The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 5, 1905 Page: 4 of 4
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WINCHESTER
"NUBLACK" BLACK POWDER SttlELLS
The *' Nublack ” is a grand good shell. It is
good in construction, primed with a quick
and sure primer, and carefully loaded with
the best brands of powder and shot. It is a
favorite among hunters and other users of
black powder shells on account of its
uniform shooting, evenness of pattern
and strength to withstand reloading.
^ l, L DEALERS SELL TH E M
NEVER HEARD OF BEN BUTLER.
NOT WORRYING OVER CONTRACT.
LOSS OF APPETITE
PRICE, 25 Cts7
THEGrap/lh
Hmo&day §U
K>H
ANTi-GRIPiNE
IS GUARANTEED TO CURE
GRIP, BAD GOLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA.
i"01<lTtor^MOK«T backVf'it'»p*totm!
F. W. Viewer,U. V.,Manufacturer,Springjielwl, Mo.
Dainty, Crisp, Dressy
Summe
Skirts
are a delight to the refined woman every-
where. In order to get this result see that
the material is good, that it is cut in the
latest fashion and use
D<gfSan@®
Sfarelhi
• ■Incident of the Rebellion Recalled by
Police-Court Case.
If it had not been for history relat-1
| ing the silverware incident of a cer-1
1 tain federal general in New Orleans
j during the occupation by union troops
•one of Tartown's most prominent citi-
zens would not now be doing time on
the chain gang, says the New Orleans
Times-Democrat. As it is, Ben Butler
is suffering partly because of the
odium attached to his name and partly
because he followed the well-known
example of that military martinet and
drank deep of the rosy wine—slightly
mixed with “coke.”
“What do you think you’ve got to
say for yourself, Benjamin Butler?”
said Recorder Marmouget. “Are you
the Ben Butler who took
spoons?”
“Lordy, boss, dey ain’ Lringin' up
dat ole matter, is dey?” exclaimed Ben
with a startled look. “I done mer time
fer dat too long ergo ter talk erbout,
jedge. I onderstan'in I ben charge
wid bein’ drunk, w’ieh I wuz, boss, but
dem spoons am er nudder matter.”
“So you did steal spoons, eh?” ex-
claimed his honor. “You followed the
precepts of your distinguished name-
sake and swiped the silverware. This
is where history repeats itself.”
“Yasser, I did stole dem spoons,
jedge, dat were fo’ yeah ergo, but I
doan kno’ nuttin’ ’t all 'bout dat
yuther Ben Butler. Dat mus’er ben
some yuther case, jedge.”
“Yes. I expect it was, Ben,” replied
his honor, “but that does not dispose
of the drunk case, and I’ll give you
ten days in the workhouse. That will
afford you time in which to read up
history and become posted on the
only and original spoon thief whose
name you bear. Take him out.”
No Matter What She Signed, Woman
Would Pay When She Liked.
“Do you know what you signed?”
asked the man, as the woman laid
down her pen.
“Why, yes,” she replied. “I signed
a contract to pay for a piano in so
many months at the rate of so many
dollars per month.”
“How do you know you did?” asked
the man. “You didn’t read the con-
tract.”
“I know that,” said the woman. “It
wasn't necessary. I haven’t time for
that. I know what I told them down
at the office yesterday.”
“That is just like a woman,” said
the man, impatiently. “They clap
their names to any kind of a docu-
Cold Sweats, Twitching Nerves and
Weakness Cured by Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills.
Nature punishes every infraction of
her laws, and careless habits easily lead
to the condition described by Mr. Wil-
liam Browne, of No. 1019 Lincoln street,
St. Joseph, Mo. Mr. Browne is an ex-
pert tinner iu the employ of the National
Biscuit Co. He gives the following ac-
count of a trying experience:
“In the spring of 1902,” he says,
“ while I was regularly working at my
trade, I grew somewhat careless in my
habits of eating and drinking, and finally
found that my appetite was fickle, a bad
taste lingered in ray mouth, my nerves
twitched and were beyond my control,
my kidneys were ont of order and cold
sweats would break out over my body at
odd times. Perhaps, while I stood talk-
ing with some one, this trembling
of the limbs, and profuse sweating, and
a severe chill would seize me. I became
alarmed at my condition and, having
' _ Williams'
- j j — -------- — ——- — — -—
those I ment without reading it over. So care-
less are they about such things that
half the women in the land would
sign their own death warrant and not
know it.”
Then the man read slowly through I read an endorsement of Dr.
the written agreement. Pink Pills, I got a box and began to use
“Here,” he said, “is a mistake, first ‘h,erl>- They helped me *t ouoe._ After
pop. Fortunately you are dealing with
a reliable firm that will rectify it. If
you were buying from some jay con-
cern that would hold you to your bar-
gain you would have to make your
payments on the 12th of every month,
instead of on the 1st. as you wish to
do.”
“Oh, that’s nothing,” said
woman, serenely. “Don’t worry about
that. I’ll pay whenever I get ready,
no matter what the contract says.”
“Oh. excuse me,” said the man. “Per-
haps that explains why all women
think it unnecessary to read whatever
papers they sign.”
PROVED TRUTH OF OLD ADAGE.
I had used one box the twitching of the
nerves, the trouble with the stomach
and the cold sweats stopped and have
not reappeared, and my appetite is good.
I have told nil my friends that Dr. Wil-
liams’ Pink Pills cured me and I recom-
mend them to everybody.”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills cured Mr.
Browne because nothing can strengthen
the nerves except good rich, red blood—
1 and Dr. Williams' Pink Pills actually
make new blood. They don’t act ou the
bowels. They don’t bother with more
symptoms. They drive from the blood
the cause of anaemia, indigestion, ner-
vous disorders, general weakness and
the troubles of growing girls and womgn.
The pills are guaranteed to be free
from opiates or harmful drugs. Sold by
all druggists, or by the Dr. Williams
Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
HIS EARS HAD DECEIVED HIM.
Had
in the laundry. All three things are import-
ant, but the last is absolutely necessary.
No matter how fine the material or how
daintily made, bad starch and poor laundry
work will spoil the effect and ruin the
clothes. DEFIANCE STARCH is pure,
will not rot the clothes nor cause them to
crack. It sells at 10c a sixteen ounce pack-
age everywhere. Other starches, much in-
ferior, sell at 10c for twelve ounce pack-
age. Insist on getting DEFIANCE
STARCH and be sure of results.
Starch
taapaDf,
Omaha, ietorasSca.
W. L. Douglas
*3-J?&’3= SHOES ™
W. L. Douglas $4.00 Citt Edge Line
eannot be equalled at any price.
B
Examination Proved Boy’s Mind
Been Elsewhere.
Lusty boyhood, as a usual thing,
F cares little for poetry and philosophy.
•' But it does gaze longingly toward the
! college campus whereon it may disport
f its sturdy masculinity. To attain that
i devoutly wished end, a modicum of
[ knowledge concerning writers and
thinkers whom he regards with indif-
I ference bordering on contempt, is de-
i manded of the high school boy.
f How deep that knowledge goes and
how wide a difference in sense may be
given by words very like in sound, was
shown in a receilt examination in Eng-
lish literature. One of the questions
asked for the name of a poem by Wil-
liam Wordsworth, expressing a belief
in a previous existence. That one of
the boys taking the examination had
been present in the schoolroom when
the poem was discussed and that his
ears, though not his mind, had been
open was shown to the astounded
teacher who in correcting the papers
found that he had written, not “Inti-
mations of Immortality,” but what
looked and sounded much like it, “Imi-
tations of Immorality.”
Thirteen at Table Certainly Proved
Unlucky for Some.
“Ever sat down thirteen to table?-’
inquired the man with the salmon-pink
tie.
“Once,” said the man with the
white mustache.
“Well, you never observed any bad
luck follow it, did you?”
“I’ll bet he did,” growled the man
who believes in these things.
“Well,” said the white mustache, “it
was a trifle unlucky for most of ’em.”
“Any of ’em die?” asked the man
who believed.
“Not enough grub to go round?”
sneered the salmon-pink tie.
“There were no victuals,” said the
white mustache softly. “It took place
in a lawyer’s office; it was a meeting
of creditors; there were twelve be-
sides myself sat down to table.”
There was a long pause, and then
the salmon-pink tie spoke again.
“In what way did the meeting prove
unlucky, may I ask?”
“Poor creatures,” sighed the white
mustache, “they never got a penny out
of me. I wf.s the bankrupt.”—London
Answers.
Susceptibility of Widowers.
A widower is a tame animal and
stands without tying. No woman can
scare him. He is overconfident and
that is bis great weakness. He has
been through it all and is not to be
caught a second time. He feels im-
pervious to the approaches of woman
in any form or guise. The widow finds
him really a rather knotty problem.
He presents difficulties that are whol-
ly absent in a man who has never
felt the matrimonial halter draw. He
looks upon the widow with amused in-
difference. But a young and attrac-
tive woman who has never been mar-
ried quickly arouses his sympathies.
He, in nine cases out of ten, shows
remarkable endurance of her siege
of his heart, and we all know that it is
but a step from endurance to pity and
thence to embraces. His doom is
quickly sealed.—Washington Post.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA,
a ufe and (rare remedy for infanta and children,
and see that it
FOR WOMEN
troubled with ilia peculiar to
their sex, aecd as a douche is marvel
cessfol. Thoroughly cleans**, kills disease germs,
stops discharges, heals inUaruination
soreness.
1
I marvelously sne-
lise&se germs,
ion and local
Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure
> water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal
and economical than liquid antiseptics for all
TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES
v For sale at druggists, 90 cents a box.
Trial Box and Book of Instruct lops Free.
Tmk H. Paxton Company Boston. Mass,
“Literary man wants to buy or bor-
row old love letters; no names used.”
This cold-blooded advertisement has
appeared in the Sydney (Australia)
Morning Herald.
AMY
$10,000 ■sssarasr
W. L. Douglas S3.50 shoes have by their ex-
ealleot style, easy fitting, and superior wearing
qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.50
Shoo In the world. They are just as good as
tlMM that cast you $5.00 to $7.00— the only
difference Is the price. If I could take you into
my factory at Brockton. Mass., ths largest In
the world under one roof maki
du the care wi1
pair of Douglas i
why W. L. Douglas $3.50
.., .... ...get
king men’s fine
th which
I show you the care with w hich every
i shoes Is made, you would realize
>ugla* $3.50 shoes are the best
•hoes produced In the world.
...... w you the difference between the
my factory and those of other
ould understand why Douglas
st more to make, why they hold
their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are o«
......e tr
If I could show you the difference between the
diou made In uiy factory and those of other
makes, you would understand why Douglas
, why they holf
Intrinsic value
ket I
greater
shoe on the nark<|
W. L. Deiigfaa Strong Me do Sho
Mon. $2.SO. 92.00. Bay*’Sc
OroooShooo.t2.ua. $2. $1.78,
mists aim v-
than any other $3.50
:to-day.
r Made Shoe• for
v*’ School 4
,7 8.$1.BO
CAUTION.—Insist open haring W.L.Doug-
las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine
without his name and price stamped on bottom.
WANTED. A shoe dealer in every town where
W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line of
samples sent free for inspection upon request.
Post Color Eyelets uiod; they will not wear brassq
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Stylea
Ol'GLAS, Brockton. Mass.
Johnson Grass Killed.
Mr. T. C. Davis, of Austin, Texas,
writes; Dear Sirs—The 10 gallons of
“DINAMINE” that you sent me has
proven very satisfactory, and does all
you claim for it, having killed Johnson
Grass and Bermuda Grass.
Five gallons of “DINAMINE” will
make 100 gallons of treating solution,
cost $2.00. A trial order will convince
the most skeptic. Ask your dealer for
it “NOW,” or send us the money and
we will ship at once.
Sharks have made their appearance
in the Adriatic sea, having come by
way of the Suez canal.
Mrs. B. Got There First.
“This,” said the jeweler, “is what
happened here last month.
“Mr. B. drove up in his hansom and
entered my shop, accompanied by his
valet, who carried an oblong box of
steel. Mr. B. asked for a private in-
terview and I took him into my office.
There he opened the box, exposing a ^ls *l’en^8'
splendid array of diamond and pearl
necklaces, earrings, tiaras and stom-
achers.
“ ‘Mrs. B.,’ he said, ‘is now abroad.
Before she returns I want you to ex-
tract all these stones and to replace
them with good imitations, selling the .
real jewels and giving me the money. '
This, of course, is to be a confidential
transaction. Mrs. B. is to know noth-
ing of it.’
“I looked at Mr. B. I think I blushed
a little.
“ ‘My dear sir,’ I said, ‘I should be
glad to do what you ask, but it is im-
possible. Two years ago Mrs. B.
called here on the same errand that
now brings you, and this errand, in
her case, was successful. The paste
jewels that you offer me are worth
little more than the hire of the han
som awaiting you outside.’ ”
Didn’t Care to Advertise Wealth.
One of the wealthy residents in the
Wicker park district is a manufactur-
er who from a street peddler worked
himself up into position and has ac-
cumulated money so that his neigh-
bors estimate his wealth at about j
$500,000. Throughout his career he has
never learned to write and his figur-
ing has been upon a system peculiar
to himself. A few days ago some of
in the presence of a re-
porter urged the manufacturer to tell
some of his experiences so that an
article might be published about him. j
Pulling out some old tax receipts J
he said: “It might be nice to get my
name in the paper and a writeup |
which you think might help me so- j
If you print, however, that [
I am worth $500,000 then the board of ;
review will raise my taxes. I have
found that people in society pay for
what they claim to have more often
than for what they actually possess.
I d rather keep my taxes as they are
and let no one know just how much
I own.”—Chicago Chronicle.
Bean the
Signature of
In L'iC For Over 30 Years.
The Kind Yon Have Always Bought.
Ventilating the Bedroom.
Keep your bed and bedroom warm
and dry during the day. An open
window and a cold room will make
the bed damp and cold and will give
its unfortunate occupant a severe cold
at least, if not worse, says the Living
Church. A damp bed is a veritable
brooding place of bacteria. Many
housekeepers, having heard of the ne
cessity of fresh air, leave the bedroom
window open during the day, filling it
with cold air when none is needed,
and then close the window for the
night when the room is occupied and
the fresh air is needed in abundance.
Any one can see how contrary to com-
mon sense such procedure is.
BABY ONE SOLID SORE.
Could Not Shut Eyes to Sleep—Spent
$100 on Doctors—Baby Grew
Worse—Cured by Cuticura
for $5.
FRANCE HAS COLD-GIRL TOWN.
8L Etienne, Where Hands That Do
Delicate Work Muet Not Pereplre.
St. Etienne is France's “cold girl
town,” a name it has carried through
two or three centuries In whioh it alio
has held international supremacy In
ribbons, says the Indianapolis News
To-day 30,000 “cold” girls operating
35,000 looms In St. Etienne annually
make ribbon enough to tie the earth
up in silken bands and throw off
streamers to the planets.
For two or three centuries the rib-
bon making industry has been su-
preme here. It became a commercial
advantage to have loom operators
who did not have “nerves” and who
did not perspire. This advantage de-
veloped to a necessity, and a peculiar
species of girls was developed. They
are girls who have no “nerves,” girls
who do not worry or hurry; girls
wh06e hands do not perspire. A pers-
piring hand now means spoiled rib-
bons. and so carefully have the femi
nine hands here been cooled to meet
this need that it seems that ice In-
stead of blood runs through the veins
of the 60,000 operatives that to-day
in St. Etienne make ribbons for the
world. At the neighboring lacemak-
ing town of Le Puy it is said that four-
year-old girls make lace and that in
St. Etienne they are set to work at
that age cooling off their hands and
controlling their nerves.
So remarkably has the training suc-
ceeded that though many of the
cooped-up ribbon weaving rooms are
insufferably hot in summer, the girls
at the looms do not sweat, and in the
entire year’s run of millions of miles
ef ribbon, valued at the looms at $18,-
000,000 annually, not $100 worth oi
ribbon comes out damaged by pers-
piration.
WORKING WOMEN
Their Hard Struggle Made Easier—Interesting States
ments by a Young Lady in Boston
and One in Nashville, Tenn.
All women work; some
homes, some in church, and
the whirl of society. And in stores,
mills and shops tens of thousands are
on the never-ceasing treadmill, earning
their daily bread.
in their! Button, tells women how %o avoid such
some in' suffering; she writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
“ I suffered misery for aavero} years with
irregular menstruation, liy back achsd; t
bad bearing down pains, ana *
STAIRCASE A HIGH ONE.
By 20,000 Steps Cut in the Rock, ML
Omi Is Climbed.
For the ascent of Mt. Omi, on the
borderland between western China
and the Tibetan plateau, there is an
artificial staircase consisting of 20,000
steps, cut in slippery limestone.
Who made these steps is largely a
matter of surmise, but they were
probably formed by religious enthusi-
asts, to provide a means of access
from the hot plains, out of which the
mountain mass rises abruptly to the
heights, 5,000 to 11,000 feet above,
amongst which the Buddhist abbey of
Omi embodies some of the holiest tra-
ditions of the religion professed by its
inmates.
Anyhow, the staircase is there, and
by it many pilgrims attain the shrine.
—Stray Stories.
To Harness the Start.
A mar. who is fond of working out
statistics and astronomical calcula
tions, figures that the cotton factories
of Lancashire, England, at present
spin about 155,000,000 miles of thread
a day, so that in six seconds they
make enough to go around the earth.
In one month they spin enough to
reach from here to the moon. The
product of eighteen days would reach
from the sun to Neptune. Counting
310 working days in the year, it
would take them, at his rate, 500
years to spin enough thread to reach
the nearest star
Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot-Ease
! A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Swollen,
W. L. DOl
Sample mailed FREE.
Olmsted, LeKoy, N. Y.
Address, Allen S.
Cautious Bride.
Bride (in railway train)—Now, my
dear, you must remember not to act as:
if vte were just married. It would be
perfectly horrible to have all these
strange people know it. Sit up a little
| closer. I want to fix your necktie. It’s
all crooked. There’s some dust on
your coat. I’ll brush it off. How white
the stuff is! It must be from that
farmer’s i r’ce- One corner of your mustache
house. One morning'the farmer held r>oin,s t1own aml lh° othrr «P If lookR
up two live ducks in his hands and 1 to° fnnny for an>thin&- Wait; 1 11 fix.
Interest!, j to Students.
The schools and colleges are now
open for the fall term, and there will
be many self-reliant young men and
women who will be looking for a good
way to earn their expenses. The Four-
Track News, the great illustrated
monthly magazine of travel and edu-
cation, appeals to intelligent readers,
and students will find it easy to se-
cure subscriptions for it. The terms
to persons soliciting subscriptions are
extremely liberal, and offer a very gen-
erous margin of profit. It will pay
any one interested to write to the pub-
lisher, George H. Daniels, 7 East 42d
street, New York, for full particulars.
Ting down pains, and frequent head-
aches: I could net sleep awl could hardly
drac around. I consulted two phrslcUna
without relief, and ns a last resort,' 1 tried
All are subject to the same physical
laws; all suffer alike from the same
physical disturbance, and the nature of
their duties, in many cases, quickly
drifts them into the horrors of all
kinds of female complaints, ovarian
troubles, ulceration, falling and dis-
placements of the womb, lcucorrhma,
or perhaps irregularity or suppression
of "monthly periods," causing back-
ache, nervousness, irritability and
lassitude.
Women who stand on their feet all
day are more susceptible tb these
troubles than others.
They especially require an invigorat-
ing, sustaining medicine which will
strengthen the female organism and
enable them to bear easily the fatigues
of the day, to sleep well at night, and
to rise refreshed and cheerful.
How distressing to see a woman
struggling to earn a livelihood or per-
form her household duties when her
back and head are aching, she is so
tired she can hardly drag about or
stand up. and every movement causes
pain, the origin of which is due to
some derangement of the female or-
ganism.
Miss F. Orser of 14 Warrenton Street,
Lydia E. Pinkham * Vegetable Cempousd Svecsads Where Others Fail.
Lydia E. Pinkhara’sVegetnhle Compound, and
to iny surprise, every ache and pain left me.
I gained ten pounds and am in perfect health. ”
Miss Pearl Ackers of 337 North Rum-
mer Street, Nashville, Tenn.', writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
“ I suffered with painful periods, severe
backacho, bearing-down pains, pains across
the abdomen: wax very nervous and irrita-
ble, and my trouble grew worse every month.
“ Mv physician failed to help me and I
decided to try Lydia E. Pinkham’* Vegetable
Compound. I soon found it was doing me
good! AU my pains and aches disappeared,
and I no longer fear my monthly periods.”
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound is the unfailing cure for all these
troubles. It strengthens the proper
muscles, and displacement with all its
horrors will no more crush you.
Backache, dizziness, fainting, bear-
ing down pains, disordered stomach,
moodiness, dislike of friends and society
—all symptoms of the one cause—will
be quickly dispelled, and it will make
you strong and well.
You can tell the story of your suf-
ferings to a woman, and receive help-
ful advice free of cost. Address Mrs.
Pinkham, Lynn, Mass.
M M MM M M
Hand-spun thread, used for the very
finest Brussels lace of all, costs' some-
times as much as £240 per pound.
»
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•as
If IT’S
CHILLS
YOU HAVE, IT»5
OXIDINE
YOU NEED.
and.ran ABSOM'TF. Gt'ARANTFF.. an’
jrour driiccUt will refund Tour looney
ular and tastrlrs* form*. Sold by nil drug
50 CENTS PER BOTTLE.
It 1* .old nnder
cured
reg
ABSOI.I TF GUARANTEE, and if you are not
Mnde in
druggi.l. for
You will will find a large number of Imitations which the manufac-
turers claim are the same as OXIDINE. We caution you against
such statements. There is only one OXIDINE and we are the sole
manufacturers. These ‘mitator* are merely trying to sell their cheap
imitations on the strength of Oxidine's record.
$1000 IN GOLD
AN! COST OF ANALYSIS will be paid to enq person who can find a
trace of Arsenic, Strychnine, Morphine, or anq other poisonous or
injurious drugs in
OXIDINE
Patton-Worsham Drug Co.
MANUFACTURERS
DALLAS, TEXAS and MEMPHIS, TENN-
»
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m
m
m
m
m
m
mm m m m mm
One About Ducks.
Here seems to be a nice, cool stream
for one of Frank N. Busch’s duck
yarnsi Mr. Busch was up in the Fox
river country, staying at a
Perhaps more people would go to
heaven if there were Sunday excur-
I sions.
DESTROYS FEVER GERMS
Stops Chills at Once
One done atop* aching bones and hot and
chilly sensation*, gives an appetite and re-
news ambition. Positive, quick and harm -
lea. cure for Malaria, Ague, and Chills and
Fever in ThrCa Days. Druggist will show you
tMtlmoniala and circular around the bottle.
Francis 3. Ott, Sacramento, Cal.
Sold by all Druggists. 75c
A small boy's idea of the board of
health is six meals a day.
exclaimed:
it. I’m tired to death, dear. Sit up
“Ain't they fine canvas? backs? Gee, pl°ser- so I can rPS* m- head on
but I had to pay for ’em. too-cost $4! No- that won't rto; 1 mu8t Pretend to
apiece. But they are raisers. Next rear* a novel, and I don t know; per-
year from these I'll have ducks I haPs >'ou’d better *° lnto ,he smokinS
enough to stock a marsh.”
“A scab formed on my baby's face,
spreading until it completely covered
her from head to foot, followed by
boils, having forty on her head at one
time, and more on her body. Then
her skin started to dry up and it be-
came so bad she could not shut her
eyes to sleep. One month’s treatment
with Cuticura Soap and Ointment r„i„, . ... .. . - —
mnrlp a cnmnlptr* rnrp Doctors and »n» e»rm.nt°w?thm.t ?in!fin2nj!,ia(S,Ci« “1°? *^an ac11 «e ,0c Dackaoe color* al1 nbers- dye in cold water better than any other dye. You Can dye
made a complet e cure. Doctors and iny garment without ripping apart. Write for free booklet-How to Dye, Bleach and Miz Color*. MONROE DRUG CO., Unlonvlllo, Mlasourl.
medicines had cost over $100, with I__
baby growing worse. Then we spent
less than $5 for Cuticura and cured
her. (Signed) Mrs. G. H. Tucker, Jr.,
335 Greenfield Ave„ Milwaukee, Wis.”
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
j Nothing so good as Red Cross Bag Blue.
! Housekeepers are delighted with results
1 and want no other. Grocers sell it.
_
A Twenty-Year-Old Fact.
Do you want to stop those Chills,
j get well, fat and happy? We think
i you do. If so, use Cheatham’s Chill
] Tonic. It is not an experiment, but
a twenty-year-old fact. For that num-
ber of years it has cured all kinds of
Chills, and still does so. It Is guar-
anteed.
Clara—"Did you have pleasant
weather at the springs this summer?”
•‘Canvas backs, your grandfather,”
replied Mr. Busch. “They are blue
, mud hens, both of them.”
“No, no. I know the man that
raised ’em; sold him the corn that he
fed to them—I know.”
The dispute grew thick and furious.
Mr. Busch happened to have an illus-
trated book on ornithology in his
trunk. He brought it out and showed
the farmer the difference in looks.
The man of the hoe and the ducks
shook his head ruefully for a moment.
Suddenly his face brightened. He
said: “Your book sho’ looks like I
done been cheated; but, may be, they
done issued a later edition.”
car. All the married men do.
Groom—Well, I’ll go, my darling, if
you think best.
Bride—Yes, you must go. Help me
off with this glove, dear. You must go
and stay real long—ten or fifteen min-
utes.—New York Weekly.
At any rate, Adam wasn’t afraid to
tell Eve any secrets.
Mr*. Winslow’* Soot hi
For children toetbtog. ruftes*
t*aun«Uoa, *u*ya putn, cure* wt
thing Syr**,
the gum*, reaue
Lad colic. 23c * b
Love.
There is no joy in life so great
There is no song so sweet as
mine;
There is no dream so perfect and so lull-
as loving,
thine and
ing
the
one we give to love divine.
RHEUMATISM
CURED WITH
-RADIO SIILPHO-
About 90.000 tons qj butter are made
| yearly in Great Britain.
More thaa^lO.OOO peopl<Dntvr cured thnm-
Rheamatlam Rsdio'-Salpba eonL* wd
by anyonde very body. Eatily used and
mdreds of cases cured with
housands with five and six
r any and every body '
>plied. Hundreds c
one bottle, thousands with five and iix
bottle*. Thousand* of testimonials re-
ceived from grateful patient*. Only on
the market a year and a half. Has made
a great record. Our ratrons do th* ad-
Sent by mail postage
press
>rd
vertising for us. bent by mail
paid, $1 per bottle, six bottles $5,
paid, tnll directions with eac
Write to-day. Pamphlets sent freH
bottles sold in IS months. We started the
first day, IS months ago, with six bottles
This is how our patrons are recommend-
ing Radlo-Sulpho. Get Radio-Snlpbo and
Cur* Yourself. We hare our own sani-
tarium and physician*.
THE RADIO-SULPHO CO.,
sie Hack Blk., Denver, Colo.
Plea«» Me; • .. t i
Don’t you know that Defiance Starch
besides being absolutely superior to
any other, is put up 16 ounces In pack-
age and sells at same price aa 12-
ounce packages of other kinds?
The average man meets temptations
about three-fourths of the way.
There is no faith so fair and all pervad-
ing
As is the faith that time has truly tried.
When through the deepest depths we have
been wading.
A kind voice whispers, “One more
crucified.”
Then Love takes up the cross of thy
redemption
And bears thee on without' a sigh or
song;
Of all thy past he makes no sign or men-
tion.
But tarry here, for Love is kind and
strong.
Don’t Use Slang.
“A lady used the expression ‘Gee’ j
the other night,” says an exchange.
It had never occurred to her that this
was taking the name of the Lord in
vain, and probably few of many who
indulge in sugar-coated profanity re-
alize that they are swearing. What is
“Gee” though, but a euphemism for
‘'Jesus?" “Dear me” is nothing but
the Latin "Deo Meo” (My God), “For
Goodness Sake” is only for “God’s
Sake.” "Drat it” is “God rot it.”
“Judas Priest” is “Jesus Christ.” “Gol-
ly,” “Gosh,” “Glory,” etc., are only va-
riations of “Damn it.” In short, there
is probably not an expression of this
sort that cannot be tracked to an oath
for its origin.
Botanist's Favorite Flower.
The great botanist Linnaeus had for
: his favorite flower the fragrant rose-
; tinted little twin flower. Concerning
it he is quoted to have answered, when
asked by a friend if it grew by the
shores of a Swedish lake, "Nay, she
lives not here, but in the middle of
| our largest woods. She clings with
l her little arms to the moss and seems
to resist very gently if you force her
! from it. She has a complexion like a
j milkmaid, and oh! she is very, very
sweet and agreeable.” The only paint-
ing of Linneaus which is in exist-
ence shows a small sprig of this flower
in his buttonhole.
Com* to Msrlia and get rid of your rh*nma-
mslaria. eczema, constipation
*1 aad skin troubles. An ideal
winter resort with every accommodation for
the comfort and health of chronic invalid*.
The Gift.
Fate promised me my wish, and I replied:
“Fortune for them who have no higher
thought..
And fame for those whose souls may so
be bought—
Rut give mo love, and I am satisfied.”
I spoke, and straight one stood there at
my side.
A child of sorrow on whose face grief
had wrought
It Quenches the Fire.
“Your Hunt's Cure is beyond doubt
the most remarkable remedy for skin
diseases ever formulated. For eight
years I suffered almost constantly
from an itching trouble the doctor
called Eczema—my skin was on Are,
but less than one box of Hunt’s Cure
quenched that Are. Many of my
friends have since used it on my rec-
ommendation and it never fails. Where
there's an itch rub it on. * It does the
work—that's all.”
Mrs. Helen Whitmore,
Clarendon, Ark.
Takes Ink Out of Fabric.
The quickest way to remove an ink
spot from a white fabric is to cover
the blemish with crushed crystals of
oxalic acid, drop on water enough to
tism. catarrh, mal
ether blood *ad
r resort with (
irafort and health ol
Writ* for fre* booklet right now
Levy, Manager Marlin Sanitarium,
Texai
You tear
to walk, for Love will walk be-
y faith, as prophets have
Add:
ress Joe
Marlin.
Some new men never seem to know
their own minds until the day after.
I do not believe piso’s Cure for Consumption
has an equal for coughs and colds.—Joan F.
Boris. Trinity Springs, Ind.. Feb. 15,1900.
If you lack sense. It will show when
you get a gun in your hands.
■QgSJSiTliciMMa’z Eh Watw
When Answering Advertisement*
Kindly Mention This Paper.
Dealers say that as soon as & cus-
tomer tries Defiance Starch it is im-
possible to sell them any other cold
water starch. It can be used cold or
boiled.
f. N.U. HOUSTON—NO. 40, 1905 Wise is the man who can be silent
-! on any subject.
Hope for the best—prepare for the
worst—and take what comes.
Too many glasses today means a
j large pain tomorrow.
am
side you;
You learn b
foretold:
You learn to live when love and faith are
by you
To give you treasures never bought or
sold.
—Lulu Kelsey Clendening.
Napoleon Expressed His Surprise.
Napoleon Gaudette, a Freneh-Cana-
dian, who was for many years an oper-
ative in one of the cotton mills in the
south part of Grafton. Mass., returned
there for a few days’ visit. He showed
great interest at the various changes
that had occurred in the village, and
when told that this family had gone
back to Canada and that one had
moved to Fall River, and that John
Thibideau was married, etc., etc., to
each he made the same comment, ut-
tered in a slow, surprised way: “Is dat
so? Din't use be so.”
“Where’s ole Mis Planchette?" he
asked.
“Mrs. Planchette? Oh, she died a
year ago." was the reply.
“Is dat so? Din t use be so.”
Fo
Such misery as nowhere else is taught moisten them, rub them well into the
r man s imagining. And then I cried: an.t thnn turn nn bciilin^ wat*r
‘Oh liar. fate, beshrew thee for thy
ar.
guile!
Thou sondost me this poor and sorry
thing
When it was love that I had asked of
* thee?"
The grave-eyed stranger smiled—oh.
such a smile
One sees but on the mask of sufferini
And sadly made me answer: "I
—Reginald AVright Kauffr
Watson's
ight
Magazine.
ing—
he.”
Tom
fabric, and then turn on boiling water
and rub gently until the spot fades.
Then wash out the acid with soap and
water and the last trace of the ink
will go with It. The knack of using
oxalic acid in this way without weak-
ening the textile lies solely in the
quickness with which the work is done
and its thorough removal immediately.
Every housekeeper should know
that if they will buy Defiance Cold
Water Starch for laundry use they will
save not only time, because it never
sticks to the iron, bui because each
package contains 16 oz.—one full
pound—while all the other Cold Water
Starches are put up in 3-4-pound pack-
ages, and the price is the same, 10
cents. Then, again, because Defiance
Starch is free from all injurious chem-
icals. If your grocer tries to sell you a
12-oz. package it is because he has
a stock on hand which he wishes to
dispose of before he puts in Defiance.
He knows that Defiance Starch has
printed on every package in large let-
ters and figures “16 ozs.” Demand
Defiance and save much time and
money and the annoyance of the iron
sticking. Defiance never sticks.
The sound of a bell which can be
heard 45.200 feet through the water
can be heard through the air only 456
feet.
Not a Pipe Dream.
Oil—some kinds—are conveyed by a
system of pipe lines, but the Oil that
makes all other Oils insignificant is
conveyed in bottle. It's Hunt’s Light-
ning Oil, and its mission is to cure
your sprains, cuts, burns, bruises,
aches, and pains—and it does it.
AGAINST
THE STORM
THERE IS Nt
PR0TECTIoTiir
Of sheep's wool, one pound is suffi- :
cient to produce a yard of excellent !
cloth.
If you don't get the biggest and best
It’s your own fault. Defiance Starch
is for sale everywhere and there is
positively nothing to equal it in qual-
ity or quantity.
THE
tALi
ALL THE
IEST DEALERS
A. J. TOWER CO, ESTABLISHED 1836
— ' K06TOH NlWYOtK CHICAGO
TOWU CAIUWAW CO..LKH .TOtOKTO. CAM.
In the course of the trial of a case
in a London court recently it came out
that imported canned fruit is often
stored in London warehouses for ten
years.
Revenge is sweet
case of sour grapes.
when it isn't a
McCANE'S DETECTIVE AGENCY.
Moncton, Texas, operate* the largest fore*
of competent detectives in the Sonth.
They render written opinions in cases not
handled by them. Reasonable rates.
Medicines. Have Stood Test of Time.
“The leading proprietary medicines
that have stood the test of time are
of known therapeutic value,” says a
medical authority. “They are prepar-
ed -in laboratories of the highest
grade, under the care of skilled phar-
macists, and they are made from ap-
proved formulas which, in many in-
stances, have been the especial pride
and
clan
crucible of public opinion and they
have been found satisfactory by the | Some people are .so in love with
people, for otherwise the people would ihemselves that they haven’t room for
Decision in Cotton
Exports of American built automo
biles have increased 40 per cent dur-
ing the last twelve months. Cotton will be moving rapid-
Here Is Relief for Women. _ Jy from now on, and yOU will
Mother Gray, a nurse id New York, dls- . , . , ... ,
covered a pleasant herb remedy for women s haVC to GGCldC QUlCaly What tO
ills, called AUSTKALIAN-LEAF. It is the . .. . ,
only certain monthly regulator. Cures do With each lot, according tO
female weaknesses, Backache, Kidney and . . , ,
specific of some successful physi- j Urinary troubles At all Druggists or by the Circumstances Ol the
They h„e been tried l. .!»j K'SSSS.’iSSSISSXff moment.
discontinue using them.’
any more.
Failed to Capture Whales.
Excitement was caused recently
among the shipping at Port Elizabeth.
Cape Colony, by the appearance of
two large whales, a bull and a cow.
Their gambols were watched by a
large number of spectators. Several
fishing boats and tugs went after
them, and one succeeded in getting a
harpoon home in the cow. A whaler's
cfpw then had an exciting time, the
whale towing the boat about the of-
fing until nearly three o'clock, when
it managed to break away. More
boats and tugs then joined in the
chase, but failed to get within strik-
ing distance.
Out of evil comes good. The apple
Eve swiped has furnished employment
to thousands of tailors and dressmak-
ers.
Do you know where the dei
ian well ii
Depth JWiO feet, temperstur
Analysis similar to the famoaa Carlsbad
than Hot Springs. Hi
artesia:
Te
well in the world Is?
Dep
sin
I Hi
e~ unsurpassed in tl
free booklet. Address doe I/evy
ter than
facilities unsm
Hundreds of dealers say the extra
quantity and superior quality of De-
fiance Starch is fast taking place of j tarium, Mai$in. Texas,
all other brands. Others say they can-
not sell any other starch.
epest and hottest
It Is st Marlin,
et. temperature 147 F.
9 Carlsbad, bet-
el and bathi
the South. Writ!
_____ Our services and our facil-
storekeepers report that the extra ities are at your command, and
quantity, together with the superior
quality of Defiance Starch makes it
next to Impossible to sell any other
brand.
you will make no mistake by
shipping to us.
Heaven won't seem much like home
unless those golden streets are torn up
occasionally.
Springs. Hotel and bathing
ia-*-1 m tii» for | if jouwish beautiful clear, white clothesj
! use Red Cross Bag Blue. You will be well
| satisfied. At grocers.
Wm. D.
Houston,
Cleveland
& Sons,
Ttiu
One is as easy to manage as the oth-
er—when asleep.
Four hundred and twenty million
eggs and 1,780,000 hundredweight of
butter were exported from Denmark to
the United Kingdom during 1904.
Happy is the woman who has as
many change of gowns as she has of
mind.
Pianlalion Chill Cura is Guaranteed
To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why not try It? Price 50c.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Herman, George C. The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 5, 1905, newspaper, October 5, 1905; Batesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth974727/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .