The Savoy Star. (Savoy, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, June 4, 1915 Page: 3 of 4
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THF5 SAVOY STAR
&
&,iSi’£&J£. "Sa^Ui'KSjg
BARBER SUPPLIES
toomptete line in the South.
x*l*hrxtort 8fcM Craft Ruor, $2.00,
Tg— prtipeM Qrindiiig and Honing',
c. L ■orrMAfl CO, 1700 Meta Street,
,T«ua Write or ceil for free catalog.
tun, itiua, tiMMp-
1M rOKCH CCWilffl,
mrmiii, wieoi
aw, aid nuii-
THIN II TB CAJm*
LUX. WHU or call/br
priett am& tamplm.
2632 EL* STREET
Excelsior Motorcycles
WTOBallOmiES
noiExcniict.
TEWS NEWS CONCENSEDI HRS. LYON S
-----ACHESAND PAINS
. ¥:
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m?
f
VMMmtk ■•III, E13SKHK&
STRICTLY F1REPBOOJP
mam of Tot Cattle Raiser*
at and Boat lanltarr hotel In
A heantifnl eafe at most sensible prices,
lartj attractire for ladle* trmYelling alone
...............: ISIS'S
::BSS
PIANOS
m
I
&
L‘
ij&f-
E&i
tf*
WINTERSMITH’S
CHILL TONIC
Dot only the old reliable remedy
FOR MALARIA nAi
general etrwgtheninftonicand appetiser.
For children ax well as adults. Sold tor 50
■nara. fiOc and 91 boctlee at drug r--
mi
DT 4/07 losses sorely m*
dLAUL
LEG sHs&SiS^
t»
ISL
•f^Cetter
1* dor to ever U
I mtmm eetjr. .
order direct.
;-;T
We and the British Have Sweet Tooth.
Britons have the sweetest tooth, and'
Americans come next, if the statis-
tics for consumption of sugar mean
anything. An Englishman eats annu-
ally 92.4 pounds, an American con-
79.2 pounds. In Denmark the
consumption is 72.9 pounds
per capita; in Swltseriand it is 66
pounds; In Germany, Holland, Sweden
and Norway it is from 39 to 44'
pounds; in France, 85 pounds; in
Belgium, 83; in Austria, 24.2; in Rus-
sia, 19.8; in Portugal, 16.4; in Spain,
and Turkey, 11; in Italy, Bulgaria.
Roumanla and Serbia, from 9 to 7
pounds. J
The principal reasons for these vari-
ations Is found In' the relative high-
neee or lowness'of the customs duties
out sugar and on the things with which
It is commonly associated—coffee, tea,
etc.
j
In. the Upstairs Bedroom.
“He can't do the maxixe.” ' f
“Goodness!”
“He can’t even Castle walk!"
“Horrors! What a stick.”.
“He's ugiy.”
“Hopeless!”
“He has an auto and regular seats
at the shew *
“What'S his namer*—Texas Coyote.
The Exception.
“Two IS dumpsny* quoted the* Sage.
“Unless they happen to be husband
’and wife,” corrected the Fool.
CLEAR-HEADED.
Head Bookkeeper Must Be
Reliable.
The chief bookkeeper in a large
business bouse in one of our great
Western cities speaks of the harm
coffee and tea did for him*
“My wife and I drank our first cup
of Postu m a little over two years
ago, and ws have used it ever since,
to the entire exclusion of tea and
coffee, it happened in this Way:
“1 had an attack of pneumonia.
Which left me with dyspepsia, or neu-
ralgia of the stomabh. My ‘cup of
chew' had always been coffee or tea.
but I became cbnvinced, after a time,
that they aggravated my stomach
trouble. I happened to mention the
matter to my grocer one day and be
suggested that I give Postum a trial.
“Next day It came, and we liked it
so much we will never change
back; tor 1 am a well man today and
have need no medicine.
“My work aa chief bookkeeper in
our Co's branch house here is of a
very oonflnlag nature. During my cof-
fee drinking days I was subject to
nervousness and the/blues' in addi-
tion to my sick spells. These have
left me since V began using Postum
and I can conscientiously recommend
it to those whose work confines them
to long hours of severe mental exer-
tion.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich* Read ‘‘The * Road te
Wellville,’' In pkgs. . 'r
Postum comes in two forma
. Postum Cereal—the original form^-
must be well boiled. 15c and 25c pack-
instant Postum—a soluble powder-
dissolves quickly in a cup of hot wa
ter, and, with cream and sugar, makes
a delicious beverage Inetantly. 30c
and 60c tins.
Both kinds are equally delicious and
•sat about the same per cup.
“There's a Reason” for Postum.
by G:
The school board of Denton has let
the contract for a new high school
building on a bid of 339,444.
* * •
Dallas sanitary sewer extensions ag-
gregating a cost of $38,800 will be
made this year from the revenues of
the city water department.
• • *
The steamer Napierian has departed
from Galveston for Liverpool with a
cargo valued at $626,692. She has
aboard 8,000 bales of cotton, valued at
6350,000.
• * •
Arrangements are about completed
for the reopening and operation of
the Werkhei8er-Polk flour mill at
Temple which has stood idle for the
past five years.
" - • • •
The commissioners of Harrison
county have recently closeo a con-
tract for about 60,000 cubic yards of
gravel to be used on the good roada
in that county.
rnmm
Plans have been drawn at St. Louis,
It is learned, for a $500,000 mausoleum
for the late Adolphus Busch. The
plans await the approval of Mrs. Lilly
Busch, the widow, now in Germany.
• ' * *
* Sheriff Will Reynolds and Deputy
Dave Smith have returned to Dallas
from Honey Grove, where they arrest-
ed Frank M. Bullington on a warrant
for murder growing out of the killing
of John Stroupe 32 years ago.
• *• •
Additional issuance of school bonds
to the amount of $18,000 carried in a
recent election at Merkel by a large
majority. In addition to this bond
issue, voters of the precinct will con-
sider the Issuance of $150,000 for the
construction of good roads on July 25.
• • •
Bonds to the following amounts have
been voted in Runnels county rural
schools: Content $2,500, Norton, $5,-
000, Truitt and Long Branch combined
as Harmony school $2,500, Benn $2,-
600; all these amounts to be spent in
addition to former issues.
• • •
Gov. Ferguson has appointed Jus-
tic Nelson Phillipps, formerly of Dal-
las, as chief justice of the supreme
court, to succeed Chief Justice T. J.
Brown, who died a few days ago at
Greenville. Judge J. E. Yantis of
Waco was named to succeed Justice
Phillips.
• • •
A final casting of the enterles la
the better fanning campaign of the
Texas industrial congress shows a
total of 34,008 men, women, boys and
girls from 149 counties who are study-
ing modern agricultural methods.
This is more than three times as
many as have enrolled in any xormer
year.
• * # ■ Y
Truck crops In Texas were In flour-
ishing condition May 15. according to
reports compiled by the United States
department of agriculture. The eon
dittoes were: Beans 83 per cent, cab-
bage 62, cantaloupes and cucumbers
72. eggplant 86, lettuace 96, onions 8$,
pees 88, peppers 75, Irish potatoes 76,
strawberries 88, tomatoes 81, water*
melons 76.
• 4 •
Congressional redistricting died In
the house when the Texas legislature
adjourned sine die about 1 o'clock Sat-
urday morning. At that time the
louse was without a quorum and all
efforts to bring in absentees had fail-
ed. The grand total of appropriations
at this session is approximately $16,-
$00,090. The senate confirmed the gov-
ernor’s appointment of W. R. Dulaney
to succeed W. O. Stamps as prison
commissioner, by a vote of 21 te 2,
with six present and net Voting.
. • • •
An attempt was made one morning
last week to rob, the express car on
an t.. A G. N. train as it left Calvert.
The express messenger fired several
shots at the would-be thieves while
they tried to force open the car door.
• • •
Chief Justice Thos. J. Brown of the
state supreme court died In Green-
ville last week, his death being from
cancer of the stomach which bad
been troubling him for the last year.
He had gone to Greenville for treat-
ment about two weeks before.
• • •
Have All Gone Since Taking
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg-
etable Compound.
Terre Hill, Pel—“Kindly permit me
to give you my testimonial in favor of
Lydia E. PinkhEim’s
Vegetable Com-
pound. When I first
began taking it I
was suffering from
female troubles for
some time and had
almost all kinds of
aches—pains in low-
er part of back and
in Bides, and press-
ing down pains. I
could not sleep and
had no appetite. Since I have taken
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound the aches and pains are all gone
and I feel like a new woman. I cannot
praise your medicine too highly. ’ ’—Mrs.
Augustus Lyon, Terre Hill, Pa.
It is true that nature and a woman’s
work pm produced the grandest remedy
for woman’s ills that the world has
ever known. From the roots and
herbs of the field, Lydia E. Pinkham,
forty years ago, gave to womankind
a remedy for their peculiar ills which
hv proved more efficacious than any
other combination of drugs ever com-
pounded, and today Lydia E. Pinkham’a
Vegetable Compound is recognized
from .coast to coast as the standard
remedy for woman’s ills.
In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn,
Mass., are files containing hundreds of
thousands of letters from women seek-
ing health—many of them openly state
over their own signatures that they have
regained their health by taking Lydia
E. pinkham’s Vegetable Compound;
*nR in some cases that it has saved them
from surgical operations.
How It Happenea.
”1 can’t do a fool thing with that
dern camel.” growled Noah, as he
came into the cabin for supper.
“What is the matter with him?”
asked Mrs. Noah.
“Why, he didn’t like the quarters I
gave him, and he got his back up
about it, and he can’t get it down
again,” replied Noah.
LADIESI
—Take CAPUD1NE— ■
For Aches, Pains and Nervousness.
IT IS NOT A NARCOTIC OR DOPE—
Gives quick relief—Try It.—Adv.
4
Unfair Advantage.
“Don’t you ever let me catch you
kissing my daughter again, sir!” thun-
dered the irate father.
“You won’t sir,” answered the quak-
ing youth. “You wouldn’t have caught
me this time if you hadn’t been wear-
ing rubber heels.”
Chocolate Soldiers.
The soldier’s weakness, fer sweet-
meats, to which Mr. Bernard Shaw \
called attention when h*. wrote “The j
Chocolate Soldier.” has been abu.id- j
antly confirmed during the present |
war. The quantity of sweets con- j
. sumed by our army in France has
been prodigious, while from Cairo
comes the news that the Australians
have absolutely eaten the place out
of chocolate. On the troopships
which brought them, too, it was the
same. Thus Capt. Bean, the official
correspondent with the force, writes:
“Our canteen had five times the de-
mand for sweets and soft drinks that
wras expected and one-fifth the de-
mand for beer.”—Westminster Gazette.
Whenever You Need a General Toaic
Take Grove’s
The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a
General Tonic because it contains the
well known tonic properties of QUININE
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and
Builds up the Whole System. 50 centa
A Vegetable Raiser.
Bacon—It is estimated that 93 per
cent of the ocean floor Is entirely de-
void of vegetation. -
Egbert—Well,. I never heard that
Neptune had any reputation as a
gardener.
DON’T VISIT THE CALIFORNIA EX-
POSITIONS Without a supply of Alien's Foot-
Ease. the antiseptic powder to be shaken into the
Shoes, or dissolved In the foot-bath. The Standard
Remedy for the feet for 25 years. It elves Instant
relief to tired, sching feet and prevent* swollen,
hot feet One lady writes: “1 enjoyed every minute
of my *ay at the Expositions, thanks to Alien a
Foot-Ease In nay shoes.' Get it TODAY. Adv.
A good cook is one who uses plenty
of butter.
RESIN0L BEGINS TO HEAL
SICK SKINS AT ONCE
You don’t have to WONDER if res-
inol ointment is doing you good. You
KNOW it is, because the first applica-
tion stops the itching and your tor-
tured skin feels cool and comfortable
at last. Why don’t YOU try this easy
resinol way to heal eczema or similar
skin eruption? Resinol clears away
pimples, too, and is a valuable house-
hold remedy for sunburn, poison-ivy,
cuts, sores, burns, chaflngs, etc. It
has been prescribed by doctors for 20
years and contains nothing that could
irritate or injure the tenderest skin:
Sold by all druggists.—Adv.
Quite Fitting.
“I am going to have an old beau as
the hero of this story.”
"What a dandy idea!”
AreYour Kidneys Weak?
Do you know that deaths from kidney
troubles are 100,000 a year in the U. 8.
alone? That deaths have increased 72%
in 20 years? If you are run down, los-
ing weight, nervous, “blue” and rheu-
matic, if you have backache, dizzv spells
rmd urinary disorders, act quickly. Use
Doan’s Kidney Pills. No other medi-
cine is so widely used, none so highly
recommended.
A Texas Case
"fcdj ItaKfl
TM •Sun"
Isaac Turner,
R. F. D. No. 2,
Grand Saline.
Tejias, says: “A
fall Injured my
kidneys and my
back was af-
fected, too. I got
lame and stiff
across ,my back,
was subject to
dizxy spells and
felt tired and
languid. The kid-
n e y secretions
passed too often
and obliged me to get up during the
night. On a friend’s advice I used
Doan’s Kidney Pills and they soon
helped me. Three boxes made a com-
plete cure.”
Get Dom'i at Any Store. 50* a Bex
DOAN’S jWuBf
F03YER40LBUKN CO- BUFFALO. 14. Y.
More Words Followed.
Tm a woman of my word,” said
Mrs. Prebscomb, with an air of final-
ity.
“Indeed you are, my dear,” said Mr.
Prebscomb.
“When I go out I don’t come home
and tell an improbable yarn about
where I’ve been.”
“No, you don’t my dear,” replied
Mr. Prebscomb mildly, “but that may
be due to the fact that I have never
had sufficient courage to ask you
where you have been.”
FROM ECZEMA AND RINGWORM
You can obtain Instant relief by u
Ing Tettertae, also the best remedy
known for Chafes. Bites of Insects,
Tetter. Itching Piles. Burns. Chilblains,
old Itebing Bores, etc. Because you
have spent hundreds of dollars end ex-
perienced no relief for your Itching
skin troubles, besides devoting a great
deal of energy scratching and pawing
at the plague spot until the blood Is-
sued forth, don’t despair. Nature wisely
provides a remedy for every 111 that
flesh Is heir to Tetterlae will cure you
permanently, positively and completely,
n°Bo?<f by*druggists or sent by mail for SOe.
r J. T. Shuptrlne, Savannah, Ga. Adv.
I Light More Beneficial Than Heat.
When rays of light tall upon the
skin of our bodies, which Is translu
cent, the greater part of them are ar-
rested some by one layer of the skin,
come by another and still others are
not stopped until they have penetrated
the subcutaneous tissues. This arrest
of the light rays produces radiant
heat, which has a higher penetrating
power than convection heat as gene-
rated by a hot water bag or poultice,
for Instance.
E. C. Titus In an address before the
Illuminating Engineering society, said
that such heat penetrated two Inches
or more, while convection heat was ex-
cited principally on the surface.
This Is why electric light baths and
sun baths are so stimulating to the or-
gans of elimination, especially the skin
apd kidneys, and so beneficial in so
many diseases.
Same Thing.
“He’s a duck of a boy.”
“Yes, he’s game.”—Baltimore Amer-
ican.
YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU
Try Murine By# Remedy tor Red,We*Jt, Watery
---—' Granulated Ryel
smfort. Write f_ ----— —. _
ie. Marine Bye Remedy Co.. Chicago
Syea and 'Granulated WyeUd*: No Smarting—
|u»t^Myet comfort. Write for book of the Bye
The attention attracted by those
who seek attention usually is uncom-
plimentary.
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nipe times in ten when the liver is
right the stomach and bowels are right.
CARTER’S U
LIVER PILLS _
gently but firmly com-^— -
pel a lazy liver to
do its duty.
Cures Con-
stipation, in-
digestion,
Sick
and Distress After Eating. _
SMALL POLL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL FRKX
Genuine must bear Signature
W. N. Uh DALLA8, NO. 23^1915.
Children Cry Foi*
\
ALCOHOL- a PER CENT,
A\fcgc table Pre pa ra f iocibrAf>
sinulatingtiwltodandltefitik!*
hag the Stomachs and Bcwds «f
Infants Ciiildki n
The auditing committee of the city
of Marshall has filed its report of
the city’s financial condition. This re-
port shows that the city's assets are
$998,403.97, and liabilities $441,719.57,
an Increase of $1,690.02 on the report
of a. year ago.
• • •
From the most accurate data to be
bad it is estimated that during the
planting season of 1914-15 there were
set out in Garza county at least 50,000
or 60,000 fruit, shade and ornamental
trees, etc.
• •1 •
It Is reported the Missouri. Okla-
homa & Gulf railroad, which has been
seeking an outlet to Dallas and Fort
Worth for some time, is about to buc-
ced in making arrangements wnereby
this can be done.
Three young women and two young
men of Austin were Injured whep the
automobile in which they were riding
turned over about 15 miles north of
:bat city. All were thrown violently
against a barbed wire fence, suffering
cuts and bruises.
PELLAGRA CURE
SAVES HER LIFE
Oakville, Tenn.—Mrs. L. B. Babb, of
this place, writes: "Three months and a
half ago when I wrote you, I didn’t think
I would live to tee Christmas again, but
now it is Christmas and I am enjoying it
fine. I cannot praise Baughn’s Pellagra
Remedy enough. I believe I could eat
meat anything there is to eat now. My
weight was 81 when I started your treat-
ment. I now weigh 98 pounds, about my
average weight for fifteen year* past.
Baughn’s Pellagra Remedy will do what it
claims to do if the patient will follow di
rections as I have done.”
There is no longer any doubt that pel-
lagra can be cured. Don’t delay until it is
too late. It is your duty to consult the
resourceful Baughn.
The symptoms—hands red like sunburn,
■kin peeling off, sore mouth, the lips,
throat and tongue a flaming red, with
much mucus and choking, indigestion and
nausea, either diarrhoga or constipation.
There is hope; get Baughn’s big Free
book on Pellagra and learn about tho
remedy for Pellagra that has at last been
found. Address American Compounding
(Jo., box 2089, Jasper, Ala., remembering
money is refunded in any case where tbs
remedy fails to curs.—Adv.
Promotes Di&estion,Chee rfuk
and Rest. Con tains neither
Opimn,Murphine nor Mineral
Narcotic.
tarried Remedy forCbnsRflBt
JUo^SoiirSkHMcIUJiarrtioa^
Wonns. Feverishness and
toss
i of Sleep.
——
ffeSimik Sigbaluredt
f
SEW Vdfl
CASTOR IA
What Is CASTORIA
Qutnla to a harmless substitute tor Castor Oil* Paa
Moric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It to plea
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other
substance. Its age to its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years tt
* at MSB for the relief of CnsttpMlen.
Colic, all Teethlnr Troubles and
Flatulency p
Diarrhee&o
Wind
assimilates tho Food, ftztaf 1
The Children’s panacea—The
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
Exact Copy of Wrapper ■
Iii Use For Over 30 Years
The Kind You Have Always Bought
THI OINTAUN c*x***»,*»x vox* **nr.
Boston’s Advantage.
Mrs. Gotham—But your streets In
Boston are so crooked.
Mrs. Hubb—And yours In New York
are so straight.
"But aren’t stflalght streets an ad-
vantage?" V
“Why, no. Now in Bostok one can
walk and walk qnd get some place,
but In New York you can walk and
walk and get nowhere.”
Incidental Advertising.
‘T suppose you thinlt -that If you
abandon your old party you will deal
it the flniehing blow?”
“Not necessarily,” answered Sena-
tor Sorghum. “My leaving it may help
it a little by calling attention to the
fact that It still exists.”
A Vigorous Writer.
"Why does your mayor pat on auto-
mobile goggles before he writes?"
“To keep the Ink from spattering in
his eyes.”—Munich Meggendorfer
Blsetter.
To Cool a Bum
and Take
the Fire 0
A Soluble Antiseptic Powder to
kbe dissolved in water as needed
For Douches
In the local treatment of woman’s flha
such ss leuoorrhesa and inflammation hot
douches of Paxtins are very efficarioofc
No woman who has aver used mod lex tad
douches will fail to appreciate the clean and
Thi3 is to the credit of human na-
ture: It Is not on record that anyone
ever resolved to be meaner next year.
It Is the visiting preacher, and not
the regular pastor, who talks plainly
to the congregation.
JUST ONE BOND’S
PILL AT BED TIME
will relieve that disagreeable Head-
ache, Sour Stomach, Dizziness, Coat-
ed Tongue, due to an inactive Liver.
Don’t take Calomel, Bond’s Pills are
far better, and they will remove the
cause. You wake up well. 25c. All
drug glBts—Adv.
’Twss Ever Thua
“Have you been operating In the
stock market of lata?”
"No. I’ve beefi operated upon.”—
Judge.
An entertaining woman is one who
permits a man to talk about himself
HANFORPS
Balsam of Myrrh
A UNIMINT
For Cuts, Burnt,
Bruises, Sprains,
Strains, Stiff Neck,
Chilblains, Lame Back,
Old Sores, Open Wounds,
and all External Iqjuriw.
Made Since 1846. *
Pries 25c, 60c aad $1.00
All Dealers ‘.fews6*
i years the Lydia 8.
Pinkham Medicine Co* hx* rec-
ommended Pax tine in their
private correspondence with wo-1
men, which proves its superi-
ority. Women who hare been
relieved axy it is ** worth its [
weight in gold.” At druggists.
60c. large box or bv mail. Sample frea
The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Maaa
DAISY FLY KILLER gT STSSS
■ §*€9
:
i2W^ :
lie]eve »»/OI»t-
itotiaiM. miiMn. i
Death Lurks In A Weak Heart
U Yaura la fluttering or
Hu UM RENOVIME.” Matfa By Van
tee Tti
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Arterberry, Mrs. T. E. The Savoy Star. (Savoy, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, June 4, 1915, newspaper, June 4, 1915; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth923119/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bonham Public Library.