The Savoy Star. (Savoy, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, July 29, 1910 Page: 3 of 5
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.
Extracted Text
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The Army of
Constipation
1* Growing Smaller Erefy D*Jk
CARTER'S LITTLE
UVER PILLS ere
*opounble—they
only *ne rd
■ S - — ^
_ladifestk®, Sick H#ad»ch#, SaHow Skim.
y ah pnJL, SHALL DOSE, SHALL PUCB
Genuine mu*few* Signature
Texas Directory
A Business Education
The Metropolitan Business College
BIG PACKERS WIN
COTTON OIL LOSES
ALDRICH’S CONCESSION MADE TO
SOUTH IS WHOLLY NUL-
LIFIED.
JUDGE FOWLER’S OPINION
Department of Agriculture Vill Con-
tinue to Inspect Lard Substitute
as Heretofore Done.
SKIN TROUBLES
LEWIS’ "SINGLE BINDER."
A hand-made cigar freah from the
table, wrapped In foil, thus keeping
A Healing Ointment With a Wide fresh until smoke^d. a^ fresh cigar
i! ci Bourse deal red
If Interested In
MANTELS
TIITng or Grates
Write for Catalogue and Prloea
FAKES FURNITURE
AND CARPET CO.
Dallas, Texas
THE KEELS INSTITUTE
BELLEVUE PLACE, DALLAS, TEXAS
Cored Whiskey, Drag and Tobacco habits.
Only place in Texas using Keeley Remedies,
cures in Texas. Write for literature.
$1-10 AM BEROL RECO RDS-S1
Send for proposition how to obtain
thw* records with an attachment
for your EDISON Phonograph.
See your dealer or write to—
HOUSTON PHONOGRAPH CO.
9W LOUISIANA SI. HOUSTON. TOAS
THE REASON.
Washington, July 26: The Depart-
ment of Agriculture issued a state-
ment to the effect that the cotton
seed oil men have lost: and the pack-
ers have won, in the matter of
whether the manufacturers of cotton
seed oil lard may use duty free oleo
Bterin in the manufacture of their
product for American consumption.
Although former Attorney General
Moody, now on the Supreme bench,
had ruled that the lard substitute did
not come under the meat inspection
law, Assistant Attorney General Fow-
ler of the present Administration
rules that it does, and therefore the
makers can not import oleo stearin,
which the Aldrich tariff made duty
free, because the manufacture of for-
eign oleo stearin is not under inspec-
tion by the Department of Agricul-
ture. Thus the concession which
Senator Aldrich made to the cotton
industry, after a hard fight in the
Senate, is nullified by the ruling
made by Assistant Attorney General
Powlcr.
The following is the statement
which the Department of Agriculture
sent out on this subject:
"Secretary Wilson’s Meat Inspec-
tors will continue to inspect lard sub-
stitute and not a pound of that ar-
ticle can go into interstate or foreign
commerce unless it bears the mark
’United States Inspected and Passed.’
Thig is the gist of an opinion render-
ed by Judge Fowler, who is acting,
as Attorney General during the ab-
sence in Alaska of Mr. Wickersham.
Judge Fowler in his opinion holds
that lard substitute, which is a cook-
ing compound made up of one-fifth
'A letter from Mrs. I. E. Cameron,
Graduate Nurse, Augusta, Me., says:
"I must write and tell you the good
Resinol Ointment has done. I applied
it to an ulierated leg of six months’
standing. Almost everything had been
tried to heal it Resinol was applied
twice a day for four weeks, and the ul-
cers are entirely healed. It is now
six months since the treatment and no
indication of a return of the trouble.
I have used Resinol for eruptions on
children’s faces, and for everything
that seemed to need an ointment, with
satisfactory results in every case.”
Mrs. F. Cox, Chicago, 111., says in
another letter: "I cannot speak too
highly of Resinol Ointment and Soap.
They cured my baby boy of Eczema.
He had a very severe case. Numerous
other remedies had been tried and
failed to do any good. I would not be
without them in the house. ”
■•Do you se °th9at°man goius along ! There™*"
n’fn^r ^ ,hC a‘r' Wlth Agul-
I:!Y , T vnow him." ! has, which is the southern tip of Af-
“1 suppose he believes In taking in rica, and south of the Cape of Good
The Brut application Trill rellrre the
It chine and Irritation In akin dUeaaea,
C hiB^.P*Lh»bnPrn,n Po”.®* Tvt 7^10^
are often cured by an overnight ap-
plication.
Resinol Ointment, Realnol Soap and
Realnol Medicated Shaving Stick are
aold at all Drag Storea.
talc for booklet on care of fhe^Skln
and Complexion, or aend atamp to ne
for aample and -booklet. Realnol
Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md.
smoke. The -old, well cured tobaccos
used are so rich in quality that many
who formerly smoked 10c cigars now
smoke Lewis’ Single Binder Straight
5c. Lewis’ Single Binder costs the
dealer some more than other 5c cigars,
but the higher price enables this fac-
tory to use extra quality tobacco.
There are many imitations; don’t he
fooled. • There is no substitute! Tell
the dealer you want a Lewis “Single
Binder.”___
An Easy Fit.
A number of years ago there lived
in northern New Hampshire a notori-
ous woman-hater. It was before the
day of ready-made clothing, and want-
ing a new suit, he was obliged to take
the material to the village tailoress.
She took his measurements, and when
she cut the coat, made a liberal al-
lowance on each seam.
The man’s dislike of women in gen-
eral prevented his having a fitting.
He took the finished garment without
trying it on. It was much too large,
and his disgust was apparent in the
answer he made to the friendly loafer
on his- first visit to the post office,
when he wore the despised article.
"Got a new coat, Obed?” 6ald the
loafer.
“No, I hain’t!” said Obed. "I’ve got
seven yards of cloth wrapped round
me."—Youth’s Companion.
the good, pure ozone.”
“No; he’s hunting for a
garage, I believe.”—Tit-Bits.
motor
Aromatic Effects.
“What you ought to do,” said the
physician, “is to take the air m an
automobile or a motor boat.’
“Can’t I stay home and open a can
of gasoline?”
Bottomless tanks enable you to water
your cattle In Nature's way at small cost.
‘Booklet "A” free. Alamo Iron tVorks,
San Antonio. Texas.
Remember, girls, that pinning a $17
hat on a 17 cent head doesn’t increase
the value of the head.
Hope. The Agulhas plateau is said to
be almost a duplicate in size and rich-
ness of the north cod banks. But this
is too far off, so there is little promise
of appeasing the hungry appetite
of the world for cod.
Formerly the people burned witches.
Now they roast politicians.
The Teacher—Who was It that
lng compound made up of one nun j climbed slowly up the ladder of suc-
a'nlmal fat ai^d four-fifths cotton seed carrying his burden with him as
he went; who, when l>e reached the
The Deacon’s Parable.
A self-conscious and egotistical
yobng clergyman was supplying the
pulpit of a country church. After the
service he asked one of the deacons,
a grizzled, plain-spoken man, what he
thought of his morning effort.
“Waal,” answered the old man,
slowly, ‘Til tell ye in a kind of para-
ble. I remember Tunk Weatherbee’s
fust deer hunt, when he was green.
He follered the deer’s tracks all right,
but he follered ’em all day In the
wrong direction.”—Housekeeper.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle 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
The Kind You Have Always Bought
{The Handiest Remedy
is Hostetter’s Stomach]
Bitters, and past experi-
ence has proven that when
taken promptly at the first
i signal of distress a sick
spell can be avoided. For
Loss of Appetite, Gas on
Stomach, Heartburn,
Bloating, Indigestion,
Dyspepsia, Headache,
Costiveness, Cramps,
IDiarrhoea, Malaria,
I Fever and Ague it stands
1 unequalled. Get_a_bottle.
SKIN DISEASE
CURE GUARANTEED
OSTETTER'
CELEBRATED
STOMACH
BITTER
The Drink of Quality
GUARANTEED
REMEDY FOR
SKIN DISEASES
SEE CIRCULAR.
ouahucud er
roooANDtAUU ACT JUMEX?M90*.SE*U.I.*’ J7>6
DIRECTIONS
warm witertndtqptrandrtbtt tell tje Cunt
onceortmcetorivanduteays ttoeaumt
Price 50 Cents
PIANUrACTURtO BY
HCHARDS MEDICINE I
%5hANTE^
Your. Money Back
All Drug Stores^
Busted
Many » man goes broke—In Health
—then* wealth. Blames his mind-
says it don’t work right; but all th®
time It’s kis bowels. They don’t work
—liver dead and the whole system get®
clogged with poison. Nothing kill*
good, clean-cut brain action like con-
stipation. CASC4RETS will relieve
j and cure. Try it now. — Of
CASCARETS Te a box lor a week’#
' - treatment. All druggists. Bigga*t seller
to tbe world. Million boxes a month.
Janitor—I know the water is turned
•aff. I’m sorry, but it isn’t my fault
* Tenant—I know, and I guess that’s
•®rhy you’re Borry.
Silenced the Critic.
Charles Sumner, when in London,
gave a ready reply. At a dinner given
In his honor, he spoke of “thb ashes’*
•of some dead hero. “Ashes! What
American English!” rudely broke in
an Englishman; “dust you mean, Mr.
Sumner. We don’t burn our dead in
this country.” “Yet,” instantly re-
plied Mr. Sumner, with a courteous
omile. “your poet Gray tells us that
*Even in our ashes live their wonted
fires ” The American was not criti-
•clzed again that evening.
. _•_
More Serious.
“Mathilda Browne was very rude to
■an overdressed old woman she met on
•the street the other day.”
“I know the story. The old woman
turned out to be Makhilde’s very rich
aunt, and new she’s going to give all
her money to a hospital for decrepit
-dogs.”
“Nothing of the sort. In fact, its
worse. The old woman was the
"Brownes’ new cook—and now they
haven’t any.”
oil, is fairly within the definition of a
meat food product and must be in-
spected, under the meat inspection
law.
“Acting Secretary of Agriculture
Hays said: The opinion of the At-
torney General confirms the construc-
tion placed on the law by Secretary
Wilson. We have inspected lard
substitute ever since the meat inspec-
tion law was passed. We never had
any doubt about the matter, but some
of the manufacturers of lard substi-
tute thought inspection of their pro
duct was not required.”
HEAT KILLS MANY IN CITIES
Chicago and New York Suffer Great-
|y From Excessive Hu-
midity.
top gazed upon those far beneath
him. and—
The Scholar (aged 8)—I know,
ma'am. It -was Pat O’Rourke, presi-
dent of the Hodcarriers union.
Real Novelty.
Knocker—Say, here’s an original
baseball story.
Second Senior—How’s that?
Knocker—Hero wins game in eighth
inning instead of ninth.—Yale Record.
EPIDEMIC OF ITCH IN WELSH
V 1 L LA G E I Just th. thing for
I breaking In new shoes. Sold everywhere, 25c.
“In Dowlais, South Wales, about fif- sample sent FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted,
teen years ago, families were strick- Le Roy, N. y.
If You Are a Trifle Sensitive
About the size of your shoes, many people
It cures Tired, Swollen, Aching Feet and
,---*—. jUBt the thing for
*Caught Too Quick.
“I pleads guilty ter' stealln’ dein
melons, ledge,” said the prisoner, “but
I wants de mercy er de court.”
“On what grounds?” asked the
judge.
“On dese grounds,” replied the pris-
oner: “I stole de melons, but de sher-
iff didn’t give me a chance to eat
•em!“—Atlanta Constitution.
There can be no true rest without
Mfeg____ _
work, and the full delight of a holiday
cannot be known except by the man
•who has earned It.—Hugh Black..
For Breakfast—
Post
T oasties
with cream , or
milk
Chicago, 111.: Four deaths were
reported Monday as a result of the
hottest weather of the season. Mon-
day was the hottest day in ten
years in Chicago, but a lake breez®
later tempered the fierce heat some-
what, but there were many prostra-
tions and general suffering. To add
to the general discomfort all the
downtown streets are torn up for
new pavement and clouds of dust
prevail at all times. The Infant Wel-
fare Committee reported it had 12,-
000 babies under its care and that
800 of them were 111 because of the
heat. The committee is distributing
two tons of ice daily in homes where
people are unable to buy ice. The
hot wave seems to have settled over
all the Middle West and forecasters
say there is no relief in sight. Rigid
warnings have been posted over the
city by the health department regard-
ing food and drink during the un-
usual torridity.
New York: After a record rise to
94 degrees Monday, marking the hot-
test day of the season, the official
mercury hovered above or not far be-
neath the 80 degree mark all night,
standing at 79. Five deaths which
occurred in the last twenty-four hours
are attributed to heat Thousands of
tenement dwellers, unable to stand
the heat during the night, fled to the
parks for refuge. Reports from
Brooklyn hospitals next morning ad-
ded four to the list of dead from the
effects of the torrid wave.
Country Life Meeting Date. *
Guthrie, Ok.: E. D. Cameron,
State Superintendent of Public In-
struction and president of the South-
west Country Life Association, has
announced that the annual meeting
scheduled to be held in Dallas August
9 and 10 would bo postponed until
during the Terns State Fair. Notice
of the postponement has been sent
to Dallas and the Fair management
will be asked to suggest the dates
en wholesale by a disease known as
the itch. Believe me, it is the most
terrible disease ®f its kind that I
know of, as it itefes all through your
body and makes your lfte an inferno.
Sleep is out of the question and you
feel as if a million mosquitoes were
attacking you at the same time. I
knew a dozen families that were so
affected.
The doctors did their best, but
their remedies were of no avail what-
ever. Then tbe families tried a drug-
gist wh<5 was noted far and wide for
his remarkable cures. People came
to him from all parts of the country
for treatment, hut his medicine made
matters still worse, as a last resort
they were advised by a friend to use
the Cuticura Remedies. I am glad to
tell you that after a few days’ treat-
ment with Cuticura Soap, Ointment
and Resolvent, the effect was wonder-
ful and the result was a perfect cure
in all cases.
“I may add that my three brothers,
Initials.
“What are Mr. Wise’s Initials?”
“Can’t say. He has been taking so
\nany college degrees that nobody can
keep track of them.”
Red. Weak, W*«ry, Watery Eye*.
Relieved By idurlne Eye Remedy. Try
Murine For Your Eye Troubles. You Will
Like Murine. It Soothes. 50c at ^our
Druggists. Write For Eye Books. Free.
Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicago.
A crazy person thinks every one
else is insane, and love is blind be-
cause it imagines everybody else is.
Tour cattle always have pure water at
small cost to you if you have a bottom-
less tank. Booklet “A” free. Alamo Iron
Works. San Antonio. Texas.
We are still patiently awaiting the
advent of wireless politics.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrnp.
Avoid headache, impurities
of the Blood, constipation by
taking a enp of GRAND
MA’S TEA. Best laxative
for children. Pleasant to
take, sweeten and take as
an ordinary tea. Package 25
cents.
Complexion Soap
The Texatone Boy
at FOUNTAINS AND IN BOTTLB8.
CTXATONB COMPANY DALLAS. TAX AS
If yon want a soap that
cures pimples, chaps,
chilblains, sunburn, ec-
zema and all cutaneous
affections, use
Freckeleater
Soap
It Is the SPECIAL soap
for the PARTICULAR
person. Price 25 centa
All Dealers
SAVE YOUR MONEY.
One box of Tutt’sPOls save men3 „ -----
Baker-Wheeler Mfg. Co., Dallas. T«.
Tutfs Pills
A vacation necessity—the
\ MAKES \ MONEY?
It’s the man at the desk; onoe Book.
*----1 or Stenographerj^now bead
■ man. Write for FREB book
on Braaskea’s Bsslaess Trsla-
Itag BY MAIL, and got ready
| for the deak that’s waiting for
— I you. Thoassads have thus
-29,-
known the
WORLD OVER
■ ---------- ----- - X thick head is apt to generate a
three sisters, myself and all our fam- mu|tjtude Gf thin ideas.
ilies have been users of the Cuticura \----- "
Remedies for fifteen years. Thomas
Hugh, 1650 West Huron St., Chicago,
111., June 29, 1909.”
W. N. U., DALLAS, NO. 31-1910.
The smile that follows will
last all day—
"The Memory Lingers"
Sold by Grocers.
Pkgs. 10c and 15c
POSTTM CEREAL OO., Ltd.
Bottle Crook, Rick.
Womens Secrets
Immense Saving Possible.
In a preliminary bulletin on the
cost of maintaining a tuberculosis
sanatorium, the National Association
for the Study and Prevention of Tu- j
berculosis announces that the average
cost per patient per day in thirty
semi-charitable sanatoria scattered in
all parts of the ’United States Is
$1,669. These institutions represent
an annual expenditure of over $1,300,-
000 and over 815,000 days of treat-
ment given each year. The bulletin,
which is part of an extensive study
the National association is making for
its bureau of information, points out
that the country could save annually
at least $150,000,000 if the indigent
consumptives were properly segre-
gated.
4
p
There i» one man in the United States who has perhaps heard
more women’s secrets than any other man or woman in the
country. These secrets are not secrets of guilt or shame, but
the secrets of suffering, and they have been confided to Dr.
R. V. Pierce in the hope and expectation of advice and help.
That few of these women have been disappointed in their ex-
pectations is proved by the fact that ninety-eight per cent, of
ail women treated by Dr. Pierce have been abso.utely and
altogether cured. Such a record would be remarkable if the
cases treated were numbered by hundreds only. But when
that record applies to the treatment of more than half-a- mil-
lion women, in a practice of over 40 years, it is phenomenal,
end entitles Dr. Pierce to the gratitude accorded him by women, as tbe brzt ot
‘[,Ev:^,\!cVwo,;7rr.,yin°oT°iird,;”“v * >.««,
out fee, to World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Dr. R. V. Pierce, Prest.,
Buffalo, N. Y.
DR. PIERCE’S FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION
DEAF HEAR*
THE AURIS
SuBest, Iswnt-fried fnetkal
luni[ torica Writs ts-ffsy.
auris company
Jamaica. Nrw Voaa
Shlstlxoa WestlL Women Strong,
Siolx Women
Well.
YOU 0U6HT TO KNOW ABOUT IT
It's a County Seat in the center of the Rio
Grande Valley and Irrigation; has railroad,
canals, new court house, good bank, school,
brick business houses. Chapin needs people
to develop it’s great resources; they’re rich
enough to make you rich. Ask us for booklet
Ckapia Town.it* Ce, • Ba 6, Ckapia. T#*.
WKM hed-lyte
Tbe new liquid headAcbe and
neuralgia medicine.
Sals, Pleasant and Eftectfv*.
10c, 25c and 60c bottle# at all
Drugstore#. Manufactured by
THE HED-LYTE COHPANY
DALLAS TEXAS
EVERYBODY SING '.gStSoSZ!- u£4
S"A£‘u„v^,5a,V.*'i?Lr‘i?^SI IS
Asylum Needs Repairs.
Terrell: Superintendent C. L.
Gregory, acting under the advice of
the board of managers of the North
Texas Hospital for the Insane in this
city, left for Austin to appear before
the Governor and legislature to ask
,'or an additional appropriation of $5,-
>H)0 for lepair fund for the asylum.
Several of the buildings of that insti*
ution have become cracked and oth-
erwise damaged to the extent that all
:he available repair fund appropriat-
ed has been exhausted and more is
needed yet.
Caught in the Rush.
“My poor man,” said the sympa-
thetic woman, “and how came you to
be crippled for life?"
“I'll tell you, madam.” replied the
beggar. “Once I spent my vacation
at a summer hotel and 1 was trampled
down trying to get into the dining
room after the first bell.
nr PiewM'# Pt#a##"t F"M«*t# e-roiat. *nii iwyUr-
......... ' >. r and bo«' * “iKar-oo#t#cL
Unj, gruauikti. •••by i© tak®. gnp«-
Knock and the world will Join .n
the anvil chorus.
Plenty of Mater,al.
“Son,” said the press humorist, “you j
have inherited some of my humor.
“Not enough to make a living with, >
dad.”-
Combination Wood and Wire Fence and Corn Crib*
. > a a la a_: 1 Ar/wtAfniesI Unrp maiie for varu. UWQ,
"Never mind. I’m
you all of my jokes.'
going to leave 4 ■-
Cattlo drink pure .water at: less cost to
you. if yuu have a bottomless tank.
• . ir,.,. Alamo iron work., bo.n
HODGE
FENCE
-U4M1
The most practical and economical fence made for yard, lawn,
garden, orchard or stock. Sold in 75 and 8o-foot roil* and
painted with the celebrated Monitor paint Easy to erec
and more durable than ordinary fencea Made in heights ol
three to six feet of selected straight grained yellow pin®
-pickets. See vour lumber dealer or write
THE HODGE FENCE * LUMBER CO, Lid, L#W CUHa, L*
“A'* tret*. AliiUlO
Autonlo, Texan
It's easier to get on in tho world
than it is to get up in it. ?
r^MlTtHFI IS FYE SALVE /*\
YbuLook Prematurely Old
gray ha,rs. U80 "LA CREOLE" HAIR RESTORER. PRICI. ...OO, #M.
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Arterberry, T. E. The Savoy Star. (Savoy, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, July 29, 1910, newspaper, July 29, 1910; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth974468/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bonham Public Library.