The Savoy Star. (Savoy, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 48, Ed. 1 Friday, February 25, 1910 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Fannin County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Bonham Public Library.
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THE SAVOY STAR
T. E. ARTERBERRY, Prop.
8AV0Y,
TEXAS
LOOKING AHEAD.
HER VIEWS ON MERE MAN
Actress Firmly of Opinion That Mem
bers of the Male Sex Need to
Be Looked After. -
“Babies—all you men are mere
babies. You all have to be taken care
of. That’s what we women are for.
We will let'you do all the Toting for
us, for you’ll vote the way we tell you,
anyhow. Do I believe in votes for
women? Emphatically no."
So Mary Garden, whose interpreta*
tlon of Sapho In the opera of that
names has brought her publicity in
her tour of the country, deliver^ her-
self on the suffrage question in1 an in
tervlew recently. Miss Garden also
made known again and in a new way
her views on the marriage and di-
vorce question. -She said:
“Divorce should be made as easy
as possible. If a man and woman are
mis mated, it is proper that they sep-
arate. It is wrong for them to live to-
gether without love. But I believe in
marriage. I don’t agree with Mme.
Sara Bernhardt—Isn’t she a dear!—*
in her advice to sweethearts to ‘live
together, but don’t get married!' I
would not go that far, but I would
have divorce easy. It is said that we
cannot know a person until we live
with him. How, then, is it possible
always to tell beforehand if marriage
will result In compatibility? Mme.
Bernhardt is quoted as advocating
trial marriages and saying that men,
•specially, should not marry until
they have had experience in domes-
tic life. Always the men. Why, man
fart get experience at a very early
age, but It is not possible for woman
to follow his example. If there is real
abiding love, there will be no need fOT
divorce; if there is not love, there
should be divorce."—New York Press
Elephant—Why does Longneck run
around with his head so close to the
ground?.
Lion—Why. he’s afraid that if he
raises it he’ll bump his head into one
of those airships!
DRUNKENNESS is unworthy when
you can have it removed without any-
body’s knowledge. Acme simple home-
treatment will do the work. Write E.
Fortin, Dickey Bldg., Chicago, 111., for
free trial._ *
She Had Noticed It.
Mrs. Knicker.—They say the pur-
chasing power of a dollar has dimin-
ished.
Mrs. Bocker.—Yes, it used to buy a
bargain w'orth $1.98, and now it only
gets something worth $1.49._
GOOD NEWS EPITOMIZED
HAPPENINGS of UNUSUAL IN-
TEREST TO OUR READER8, IN
READABLE SHAPE
BOTH FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
Que«n Alexandra's Underatudy.
It la the privilege of royalty to at-
tend any public or social functions
they please by deputy. This is a neces-
sary rule, for royalties have so many
engagements of a public and private
character to keep that it would be ab-
solutely impossible that they should
fulfill them all in person. This ap-
plies especially to the king ahd queen,
who frequently have half a dozen en-
gagements to keep at the same time
In as many different places. ’ On such
occasions c, deputy is sent to repre-
sent the king or queen at those func-
tipns or entertainments which their
majesties are unahie to attend in per-
son. The queen is always represent-
ed by her secretary, Mr. Sidney Gre-
aville. When her majesty attends any
f function such as a wedding, baptism
or any private reception by deputy, her
hostess Is notified beforehand that Mr.
Grevilla will be present on the queen’s
Ibehalf, and the time at which he will
arrive is also stated.—From M- A. P.
For Family Needs
You will find Hostetter’s
Stomach Bitters especial-
y well adapted. It is com:
pounded from the purest
druffs and is good for every
member of the family.
When the appetite is poor,
system run down, or you
suffer from Sick Head
ache, Vomiting, Heart
burn. Sour Stomach,In
digestion. Costiveness,
Biliousness, Colds and
Malaria, take nothing but
OSTETTER’
CELEBRATED
STOMACH
BITTER
It Was of Sufficient Importance
You Will Find It Recorded
Here.
WASHINGTON NEWS
The Washington “City Beautiful-’
bill, "providing for the establishment
of building lines and special building
restriction in the District of Colum-
bia,” to quote the title, was approved
by the Senate Committee on the Dis-
trict of Columbia and favorably report-
ed to the Senate.
Senator Tillman of South Carolina
Premier Brland of Paris, announces
that he has received ,an additional
$1,500 from the French residents of
New Orleans for the flood sufferers.
The body of B. P. Green of Amarillo
was brought to that city on the Rock
Island from a point fifty miles north-
west, where death resulted from freez-
ing.
The French aeroplane contractors
have decided jointly to send a lawyer
to the United States to defend French
interests in the suits brought by the
Wright brothers. ->■
It is learned that the Katy con-
templates spending $100,000 in repairs
on the shops at Sedalia.'Mo., this year.
The new car shops, which Mr. Allen
announced would be built in Denison to
take the place of those destroyed by
fire last June, will cost between $400,-
000 and $500,000.
Houston is to have its municipal au-
ditorium within nine months, accord-
ing to the contractors, the contract hav
ing been awarded Feb. 9, The struc-
ture is to cost $235,000 in its entirety
and the contractors have promised to
complete the building in time for the
A CAUTIOUS HUSBAND.
Mrs. Henpeck—John, what’s your
honest opinion of my new hat?
Mr. Henpeck—Don’t ask me, Mary.
You know you’re much bigger and
stronger than 1 am!
E8S3 jp
jm
was taken suddenly ill on the steps of
the capitol in Washington, and had to j ^xtTa7nival T
be carried iota his rooha by two cap- \ , _ . .
Itol employer Later he was removed i Driven ashore in a gale of sixty
to his homefwhere he is now under the | miles an hobr, the Spanish bark
. o .vai„i!1T, * Trlumfo, from Havana to Pensacola, is
C£The Senate Committee on Agricul-1 rapidly going to pieces five miles^west
ture and Forestry has begun hearings | of Pensacola Light. The; crew of h r
on the bill introduced by Senator teen men weretaken
Lodge of Massachusetts for the fur- saving crew ahd carried to the city in
ther regulation of cattle shipping by j a towboat,
the railroads. The bill, which seeks to j The big packing house interests
hedge this kind of interstate traffic j have been dealt a severe blow by all
Powtr of Example.
“It ain't a pretty kind vorld for a
poor old Swede woman like me,” said
Christine. “But sometimes ids a pretty
good vorld anyvays. I vas at a place
yesterday vere de lady alvays make
me Iron all afternoon und den send me
home mitout my supper. So yesterday
I tolt her how kind you vas to me, und
how you tell me set dowm and rest till
supper get ready, und git me money
for de street car so 1 don’t have to
valk home ven I been so tired, und all
about you. So ven I put avay de irons
yesterday dot lady she say to me. Set
down und have something to eat pretty
soon, Christine; you not be in de vay.’
Dot's because I tell her about you,
WHEN YOUR BACK ACHES SUS-
PECT THE KIDNEYS.
Backache is kidney ache, in most
cases. The kidneys ache and throb
with dull pain be-
cause there is in-
flammation within.
You can’t be rid of
the ache until you
cure the cause—the
kidneys.
Doan’s Kidney
Pills cure sick kid-
neys. G. S. Warren,
1517 No. 7th St.,
Boise, Idaho, aays:
An injury to my
iack years ago left
e lame. I had to
use a cane, and it
hurt me terribly to
stoop or lift. The
kidney secretions
passed too frequent-
ly. For five years since I was cured
by Doan’s Kidney Pills, I have had no
return of the trouble.”
Remember the name—Doan's. For
sale by all dealer*. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
&
oth-
with”additional humane restrictions, | of the railroads, with the exception of | elle^lh’
A Benefactor.
“Are you doing anything for
ers?” asked the philanthropist.
“Sure,” answered Mr. Crosslots, “I
make a garden every year for the ben-
efit of my neighbors’ Chickens.”
has a provision requiring that the av- j the Alton, extending between the Mis-
erage movement of cattle shall be at
the rate of sixteen miles per hour. It
Is this provision which was most per-
sistently attacked by representatives
of a number of Western roads at the
first of the hearings on the bill Tues-
souri River and Chicago and St. Louis,
which have decided to make a material
increase in the rates on live stock,
packing house products and dressed
meats.
Gov. Campbell ha9 addressed a let-
good.”—Newark News.
Spineterhood.
The day of the typical crabbed old
maid is passed. Even the comic pa
pere have ceased to make fun of spin
•terhood in this guise. Her place has
been taken by the independent woman
who quickly enough finds her own
niche in the world, and who generally
has plenty of common sense to spare
for the benefit of others.
Hie old maid of to-day finds a whole
realm of interest awaiting her, and
plenty of work which she cares to do.
No longer is she condemned to soli-
tude and a cat; no longer is spinster-
hood regarded as a term of reproach
and looked upon as a condition to be
ashamed of.
Look at any of the big charities, any
of the numerous boards of manage-
ment, and you will see the old maid
triumphant and at her West, happy
enough In her work and her efforts tc
help humanity.
*-* Viking Days.
. Interesting remains of Viking rule,
believed to be the first of’thelr kind in
Brittany, have Just been discovered at
Port Marla, on the southern Breton
coast 'It is an ancient Viking burial
ship such as were set afire in the days
of eld and sent adrift with a Norse
chieftain’s dead body on board. Ex-
cavations of a tumulus known as
Erguel disclosed the remains of a half
burned sloop 36 feet long and eight
feet wide, containing bows, arrows,
arrows, battle axes, bucklers and
swords, and gold and, bronze orna-
ments, all of which were batjly dam-
aged by lire.
Work Cure Does Wonders.
The work cure is being tried suc-
cessfully by bne experimenter in cases
of nervous troubles and mental ail-
ments. Hard work is not exactly a
universal panacea, but it is about the
best all around remedy for human ills
which has ever been discovered. It
,)■/> ranks high as a preventative. Peo-
ple who have hard work to do have
little time for indulgence in the lux-
ury of nerves. Nature found out*the
remedy long ago. Science Is a little
late in the day in applying iLr
Many smokers prefer them to 16c
cigars. Tell the dealer you want Lewis’
Single Binder. Factory, Peoria, Illinois.
King's "uitiii eiant: cotton
*3-THE EARLIEST KUOWH. VARIETY 1
day morning. It was pointed out that! ter t0 president Taft calling attention
such an average speed for a movement unsettled condition at El Paso
of cattle Is impossible because of num- | growing out of the dispute over a strip
erous grades and delays at Junction j territory in the border town claimed
points. I by Mexico anid the United States and
which was long regarded as part of
cnDFirw NPWR i El Paso, Tex. The President is asked
DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN NEWS j to have the ^ter settied speedily and
In less than one hour $20,000 worth avoid serious trouble and bloodshed,
of property burned in Columbia, Tex., | jn a fight -in Cairo, 111., between a
including three stocks of merchandise mob that sought to lynch a negro
and six buildings. charged with purse-snatching and five
An extensive temporary withdrawal deputy sheriffs, who were guarding the
of lands from the public domain has jail, several jnembers of tee m°b were
been made by Secretary Ballinger, in- 3h0t in an attempt to rush the.jail. The
volving 2,068,492 acres reserved from i number of injured is unknown, the esti-
coal entry and 127,122 acpes withdrawn ! mates varying between two and eleven,
from all forms of disposition. Fifty-six j Democratic Day at the Feeders and
thousand four hundred and thirty-one . show at Fort Worth, March
acres were restored to settlement. j promises to be an event in the po-
Heavy overcoats and warm tubs will j annajs 0f Texas. Replies have
be in demand all over the country i ^en recejve(j from a large number ol
during the present week, according to Qemccratic 1 governors, accepting the
the forecast made by the Weather Bu- lnv.ltation to attends Invitations have
rean in Washington. Uqusually^stormy! also been sent to the 140 Democratic
and cold weather is the indication, es-! graters and representatives in Texas,
pecially in all districts from the Rock- i mog^ 0j Wfi0m will be on hand,
ies to the ^UMUceoastMd from the , Thft battleshlp Virginia maintained
Rockies over the North Pacific States. | ^ averape: Qn trlal speed ^ 19.45
„ w _____ . , knots an hour in a four-hour full-power
tug Nina pracUcallT ha> bMn .teu tfW cg Goantenaro. Cuba, according
done<i by the United States Nayy, and j ^ informatlon recflved at the Nary de-
partment. This is better than that
made under contractors’ trial, when
she was put into service, and was con-
ducted with an Increased displacement
of more than 1,000 tons than was the
case when the contractors’ test was
made. •" ; ; '{
The twelfth anniversary of the de-
struction of the battleship Maine was
Bet Your t—4
DIRECT fro«
the Originator
and Ba Sara
ol thn Boat
Bo lectod Strain
itaad the
Originator’*
Statamont to
tha Public.
We bare confidence to the tann-
er* and faith ia the eeed and we
prove It hr oat terms.
- IVe Soil on
Onto, 15th Tlmo.
Sedd skipped to Branded Bags
Vnte postal at case hr latrst ifikrm-
tiea, teraa, pneee aad Sample *** Ofrr.
Rnpanancnt CITY BANK,
T. i. King Seed Co
Seed direct front Originator
Richmond, • r Virginia
« M EXPENSE It kfCMl.
5jgipRUIT
Bay Street from the grower
and tare 60 per Cent. Twenty-
Bra yeara' Mperieoee enables
os to handle the light kinds
of trees to the right way at
the right price*. Peaches, ap-
ples. plums, grapes, berries,
paper shell pecan*. shad#
trees ef all kinds, nhrnba,
roe**, plants, need*, etc. Ex-
press peid. Catalogue free.
Baker Bros. Co.
POBJ WORTH, TEXAS,
Unexpected1 Recommendation.
One day, when Lord Thurlow was
very busy at his house in Ormond
street, a poor curate applied to him
for a living, then vacant. J
“Don’t trouble me,” said the chan-
cellor, turning upon him with a frown-
ing brow. “Don’t you see I am busy
and can’t listen to you?—what duke or
lord recommended you?”
The poor curate lifted up his eyes
and, with dejection, said he had no
lord to recommend him but the Lord
of Hosts.
“The Lord of-Hosts!” replied the
chancellor, “the Lord of Hosts!—I be-
lieve I have had recommendations
fi-om most lords, but do not recollect
one from him before; so. do you bear,
young man, you shall have the living.
For Cold* and Grlpp—Capudlne.
The best renfMy for Qrtpp •^d Cohto to
Hicks’ Capudlne. Relieves the aching ana
fpvertohneea Cures the cold—Headache*
also It’S Uquid-EfTocta immedlataly-XL
X and 50c at Drug Stores.
No man can be provident of hia
time who is not prudent in the choice-
of his company.—Jeremy Taylor.
PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DATS, m
PAZO OINTMENT I * guaranteed to cure any aaa»
of Itching. Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Pile* Ua
«to today*or money refunded, fibs.
There is always work, and tools to-
work, withal, for those who w ill.
Ruskin.____
IMPOSSIBLE TO FIND ANYTH I NO
__ for rirteapht' bACk&Obff Of StllCbe* VbAft
herru DnviM* PninkilXtr. Get the lanre gl*e.
r ^p£? A t all druggisi *. 25c. tbr .ad 50c bottle.
Landlords and tenants can never se*
through the same spectacles.
THE STORY OF THE
SHELLS.
PEANUT
As everyone knows, C. W. Post of
Battle Creek, Michigan, is not only a
maker of breakfast foods, but he is a
strong individual who believes that the
trades-unions are a menace to the lib-
erty of the country.
Believing this, and being a “natural-
born” scrapper for the right, as he
AFTER
FOURYEARS
OF MISERY
S 1------- -- Cured by Lydja E. PUJ-
sees it, Post, for several years past, hafll SVegetable COIDpOUlKl
has been engaged In a ceaseless war- Baltimor« Hd. —“For fodr par»
fare against “The Labor Trust,' as he mv wa8a misery to me. I suffered.
■S from irregulari-
ties, terrible drag-
the problem will likely go dowm In his-
tory, among the untold stories of the
sea. In the opinion of the Navy De-
partment, she foundered, carrying
down her entire crew of thirty-two
men, off the coast of Delaware on Feb.
6 or 7, only a few hours after she left
Norfolk on her fateful voyage.
The announcement from the tVhite
House that President Taft had by his .
own motion cut to four the number of observed in Havana harbor with more
Administration measures he would de- elaborate ceremony than any anniver-
mand at this session Is received by | aary since the ttaged}. A fleetoffug-
Republican leaders with unmixed feel- j boats and yachts bearing the members
ings of relief. The Administration pro-1 of the newly organized Havana Camp,
gram was so formidable that members United Spanish War Veterans the
who are warmly supporting the Taft Daughters of the American Revolution,
policies hardly knew where to begin, the members of the American Legation
A schedule including only the bills to | and Consular officers many members
amend the interstate commerce law, j of the American Club, representam es
provide for the regulation of issuance [ of the Cuban Government and hun-
of injunctions, start Arizona and New j dreds of tourists and American resi-
Mexico on the road to statehood and : dents visited the wreck, where^the
validate the withdrawals of public service for the; dead was read -by Rev.
lands for conservation purposes ia re- Albion B. Knight, Protestant -pisco-
garded as quite possible of attainment, pal Church of C uba.
There Is every probability that the | R. Jarvis of Terrell sold 239 bales of
taxable values of the city of Dallas for ! cotton Friday at $.2.60 per bale, aggr*
the year 1910 will show fully $75,000,- gating about $17,500. •
000, as against approximately $61,000,- What is known as dead ol has been
000 last vear ? found In the hole being drilled seven
United States Senator Benjamin R. ! miles northwest of Denison by the
Tillman of South Carolina is seriously I Paraffine Oil Company at a depth ot
ill at his home in Washington, and
ging sensations,
extreme nervous-
nags, and that all
gone feeling in my
stomach. I had
given up hope 6f
ever being well
when I began to
take Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable
Compound- Then
1 felt as though
new life had been
given me, and I am reco pending it
Yon eaa’t sow ffrisde* and
rcip figs. lfyoup1«nt
Ferry** Seed* you A
grow exactly what
you expect and to
• prolusion
tion never
* C&4
possibly will be unable to participate
in any active deliberations of the Sen-
ate for the remainder of this session.
In a pitched battle between whites
and negroes at Hale's Bar, near Chat-
tanooga. Tenn., three negroes were
shot to death.
The duty on wheat was reduced from
3c to lc a kilo by the Mexican Govern-
ment. owing to a shortage of wheat in
Mexico. Because of the reduction.
720 feet. This dead oil is said to be
valueless except to Indicate the prob-
ability of oil in paying quantities at
a Lower level. It Is understood that
the well will be sunk to a depth of
1,800 feet if necessary, with , the ex-
pectation that pay oil will be encoun-
tered at between> 1,500 and 1,700 feet.
An explosion n the mixing room of
the Trojan Powder Works at San Lo-
renzo, Cali., cost the lives of Chemist
Reuben Tharp and four workmen, and
•tudy »nd
experience
make them re-
PATENT
»'very where. Pmy’t
B. h. ran b co«
Boot and Adrlee FRE1I ■•*•«.
i Washington.
1>.C Mat, <W in Uaal ratereiwv*
which was announced several weeks j caused a property loss of $50,000. Four
ago, cars of wheat have been received others were seriously, if not fatally, in-
•t the border, and a train load of nine- jured, and a dozen more, including Su-
ty cars of wheat, worth about $14,000 a | perintendent Martina, were severely
car, was sent across the river. The burned and bruised,
shipments will continue until the short- • At a banquet of the prominent lay-
age is relieved. ' men of the Southern Methodist Episco-
T S Whitlock, a well known Den- j pal Church in Baltimore it was decid-
likes to call It.
Not being a^le to secure free and
untrammeled expression of his opin-
ions on this subject throughthe regular
reading pages of the newspapers he j
has bought advertising space for this j
purpose, just as he is accustomed to
for the telling of his Postum “story,”
and he has thus spent hundreds of
thousands of dollars in denouncing
trades-unionism.
As a result of Post’s activities the
people now know a whole lot about
these organizations; how they are ______ ______
honeycombed with graft, how they ob- ^ myfriends.’’—Mrs. W. 8. Ford,
struct the development of legitimate 2207 W. Frsnklin St., Baltimore, Ma.
business, curtail labor’s output, hold The mo*
up manufacturer*, craft upon their own IjSL
membership, and rob the public. Natu ham's Vegetable Compound. It hau
rally Post Is hated by the trades- test ot years and to-tey is
unionists, and intensely. more widely and successfully used than
He employs no union labor, so they any other female remedy. It has cured
can not call out his paen, and he defies thousands of women who ^ve been
their efforts at boycotting his products troubled yrittt disp^efiMtttA rnfliam-
The latest mean, of "getting- Post i.
the widespread publication of the story ringSotyn feeling, flatulency,
that a car which was recently wrecked and nervous prostration,
in transmission was found to be loaded other means had tailed. ____
with empty peanut shells, which were if you are suffering from any ofThese
being shipped from the south to Post’s ailments, don’t rive
establishment at Battle Creek. have riven ^kh ' ^
This canard probably originated with ttbje UkSapodal adylo*
President John Fitzgerald of the Chi- ^ jfrs. Pinkham, Lynn*
cago Federation of Labor, who, it is fop She ha® (TUided
said, stated it publicly, as truth. thousands to health* free
Post comes back and gives Fits- charge,
gerald the lie direct. He denounces
Fitzgerald’s statement as a deliberate j|
falsehood, an underhanded and coward-
ly attempt to Injure his business, hav-
ing not the slightest basis in fact. As
such an effort it must be regarded. It
is significant that tMff statement about
“the peanut shells" is being given wide
newspaper publicity. In tho patent
inside” of an eastern country paper I j
find it, and the inference naturally is j
that iabor-uniontteB are insidiously |
spreading this lie.
An institution (or a man) which j
will resort to moral intimidation and j
to physical force, that will destroy ma- j
chinery and burn buildings, that will ,
maim and kill if necessary to-efTect its j
ends, naturally would not hesitate to j
spread falsehood for the same pur- ;
poses.
We admire Post.
While we have no
Obligations.
-So you are a bill collector,” said
the person who is careless about
debts.
“I am.”
•’Well, you shouldn’t be short or dis-
courteous If it weren’t for people like
me you’d have been out of a job long
ago.”
Muckrskers.
*Tve gtean up trying to prevent the
country from going to the dogs.”
”8o have I. I figure that I can bear
the calamity if the rest can”
Texas Directory
ton County fanner, reports that the | ed to make a whirlwind campaign to enmlty toward labor unions, so long as
farmers around Mount Jov and Unitla | raise $56,000, which will assure a mem- - .....
were putting in all of their spare time 1 orial edifice in this city to cost nearly
hauling water. $200,600.
The top price paid for hog, In the ! A tierce gale ha, swept over the Brit-
Indianapolis ntnrlte, has been »M» a »_*■*».
HONOR BRAND
SEEDS
*
If vour merchant don t handle
* them, let us know. 1910 cat-
alogue now ready.
ROBINSON SEED A PLANT CO.
218 PACIFIC AVE. DALLAS. TEXA9
hundred pounds believed to be the j damage. The harbors are all crowded
were not enough bogs to fill the de-j sage.
mand. which was active both from The steamship Parthian of the Mer-
local and outside sources.
in the Cincinnati
chants and Miners’ line at the mouth of
Prices in the Cincinnati, market the St. John s river at Jacksonville,
soared until they reached the highest
Fla., rammed and sank the steamship
Magic Oltv of the Cook Steamship com-
I 7IS"V" P.BV. Thc.-Magtc City was loaded with
I per hundredweight. Clear perk has I merchandise, and now lie, tn twenty
advanced to $25 a barrel, which Is $^
higher than a year ago.
four feet of watery
«made to raise it.
Efforts will be
tbev are conducted in an honest, live- 1
and-let live" kind of a way. we have had !
enough of the tarred end of the stick J
to sympathize thoroughly with what he j
is trying to do. He deserves support. I
A man like Post can not be killed, even |
w ith lies. They are a boomerang, every
time. Again, we know, for hasn’t this |
weapon, every weapon that could be ’
thought of. been used (and not simply
by labor unions) to put us out of bust- j
ness, too? J
I am going to drink two cups of (
Postum every morning from this time J
on, and put myself on a diet of Grape-
Nuts. Bully for Post!—Editorial in
The American Journal vf Clinical Med- \
icine. J
Sick Horses
have many symptoms, such as
hidebound* loss of appetite,
cough, colic, indigestion, etc.
BLACK-DRAUG]
STOCK & POULTRY
MEDICINE
liberates their livers and
drives out the cause of all
these troubles. Costs less
than one cent a day to keep
your horse in prime condition.
Ask your dealer.
25c. SOc. and $lr Per Can.
p c«
~ TAKE A DOSE OF
PISS'S
m ust ttumi m (g?
it will iutoady relieve that recking cough.
Taken ptwnpdy it will ohen perraot
Aathmn, Brocxybtoi and *erioui dwoto end
lung trouble*. ~
AB Dnnto, 28
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Arterberry, T. E. The Savoy Star. (Savoy, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 48, Ed. 1 Friday, February 25, 1910, newspaper, February 25, 1910; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth974348/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bonham Public Library.