woman's Tonic
GH 150
j,:;*
I
“Cardui is all the doctor I want,” writes Mrs.
Frye, of Montoya, N. Mex. “ It is the finest j
licine for women that ever was. I cannot say too
lpuch for it. It helped me and also
my mother, who had been suffering!
for three years from the .change of
life. I advised her to take Cardui and
now she has taken one bottle and it]
has helped her and she feels like a
different woman.”
Try Cardui. It will help you.
Sold everywhere. Buy a bottle today. ]
DOME8TIC AND FORbfGN NEWS.
Mayor John H. Bonner of .Tyler,
will attend the next meeting of the
Texas Mayors’’ Association, which
meets in San Angelo in July, and while
there, he will try to secure the 1910
•meeting for Tyler.
One cent postage is provided in a
bill which Representative Bennett of
New York has introduced in the Sen-
ate &$ Washington. The measure pro-
vides beginning Jan. 1, 1910, the rate
of postage on all letters mailed in the
United States for domestic points, in-
cluding dybp letters, shall be 1C per
ounce or fraction.
The attention of Representative
Garner, in Washington, has been cal-
led to the damage threatened to the
military reservation at Brownsville by
the encroachment of the*Rlo Grande.
Concern over, the danger to the reserv-
ation is expressed at the War Depart-
ment and Congress may be asked to
relieve the situation by an appropria-
tion of $40,000.
Ennis is just now getting well start-
ed pa a campaign of bqilding cement
sidewalks. A great deal of this line
of improvement has already been
made and other citizens have con-
tracted for several hundred feet of
walks.
According to* a statement issued
Thursday in New York by the Nation-
»1 Association for the Study and Pre-
vention of Tuberculosis, more than 20,-
100 church congregations in the United
States, in over 100 different cities,
have had the gospel of the cure of
tuberculosis preached to them.
The sum of $220,000 will be dis-
tributed to the Osage Indians next
week. Of this sum $100,000 is the reg
ular quarterly allotment and $120,000
Is a partial distribution of the town
lot fund.
In its amended form the House
Thursday considered the bill, provid-
ing for the taking of the next census.
The bill was passed at the last session,
but was vetoed by the President be-
cause of his objections to the pro-
vision which took away from the Civil
Service Commission the power of ap-
pointment of the clerks.
The Government of Italy has offered
| a reward of $2,000 for the apprehen-
I slon of the murderers of Joseph Pet-
■ rosino of the New York police depart-
ment.
Gov. Haskell of Oklahoma has sign
ed the bill that makes available $10,-
000 for relief of cyclone, tornado and
famine sufferers in Texas and
Cimarron Counties, with an additional
$1,000 for persons residing in the
southern part of Kiowa and Caddo
Counties, and the northern part of Co-
manche County, who suffered from
hailstorms on June 10, 1008.
A force of about 100 Greeks Is ex-
| pected in Brady to work on the street
| grading.
A bulletin was posted at the Katy
shops Thursday ^t Denison that they
would be closed Friday.
The fifth annual convention of the
Central Texas Dental Society was
held in Temple Saturday.
The Wright brothers have placed
an order with a London firm for the
construction of six aeroplanes.
An automobile route from Denton
via Slidell to Decatur, is the latest
suggestion which has been advanced
Mayor Woodall of Hillsboro has is
sued a proclamation designating Tues-
day, March 30, as a general cleaning
up day for the city.
The rain which fell in Taylor Friday
afternoon was accompanied by a se
vere windstorm, which did consider-
able damage in that vicinity.
The Attorney General has approved
the $25,000 issue of Hamlin city water
works bonds, and they are now being
engraved by a Dallas firm.
An explosion occurred in Reid Mine
No. 1 at Adamson. Okla., Tuesday
morning. A-shot firer named George
Petri was killed and the mine set on
fire.
President Taft Tuesday sent to the
Senate for confirmation the nornina
tion of R. B. Creager, as collector at
Brownsville, for the port of Brazos
Santiago.
George Thorndike Angell, the “friend
of dumb animals" and leader in the
humane educational movement in the
United States, died in Boston Tuesday,
aged 86 years.
It is currently reported in Bridge-
port that the final location survey foi
the Graham-Stamford extension of the
Rock Island is completed through
Young County.
The J. C. Trees Oil company drilled
In an oil well with a 500-barrel ca
paclty on Jeems bayou, northeast of
Moorings Port, La., not far from the
Texas line, Friday.
A deal was consummated Monday
in which Capt. S. B. Burnett, of Ft
Worth, sold to Edgar Boice of Wy-
oming 2,000 2-year-old steers at $25
per head, or $50,000.
At a depth of 1,800 feet a gas blow-
out occurred in one of the wells being
drilled for oil at the Medina oil fields.
There are also good indications of a
heavy flow of oil in this well.
E%ht miles more of the Katy’s new
track between Denison and Atoka
Ok., will be open for traffic- some time
this week, bringing the doable track
within twelve miles of Denison.
The flood of waters on all rivers in
the state of Alabama threaten to reach
a stage as great as that of the spring
of 1886. Many wagon bridges have
been washed out. The railroads ara
still in good shape. ,
Dr, John’William Jones, who by his
historical works and close association
with General Robert E. Lee and Gen.
Stonewall Jackson, gained the title,
“historian of the Confederacy,” didd
Wednesday, in Atlanta, Ga.
Drawings and plans of ‘the world’s
first airship to be operated by wire-
less electricity were completed Satur
day, and next week construction will
begin in the balloon factory of Lee
Stevens, in New York.
Special dispatches from Berlin state
that the Luka-Anser publishes the re-
port that Count Forgach, the Austro-
Hungarian Minister to Servia, has
been assassinated. Nothing of a con-
firmatory nature is obtainable.
. In a fire atHhe Palan mine .of the
Mexico Coal and Coke Company, lo-
cated at Menor, State of Coahuila, twe
Japanese miners were asphyxiated
and damage to the amount of approx-
imately $50,000 was done to the mine
The further stay of two weeks of the
mandates in the three Waters-Pierce
Oil cases has been ordered by the
United States Supreme Court. The
original stay of execution was to have
expired Saturday, March 20, and was
granted to give the Waters-Pierce Oil
Company and Bradley W. Palmer time
to file a petition for re-hearing.
Dr. J. H. Eastland, secretary of the
Parkdr-Polo Pinto County Medical So-
ciety, is receiving data on the meeting
of the Northwest Texas Medical So-
ciety, which will convene at Mineral
Wells in April.
It is now believed to be a certainty
that a conference of the five Presi-
dents of the Central American Re-
publics will be held shortly.
At a meeting of the Commercial
Club in Gainesville Friday night, it
was decided to accept the proposition
of capitalists to build a street rail
way in this city.
The latest piece of freak legislation,
Introduced in the Missouri House, is
.the bill calling for a poker commission,
to be named by the Govenor. The
bill was introduced Saturday. The
commission, in the bill, is called a
“board of control for poker players.”
In view of the assertions made in
the British House of Commons that
Germany ^in the spring of 1912 would
have seven warships, all of them of the
big gun type, the Navy Department au-
thorizes the statement that in the
autumn 1912 Germany will have thir-
teen of such vessels.
Fire destroyed three wooden store
buildings at Wastella. on the Roscoe
Snyder and Pacific railway, Tuesday
night, damage being estimated at
$5,000.
The authorities of White County,
Ind., have learned that a youth named
Charles Stinson is dead as a result
of hazing by fellow-students at the
White School. | It is said , that the
hazers strung 8tlnson by the ankle to
a sapling near the school building and
left him dangling so long that he died
in a few hours after he was taker
down.
GALVESTON IS FAVORED
DOUBTED TALES OF SCIENTIST.
f
Scotsman's Summing Up of Character
of Man of Learning.
ENGINEERS REPORT FOR HARBOR
IMPROVEMENTS BELIEVED
TO BE ENDORSED.
!
Sir Archibald Geikie, the distin-
guished geologist, who will probably
succeed Lord Rayleigh as president of
the Royal society, tells a good story
in his capital book of “Scottish Remi-
niscences.”
“I was quite sure you had been in
our neighborhood,” a friend said to
Sir Archibald. "I met the old farm-
Possibly One-Fourth of the Estimated er °* ® - w^° kfld a strange tale to
MATTER AWAITS APPROVAL
FIDO DULY WARNEO.
IE
tell me.
“ ‘Dod, Mr. Caithcart,’ he began. ‘I
ran across the queerest body the other
day. As I was coming by the head of
the cleugh I thocht I heard a wheen
tinkers quarrelin’, but wheii I lookit
$29,000,000 Has Been
Recommended.
Washington, March 23.—The Board
of Engineers today reported its rec-
ommendations on the comprehensive
system of improvements for Galves-j down there was ae wee stoot man.
ton harbor. The report went to Chief Whiles he was chappin the rocks wi* a
Engineer Marshall for his indorse- hammer, whiles he was writin’ in a
ment. The line of questioning indi-1 book, whiles fetchin’ with the thorns
cated that possibly one-fourth of the
estimated $29,000,000 project would be
authorized. It was apparent that the
board might recommend a partial in-
crease in the depth of the channel in-
stead of the full thirty-five feet, but
that the project would be treated as a
harmonious whole, with a depth for
the same draft of vessels for Galves
ton, Texas City and Bolivar.
and misca'in them for a' that was bad.
When he cam up frae the burn, him
and me had a large confab. Dod! he
tell’t me a’ about the stanes, and hoo
they showed that Scotland was ance
like Greenland, smoored in ice. A
very entertainin’ body, Mr. Caithcart,
but—an awful’, awful' leear.”—Tit-Bits.
Look here, Fido, if you can’( be a
better horse than this I shall have to
discharge you an’ get an automobile!’’
Hard to Get.
Junior Partner—I’m going to adver-
tise for an honest man.
Senior Partner—Tell the newspaper
people that we want the “ad” to run
for a year or two.—New Orleana Picay-
une. ___
For Colds and Gripp—Capvdine.
The best remedy for Grlpp and Colds is
Hicks’ Capudlne. Relieves the aching and
feverishness. Cures the cold—Headaches
also. It’s Liquid—Effects immediately—]*.
25 and 50c at Drug Stores.
< -
No man will become a drunkard if
he knows how to make a homo run.
Some Resemblance.
A little girl in a California public
, school complained to her teacher that
Kirby Lumber Co.’s Case. «, Mexican boy had struck her. The
Beaumont: It is learned here on teacher took'Joe, the ohly Mexican
Authority said to have originated with {joy in the school, sharplv to task for
B. F. Bonner that April 30 is the day ! the offense, but the boy denied it.
named when the Kirby Lumber Com “Mary,” said the teacher, “Joe says
pany receivership will cease and the! he didn’t strike you.”
tremendous properties of the Kirby “Oh, no,” said Mary, “’twan’t Joe;
Company will be given back into the twuz that tother boy over there," and
control and management of John she pointed to the blackest of negro
Henry Kirby. boys 1h the school.
--j “But, Mary, that boy isn’t a Mexi-
Peach Crop Damaged. can,” said the teacher.
Little Rock: A heavy hailstorm! “Well, anyhow,” said Mary, “he’s
which passed through Miller and Co-j very much tanned.”
lumbia Counties Friday night killed . js
pigs and did great damage to the peach for e flfteen yearm
trees throughout the two counties. It, jjunt>8 Cure has been working on the
is estimated that the peach crop of the | ltg ml„ion i8 to cure 8kln
two counties was damaged about M particularly those of an itch-
p0r cent. ing character. Its success is not on
“ , , . i account of advertising, but because It
Mount Vernon’s Proposed Line. 8urely doeg the work 0ne is
Mt. Vernon: M. J. Healy, general j guaranteed to cure any case.
manager of the St. Louis, Oklahoma j —--
and Texas Railway, is here with a He Objected,
large crew of civil engineers and sur- "Meeker tells me that he wants
veyors and will begin work Tuesday handcuffs abolished.”
_ Us* Alisa’s Foot-Kau
Cure*tired.aching, strestiDgfe«t. Sc. Trial |
free. A H. Olmsted, Le Roj, N. T.
It is what it is “cracked ap to ba"
it is ice.
*■=
, %
m
■
ii >jjir
■ vM
surveying for the new railroad from
here to Sulphur Bluff.
Terrible Mine Explosion.
Evansville: Thirty men are en
tombed, six dead have been removed
“Is Meeker interested in crimin-
ology?” } |
“No; hiB wife is In the habit of cuff-
ing him on the ear."
Don’t Delay.
Save a possible serious spell of fever
and a party of rescuers are working (gter on by jcleanBing your system now
in a driving rain at the Sunnyside coal 0f its accumulation of impurities. Sim-
Posttlvely cured by
these Little PlHa.
They also relieve DU-
tree* from Dys pep
d igesUon and Too I
Eatinr- A:
udy for :
Taste In the)
ed Tongue,
Side, TORI
They regulate the Bowels. Purely
SHALL PUL. SMALL DOSE.!
mine near here. A windy shot fired
at 3:15 o’clock Saturday afternoor
caused the disaster.
Cotton Carnival for Galveston.
Galveston: The Galveston Business
League, embracing‘the suggestion of
Malcolm Graham that a cotton carni-
val be given by the organization dur-
ing the first part of August, has en-
thusiastically taken up the matter and
launched the enterprise.
mon’s Sarsaparilla will do it It j
makes fine blood, fine appetite, great
strength and grand ambition.
He who is false to duty breaks a
thread in the loom, and will find the
flaw when he may have forgotten the
cause.—H. Ward Beecher.
Many Attorneys Present
Muskogee, Ok: No less than 200
lawyers from all parts of Eastern
Oklahoma thronged the United States
Circuit Court room Monday when argu-
ments were heard on demurrers on the
30,000 land suits filed by the Govern-
ment to clear the title to Indian landa
Red, Weak. Weary, Watery Eyes
Relieved by Murine Bye Remedy. Com-
pounded by Experienced Physicians. Con-
firms to Pure Food trad Drug Laws. Mu-
rine Doesn’t Smart; Soothes Eye Pain.
Try Murine in Your Eyes. At Druggists.
UKTtfS
Genuine Mi
Fac-Simite \
—
Thy faces of some men look like :
accidents—and some others look Uka t
disasters.
iJGK
•vim.--;
. fi- -
Vi
Franchise for Pipe Line.
Fort Worth: A franchise for laying
a pipe line for the transportation of oil j
and gas from the Clay County line to
the city limits was Monday granted
to E. R. Brown and associates by the
Tarrant County Commissioners’ Court
What little some men do know isn't
any credit to them.
Terrell Tag Day Receipts.
Terrell: The total receipts from
“Tag Day” sales last Saturday amount-1
ed to $603. This will be used for the
benefit of the public library.
Shipping Eggs to New York.
Wichita Falls: Two more car loads
of eggs are ready for shipment to the
New Yerk market from Wichita Falls, j
This makes four cars of eggs leaving
this point in the past two weeks, and
bespeaks the industry of the hens ip
this section.
!
Y’isVi
m
from woman’s ailments are ■invited to write to the____
addresses here given, for positive, proof that Lydia E. PLukham’a
Vegetable Compound does cure female ills.
~ wm- tojjp in Painful
Goshen, Alov—Mrs.W.
Prince Hilkoff is Dead.
St. Petersburg: Prince Michael Hil-j
koff, a member of the Council of the1
Empire and formerly Minister of Com-!
municatlons, died suddenly Sunday.
Ellis County drainag^l
Waxahachle: ’At a meeting of the
County Commissioners Saturday after-
noon the property owners in Cham
bers Creek Valley drainage district
No. 1 were given authority to issue
bonds in the sum of $40,000 for Im-
provements of the district.
A,'*“
Lladley, Ind—Mrs. May Fry.
Kinsley, Kaos.—Mrs. Stella Gifford Beaman.
Scott, S. Y.-Mra. 8. J. Barber. .
CornvallriHs, S.Y—Mr*. Wm. Bough toe.
Cincinnati,O.—Mr*. W.K-HouakTkMtriswAr
MUwaakss, Win.—Mr*. Bum hutrlO la*
Ind.—Si*. Fred Certia, 1014 S.
New Mexico Governor Resigns. .
Santa Fe, N. M: Gov. Curry Mon-
day telegraphed President Taft his
resignation as governor of New Mexi-
co.
Catle to St. Louis.
Mexia: Buck Stroud of Groesbeck
shipped ten cars (250 head) of fat
steers to St. Louis Monday from this
city. This shipment of steers was fed
in this city on cotton seed meal and
hulls.
Terrell Lighting Plant.
Terrell: The building for the new
city lighting plant is bmng con-
structed. Machinery for the plant has
been ordered and will be put in place
a§ soon as the building is completed.
8L Otrmatt.
_____j of Life.
South Bead, Ind.—5
Lafayette Street.
Noah, Kentucky.—Mr*. Lizsi* Holland.
Brookfield, Mo.—Mrs. Sarah Louxtguont, 907
8. Market St.
Paterson, N.J. — Mr». Wm. Somerrilla, 135
FUUd*feh^l4?2£*i K. K. Garrett, 3407
North Garnet Street.
Kevaakum, Wla.-Mrs. Carl Dahlke.
Maternity Trouble*,
r, Maas. — Mre. Dueytra Cote, UT
gate Street.
. >llaJad.;-Mi*. A. F. Anderson, HOT
K. Pratt Streak
Big Ron, Pa.—Mr*. W. K. Pooler.
A tester Million, O.—Mrs. Anton Mnathnapt.
Cincinnati, Ohio.—Mr*. E. H. Maddocks, -zfe
Gilbert Avenue.
Mogadore, Ohio —Mm. Lee Manges, Bos LSI.
Dewittvilta, N.Y.-Mra. A. A. GOw.
Johnstown, N.Y.—Mr*. Hooter N. Seaman, KM
K. Male Street.
Bortonriew, 111.-Mrs. Peter Inngenbnhn
Avoid Operation*
Hampstead, Md.—Mr*. Jo*. H. Dandy.
Adrian, Ua.—Lena V. Henry, Route No. S.
ludlauapolls^Ind.—Beetle V. Piper, 39 South
Louisville, Ky.—Mr*. Sam Lee, 3C23 Fourth St.
South West Harbor, Maine.— Mr*. Lillian
Robbins, Mt. Desert Light Station.
Detroit, Mich. -Mrs. Frieda Rosenao, 544
Meldrom Avenue, German.
Organic Displacements.
Morier, Ilia.—Mr*. Mary Ball.
Ligonter, Ind.—Mr*. El(*aWood,R.F.P.Xo.4.
Melbourne, lows. —Mr*. Clara WateriuaAii,
R. F. 0. No. 1.
Ban Is town, Kr.—Mr*. Joseph Hall.
Lewiiton, Maine.—Mr*. Henry Cloutier, 06
Oxford Street.
Minneapolis, Minn.—Mr*. John G. Moldan,
2115 Second Street, N.
Shamrock, Mo.—Juste Ham, R. F. D. No. I j.
Box 22.
Mar I ton, N.J.—Mrs. Geo. Jordy, Route No. 3,
Box 40.
Chester, Ark.—Mrs. Ella Wood.
Ocilla, Ga.—Mrs. T. A. Cribb.
Pendleton, Ind.—Mrs. May Marshall.R.H.44.
Cambridge, Neb.—Mrs. Nellie Moslander.
Chicago, 111.—Mrs Wm
Paw Paw, Mich..—Mrs. 1
Flushing, Mich.—Mr*. I
No. 3 ; car* of D. A.i_____s
CoffeerlUe, Mim.-Mr*. 8. J. J
Cincinnati, Ohlo.-Mra. flora J
Cleveland. Ohio-Min
Fleet Avenue, S.K
Westerville, Pa^-I'
Mrs. Lael
plys!!
Jit
m
FrmncU MerkleJS Field
Clarksdaie, Mo.—Mh
Guysville, Ohio.—Mi
■ i . i y
i Anna Wallas*.
Clarksdaie, Mo.—Mia* Anna Wa
‘ ~ M*
. Harry L. Kittle, 23) Leh-
Srke*. Tenn.—Minnie Halt
Dearoit,Mlch.—Mr*. Loaiae Jnng.mCheefnt
®** Ovarian Trouble.
Vincennes, Ind. —Mr*. 8y 1. B. Jerauld, MB X
Tenth Sire^t.
Gardiner, Main*.—Mrs. 8. A. William*, R. F.
D. No. 14; Box 33.
Philadelphia, Pa.-Mr*. Chas. Boell, 9407 X
OfiTDft Street
riatuburg, Ml**.—Mis* Verna WUk«a,KFJ>X
Female Wen
Wlltimantie, Conn.—Mia. J
Woodaide, Jdabo.-Mr*. Rachel Johnson.
Hock land, Maine.—Mr*. WiU Young, • C*U
urn hi * Avenue.
Soottville, Mich.—Mr* .J.G. Johnson. R.FD.3.
Dayton. Ohm.-Mr*. F. X Smith, 431 Kim 8k
Brie, Pa.-Mr*. J. P. EndUch. 1.1.1). No.T.
Beaver Falla, Pa.— Mr*. W. P. Boyd, tm
Seventh Avenue.
Falrchanoe, Pa.—Mi*. L A. Dunham, Box 183.
Fort Hunter, Pa.—Mr*. Mary Jan* Shatto
East Earl, Pa.-Mr*. August u* Lyon. K.F.D. L.
Vienna, W. Va—Mr*. Emma Wheat on
Ooanga, Mae McKnlght.
Camden. N J.—Mrs. TiUU Waters, 451 Liber-
ty Street.
Joueph, Oregon.—Mr*. Alice Huffman.
Philadelphia, Pa. — Mr*. John Johnston, ID
Siegel Street.
Christiana, Tenn.—Mr*. Mary Wood, R. F. D.
No. 3.
Pec on. Texas— Mr*. Ada Young Eggleston;
Graniteville, Vt.-Mra.Chaa. Barclay, K.F.
'/
lijSf'
The Credit Mobilier.
In the campaign of 1H72 It was
charged that the v!< e pr< . hjent. the
vice-presiidcnt elect, the secretary of
!ho treasury, several senators.
the speaker of the house and
% large number of representatives had
been bribed during the years 1867 and
1868 by presents of stock in a corpora-
tion known as the Credit Mobilier
(organized to contract for building the
Union Pacific railroad) to vote and act
(or the benefit of the Union Pacific
.At
Railroad Company. An investigation
committee appointed by congress re-
portrd February 18, 1S73, recommend-
ing the-expulsion of Oakes Ames of
Massachusetts for selling to members
of congress shares of the stock of the
Credit Mobilier below their real val-
ue, with intent thereby to influence
the votes' of such nMnohara," and of
James Brooks of New York for re-
ceiving such SfeBjritir The boose modi-
fied the proposed eggateion into an
"absolute condemnation” of the con-
duct of both members.
Gasoline Baths Win Divorce.
Los Angeles, Cal.•-Because gaso
line was the only fluid she would use
to wash their two children Cyrus San
ford was granted a divorce from Min-
nie T. Sanford.
“My wife,” he says, “drenched a rag
with the gasoline and in two minutes
had given each of the children a bath.
‘It takes ton much time and Is toq,
much trouble to scrub those poung,
ones with water,’ she said. ‘Gasoline
is the quickest way to clean
with and the least trouble.’w
' - - w V4" »-1
ing that we should refer to them bacause of the good they may
do other suffering women to prove that Lydia 1L Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound is a reliable and honest medicine, and that the
statements made in our advertisements regarding its merit art
truth and nothing but the truth.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Arterberry, T. E. The Savoy Star. (Savoy, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, March 26, 1909, newspaper, March 26, 1909; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth904634/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bonham Public Library.