The Pearsall Leader (Pearsall, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 50, Ed. 1 Friday, March 27, 1914 Page: 7 of 8
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THE PEARSALL LEADER, PEARSALL, TfeAS
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It has been mj observa-
tion that women are not
only more economical than
j j jien, but that they are much
more economical.
A false standard of living
.TlJ 'is responsible for the fact
saving, not so economical as
an ;, in the ttterage family, to
illv mav later need.
a rule boys are more desired
more spoiled. In early school
other boys, in the matter of
gratified, at some cost, perhaps
Girls may have the same
t heirs is a life of giving up.
their discrimination between
man, responsibilities in caring
'The future happiness of many.
Tine, or lack of discipline, pre-
; nd father of a family?
• iers carefully all the extras,
uise ‘fit is asking too much
this, although, when the need
■ strenuous efforts at earning
.1 ranee in college still comes
Th the crowd, regardless o 1
I to gain his ends and keep
false standards he marries and
rein. Oh, for the days of ou.v
keeping up in the procession,
beautiful falls to the ground.
he blames the world when
helping the world to worship
i h . k
r this false standard, in my
won’t stand it as a man, and
T g to grasp that unseen god
In the last analysis I believe
!
—
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is now electrically sealed with a
“SEAL OF PURITY” so
obsolete that it 1st
damp-proof,«tust
proof, impurity*
proof—even
airproof!
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pa r>on
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The number of accidents
• it have occurred lately
5 are still taking place in
nting expeditions is ap-
r ailing. In almost every
ase the cause of the acci-
*
dent is either carelessness or
he understands every detail
to go out on a hunt. .
, which if carefully observed
: the number thereof:
• ion so that dirt or any other
I almost certainly make it
'.he muzzle, wherevey you
: !• rt t Vie gun over first, and see
go over yourself and take
«
and from other persons;
r directly downward.
when actually expecting, the
the direction of a sound
iMs there and then fire. >
- fr; the houso, and in returning
■her, or remove the cartridges
oances, carry it loaded into
\
Give TTJH
regufaraid
td|^h|teesiai, _
appetite and diges-^
tion. It’s the safe
besides delicious and
beneficial confection! .
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BUY IT BY THE BOX
m
It’s dean.
If it’s
san, m «N
WRIGLEY’S.
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Look forthe spear
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No Joke.
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Hit Him.
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At the Chicago Athletic club a
game had been put up on a cynical
old" bachelor. The man had waited
from eight to ten in the park on a
snowy evening in obedience to a
pale pink, violet-scented note that his
friends had faked in order to see if
he was really as confirmed a woman
hater as he claimed.
Turning up at the dub for a night-
cap, the duped and frozen bachelor
was very sullen and sulky when his
friends derided him. He saw no fun
whatever in the fake note.
George Ade, noticing his black and
lowering looks, gave a loud laugh and
said:
“What a skinflint you must be!
Won’t even laugh at a joke, eh, if it*s
at your own expense?”
The Judge-T-What did yon hit this
man with?
Prisoner—I didn’t hit lilm with .any*
thing.
The \Judge—But look at him. He’i
in a horrible condition. Surely you
didn’t do that' with your fists.
Prisoner—No, yer honor. I ketched
*im by the heels and bumped ’im agen
a brick wall p few times. But I didn’t
hit him with anything wanet.
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rcr part of valor.
nrr
By what rule or principle
-:hall one discriminate he-
rn good and bad slang?
i tween the admissible and
■ he inadmissible? Between
allowable and the for-
len? to the
)rized word, ptirase or mode
r as authority to authorize,
r r>brakes which have acquired
•ncal meanings.
certificates of good char-
best of reputations in some
Dear
IK
ks “On the level” and
nothing wrdng in “She’s a
Faking to the tall timber” as
n his lingual index expurgn-
“Put you wise,” “Getting
v .th “Copping the coin.”
not a college professor, know
is no line.
ECZEMA ON HEAD AND FACE
Reedy, W. Va.—“My baby boy
when three weeks old took the ecze-
v
ma on the head and facie. It broke
out in pimples and first they looked
like blisters and a yellow water would
run from them. His head was per-
fectly raw and his hair was all gone.
Everybody said he would never have
any more hair. As the sores spread
his hair came out. The breaking out
itched so badly that we had to keep
gloves on his hands to keep him from
scratching his head and face. It
caused disfigurement. He couldn’t
rest at night it burned and itched
so badly.
“He was treated for eight months
and he got worse all the time. So
I decided to try Cuticura Soa^ and
Ointment. In two months he was com-
pletely cured after using the Cuticura
Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Oint-
ment.” (Signed) G. A. Dye, Jan. 7,
1912.
Cuticura 8oap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-
card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”—Adv.
or
Just what causes tidal
waves has been a subject of
uch interest to learned
men all over the world.
I rv term tidal wave is
erroneously applied to 'al-
most any unexpected wave
a great lake. These waves
'' lal wave is a phenom-
reiletion, but they may be
violent storm. , f
o, the vertical movements
propagated outwards from
'Tier the arrival of the earth
t
’ t cannot be perceived,
t rushes forward as
r. high, and overwhelming
it interests them deeply.
So Obedient.
Stealthily Light-Fingered Sam
slipped up behind the strolling pedes-
trian.
“My doctor said I needed a little
change, didn’t he?” he murmured to
himself.
And then he took it.
“Pape’i Diapepsin” settles sour,
gassy stomachs in five
minutes—’Time It! .
Ton don’t trant a slow remedy when
your stomach is bad—or an uncertain
one—7<)r a harmful one—your stomach
is tqo valuable; you mustn’t injure it
Pape’s Diapepsin is noted for its
speed in giving relief; its harmless*,
ness; its certain Unfailing action in
regulating sick, sour, gassy stomachs.
Its millions of cures in indigestion,
dyspepsia, gastritis and other stomach
trouble hag made it famous the world
over. "■
Keep this perfect stomach doctor in
your home—keep it handy—get a large
flfty-cent case from any dealer and
then if anyone should eat something
which doesn’t agree with them; if
what they eat lays like lead^jferments
and sours and forms gas; causes head-
ache, dizziness and nausea; eructa-
tions of acid and undigested food—
remember as soon as Pape’s Diapepsin
comes in contact with the stomach all
such distress vanishes. Its prompt-
ness, certainty and ease in overcoming
the worst stomach disorders is a reve-
lation to those who try it.—Adv*
And There You Have the Tango.
This illustration of the tango is
credited to,an Arkansas City negro:
"Dat tango, boss, am sort of a easy
motion. Ye jis go a stealing along
easy like ye didn’t have any knee
joints and wuz walkin’ on eggs that
cost fo’ty cents a dozen.”—Atlanta
Constitution.
BUY
li®A
No wholesale profit to pay. No middleman’s profit to pay.
No loss! On had accounts. Yoti p*y cash for the piano with only
DIRECT. FROM FA
•AVE siso okthe ~
fSt
a slight factory profit added. Nothing else.
We will ssU you a fine Schubert Piano direct from our factory far $212 mid
up. We will dq you a high grade Schubert Player Piano for $375 and op.
Other good pianos for $137 and np and a good reliable Player nano for $275.
Tbaae prices are for caah lab. Ny- At a might advance in price we sell on
die easy payment plan. ' f.
The SehubeftPianoi have been on fit market for the peat 39 years, and
haven reputation as being one of die world’s bast makes.
Write for catalogue andJTull particulars.
debt. Smith^jR^r Mil Turn An., Ronton, 7
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THINK OF THE MILLIONS
that have been relieved in the past 75
years by Wright’s Indian Vegetable
Pills and decide whether they are not
worth a trial. They regulate the
bowels, stimulate the liver and purify
the blood. Adv.
tin
‘HT-hS
NEW BFRINQ i__= B
BhmW, FmiU, Flowur Tngntibla Send for tk* I
w. V—tal k Soa. 1
i mu mou
* “ ruata.
idrap
Their Breed.
“Your father has a lot of very fine
chickens,” observed the young man.
“Has he incubators?” “No,” said the
sweet young thing just home from
boarding school, “I think they’re
Plymouth Rocks.”—Dallas News.
Standing on one’s merits is good,
but moving on them is better.
EC-Z1E13&
cures ECZEMA
OUmiTBD
OIL SOe - SI BOAPSSe
Bead tea cents for wsiflii
Ec-^ENE Qo.4 ST.PAUL, MINN.
---------' —......— ....------... . ..
W. N. U., HOUSTON. NO. 11-1914.
V ,
Whenever Yen Meed
Take Grove
m Qmnmrmi
ovo'a
Welded.
Boob—Weak things become strong
when united.
Miss Tarte—Why don’t you marry?
—Judge.
Important to N1 other*
Examine carefully every bottlo of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Caatorig
Nice Woman This.
Snapp—Well, all the tools are not
dead yet
Mrs. Snapp—I’m glad of it. I never
did look well in black.
The Old Standard
Grove's Tasteless
ohlll Tonic
It Eqtillj ValuUt u i 6mni Strngtttilig Title, Brant It Mt « til
Llnr, Print Out Malaria. Etrfcltt tin BUM tM MIS Up tin Wkati Sptn.
|V«0 know what you are taking when Jfoo take Orm.', Taitelw, chill Tania, an
Fana, WaakntM, General Debility and LoaaU ApgahteT aire^b»lTi^l.
Kamnf Motlun and Pale, Sickly Children. A Tree Tonic aad Bare
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Hudson, C. H. & Woodward, Roy. The Pearsall Leader (Pearsall, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 50, Ed. 1 Friday, March 27, 1914, newspaper, March 27, 1914; Pearsall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth920711/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .