The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 15, 1905 Page: 4 of 4
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Hia Health Was Wrecked |
Pe-ru-na Gave New Life.
CHICAGO A WONDER CITY.
GAS AND WATER
HON. JOHN TI6HE.
Assembly man Tlghe’s letter should
be read by every brain worker leading
• strenuous Ufe.
Hon. John Tighe, No. t»8 Kemsen St.,
Cohoes, N. Y., Member of Assembly
from the Fourth district, Albany
county, N. Y., writes as follows:
“Peruna has my hearty indorsement
as a restorative tonic of superior merit.
At times when I have been completely
broken down from excess of work, so
that my faculties seemed actually at a
standstill, Peruna has acted as a heal-
ing restorer, starting the machinery of
mind and body afresh with new life
and energy.
“I recommend it to a man tired in
mind and body as a tonic superior to
anything I know of and well worthy
serious consideration.”—J. Tighe.
Excess of work so common in our
country causes impaired nerves, leading
to catarrh and catarrhal nervousness—
a disease that is responsible for half of
all nervous troubles.
Peruna cures this trouble because it
cures catarrh wherever located.
If you do not derive prompt and satis-
factory results from the use of Peruna,
write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a
full statement of your case, and he will
be pleased to give you his valuable ad-
vice gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of
The Hartman Sanitarium. Columbus. 0.
Only Four Cities in the World Aheau
of It.
Chicago in 1905 Is the fourth city
in the world in point of population
and wealth, says Leslie’s Weekly. The
only towns which lead it are Ixjndon,
New York and Paris. Canton is somer
times assigned a larger population,
but this is estimated, for there has
never been any census taken of its
population. Berlin has Just crossed the
2.000.000 mark in inhabitants, but it is
safe to assume that Chicago is ahead
of the German metropolis. It is like-
ly to keep ahead, notwithstanding the
wonderful growth of that capital, un-
exampled in Europe's annals.
Nearly all the world's great cities
— Paris. Berlin. St. Petersburg. Vieh
na. Madrid and others—are far Inland
Even London, the nearest to deep wa-
ter of all Europe’s great capitals, is
over sixty miles distant from the sea
New York is the only city of com
manding importance in any civilized
country which is in sight of the ocean
Chicago feels that It will some time
have the same preminenee In the
United States that Berlin has in Ger
many or St. Petersburg in Russia. It
is growing faster than New York, has
several suburbs which It expects tt
absorb within the next five or ten
years and figures that it will pass
New York by 1950. Ten or fifteen
years prior to that date New York
will have passed London, so that if
Chicago ever beats the metropolis on
the Hudson she will be the greatest
of the world’s cities, as she Is al-
ready the most marvelous of them In
her sudden rise and swift expansion.
IS ONE AS NECESSARY AS THE
OTHER?
«*HE MIGHT HAVE ASKED.
Citizens ef Large Cities Say It Is.
GOT THE WORD HE CRAVED.
In bis book on “Nerves in Order," i
Dr. Schofield, formerly examiner for
the British National Health Society,
gives a table of longevity which shows
that the Christian ministry is the most
healthful of callings.
Better Try It.
. “I have used Simmons' Sarsaparilla
with the most gratifying results. It
imparts strength and vigor almost
from the first dose. As a tonic for a
•run down’ condition I know no
superior. As an appetite builder it is
simply great."
M. J. Largsworthy.
Mar.gum, O. T.
Very often the less a man has tc
say the greater reputation h-3 gains
for wisdom.
Ask Your Dealer for Alien's Foot-Ease,
A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Svrol- .
Ion,Sore. Hot.Callous, Aching,Sweating
Feet and Ingrowing Nails. At all Drug-
gists and Shoe stores. 25 cents. Accept |
no substitute. Sample mailed FREE.
Address, A S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
The man la the moon isn't mai at i
Old Sol for making light of him.
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 as 12-
ounce packages of other kinds?
Preceptor’s Somewhat Startling Ad-
vice to Young Minister.
The late Dr. Norman Macleod was
in the habit sometimes of giving a few
words of advice to students and young
ministers who might call upon him
for that purpose. On one occasion a
young fellow, newly appointed to a
kirk, went to see him. and asked for
a helping word from the great man.
The young minister was a voluble
talker, turning up J^he whites of his
eyes and clasping his hands when he
did sc. He was tall and thin, and as
he rolled about in his chair Macleod
noticed that his trousers were grad-
ually creeping from underneath his
vest, leaving a narrow streak of
white, which threatened to grow
larger every roll he took.
"Do your duty, sir?’’ said Macleod
to him; “that is really all I can say
to you. Get common sense, and do
what is right.”
"Yes. doctor,” he said in reply; “but
Is there no word you could give me—
no word to satisfy the desires of one
who feels he has been called specially
to this great work?"
The great preacher at once took his
measure, and his eye gleamed as he
spoke; “Yes, there is a word—advice
if you like to call it—that I can give
you. Are you prepared for it?”
“Yes; oh. yes.”
“Are you sure, sir?”
“Yes; oh. yes, thank you.”
“Then." said Norman, pointing a,
him. with the air of a tragedian, “go
away and buy a pair of braces!”
Would you say that the weaver of
woolen cloth was caught napping?
Sirs. Wtutow'i
Tor children tnothl
luuiuw, allays
slaw's Soothing Syrup,
line, ■often* the gums, reduces tO>
•nan. earns wind collu. 25c . botua,
Th-3 shoplifter Is careful how he goes
In a store and takes a notion.
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.
A man wills his wife money because
•he wills It.
TWO OPEN LETTERS
IMPORTANT TO MARRIED WOMEN
lira. Mary Dtmmlck of Washington tolls
How Lydia X- Plnkham’s Vegetable
Compound Made Her Well.
It is with great pleasure we publish
the following letters, as they convinc-
ingly prove tiie claim we have so many
times made in oar columns that Mrs.
Neighborly.
Rev. R. H. Nelson, the new bishop
coadjutor of Albany, wished to indi-
cate in a recent address the spirit of
friendliness and helpfulness that
should exist between neighbors. “Too
many neighbors,” he said, “are like a
physician and a lawyer who used to
live next door to each other in his-
toric Germantown. The physician,
one day. asked if he might borrow
from the lawyer his edition of Florio’s
‘Montaigne.’
“ ‘You are welcome to read the
work in my library,’ the lawyer an-
swered. ‘but you can’t take it away
with you. I am sorry to say, for I
have lost so many books through lend-
ing them that I have sworn never to
let another volume leave the house.’
“The physician thanked the lawyer,
but of course he did not attempt to
get through so ponderous a work as
‘Montaigne’ in the other's library. A
week passed, and the lawyer came
and asked the physician to lend him
his lawn mower.
“ ‘I am only too glad to lend you
my lawnmower,’ said the physician,
‘though it Is my rule never to let it
leave my lawn. There, however, you
may use it all you please.' ”
New York, June 13.—In the recent
agitation here about the price of gas,
the demand for lower rates was sup-
ported by the argument that every
resident is as dependent upon a sup-
ply of gas as upon a supply of good
water.
It has come to pass that the day
laborer uses gas as bis only fuel for
cooking, because of economy, and the
rich man uses gas on account of its
convenience. Gas for lighting, with
modern improvements in burners, is
cheaper, better and more satisfactory
than any other kind of light. Gas
sells at. $1.00 per thousand cubic feet
in large cities and from that to as
high as $3.00 in smaller towns.
The consumer of gas in the country
uses Acetylene (pronounced a-set-a-
lene), and each user makes his own
gas and is independent of Gas and
Electric Companies. Acetylene is a
more perfect illuminant than the gas
sold by the big gas companies in the
cities, and the co3t to the smallest
user is about the equivalent of city
gas at 85 cents per thousand.
Acetylene is the modern artificial
light, the latest addition to the many
inventions that have become dally
necessities.
The light from an acetylene flame
is soft, steady and brilliant, and in
quality is only rivaled by the sun’s
rays. If water and a solid material
known as Calcium Carbide are
brought into contact, the immediate
result is the making of this wonder-
ful gas. The generation of acetylene
Is so simple that experience or even
apparatus is not necessary to make
it. If It is desired to make It for prac-
tical lighting, a 3 to keep it for im-
mediate use. then a small machine
called an “Acetylene Generator” is
employed. There are many responsi-
ble concerns making acetylene gener-
ators. In practice, this gas is dis-
tributed in small pipes throughout
buildings, grounds, or entire cities
and towns, in the same manner as
ordinary city gas. Acetylene is the
only satisfactory means of lighting
isolated buildings located in the coun-
try or suburbs at a distance from city
gas or electric plants.
Vases Bring High Prices.
Recently in London a cracked Chi-
nese vase brought at auction $30,000
and a Sevres vase in two minutes was
run up to $20,000. These are large fig-
ures, but ten years ago a Dodin ori-
form vase brought $25,000. and thirty
years ago another Sevres vase brought
over $50,000. Collectors in the past
decade have been studying to differen-
tiate the products of the various Chi-
nese dynasties, with the result that
K’ang-hsi black-ground vases, such as
the cracked vase just sold, enameled
with green tracings of decorative foli-
age and figures, have become ex-
tremely valuable. A perfect set of
them is very rare. The $10,000 vase is
seventeen and one-half inches high.
Excessive Modesty Only Spoiled an
Evening's Enjoyment.
They were all to have a Sunday
night supper at a friend’s house, and
even the boarding mistress was in-
vited; so the girl got an extra Sun-
) day night out and the household split
up into parties for the afternoon.
By two and threes they arrived at
the host's home until there were left
only the boarding mistress and the
husband of the woman who had en-
gineered the party. There was a quar
ter hour wait, and at last the husband
strolled in.
“Miss Blank says she can’t come,’
, he announced, as he sniffed the odor of
the old-fashioned shortcake. “I guess
she must have another of her sick-
headaches, for she seems to have gone
to bed; just poked her head out of the
doorway and said she was sorry.”
Late that evening the other woman
took home a generous slice of short-
cake and found the absent one sitting,
disconsolate, in the parlor.
“I thought you were ill?” she cried.
“Will said you had gone to bed."
“My dear,” sobbed the boarding mis-
tress, “all my dresses button up the
back, and when I started to get ready
the only person in the place was your
husband. I couldn't very well ask
him. could I?”
And the only comfort she received
was: “Why not? I've trained him to
do it beautifully.”
names best ooctor
- at Washington.
ME. BAYSS0N PUBLISHES RESULT8 Mayor McClellan is fond of relating
OF VALUABLE EXPEEIEN0E. ' this experience which befell him when
- I a congressman in Washington: One
A Former Proaonnrfd Dyspeptic He Now I ujght when 1 was walking down Penn-
Rejoice* in Perfert Freedom from i sylvania avenue.” said Mr. McClellan,
Miseries of indigestion. j ..'j saw a fojg policeman standing on
Thousands of sufferers know that the I corner acting in a suspicious man-
reason why they are irritable and de- j ner He held one hand behind his
pressed and nervous and sleepless is be-! back, as if he were concealing some-
cause their food does not digest, but bow | tbing Just for the fun of the thing 1
to get rid of the difficulty is the puzzling j Spproached and asked him: ‘What
question. ; have you thrre?' For an instant he
Good digestion calls for strong diges- i00kcd startled and. then quickly
tive organs, and strength comes from a j bringing his arm around in front of
supply of good rich blood. For this aaid; 'It's an apple; have a bite?
reason Mr. Bavssou took Dr. Williams' s;0 sir,’ I said sternly. 'Don t you
Pink Pills for the cure cf indigestion. ^ know who I am?' ‘Don't know you
“ They have been tny best doctor," he j f,om a lamppost, sir.’ "Well, I am
====== THE family flour
RED RAVEN
Makee the best Biscuits. Bread and Rolls. Write na abont a
valuable prise that trill be awarded this summer
STANDARD MILLING COMPANY. : HOUSTON, TEXAS.
Nothing pleases the eye to milch as
a well made, dainty
Shirt
DARLING AT THE ’PHONE.
But It Was Not the “Darling” Wifie
Had in Mind.
She had promised to come down
town and go to luncheon with him
and about noon she opened his office
door. Her husband’s voice at the
'phone made her stop to listen.
“That you, darling?" he was say-
ing. “Say, my wife’s coming down to-
day, so we can’t have that spread. But
we’ll have it to-morrow. Meet me at
the usual place, you know. Yes, all
right. Good-by.”
She slipped quietly away, and al-
though he waited until 3 o’clock his
little wife did not come to go to
luncheon with him.
By the time he got home that night
she had fought it out with herself and
determined to have an explanation. So
she said as calmly as she could:
“George, do you usually go out
alone to your lunch?”
“Why, yes,” he answered. “That is
unless Darling goes with me.”
“Darling?” she cried. “For pity's
sake, George, who is—”
“Why, Jack Darling. You must re-
member hearing me speak of him.
Don’t you know--”
She got up and It was several min-
utes before he could check her sobs
and get her to explain why she had
broken her appointment.—New York
Press.
says. " I was suffering from dyspepsia.
: The pains in my stomach after meals
| were almost unbearable. My sleep was
very irregular aud my complexion was
sallow. As the result of using eight
ixixes of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, about
the merits of which I learned from
' friends in France, I have escaped all
these troubles, and mn able again to take
’ pleasure in eating.”
A very simple story, but if it had not
been for Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills it
j might have been a tragic one. When dis-
! comfort begins with eating, fills up the
intervals between meals with pain, and
prevents sleep at night, there certainly
cannot be much pleasure in living. A
final general breaking down must be
merely a question of time.
Mr. Joseph Bayssoti is a native of
Aix-les-Bains, France, but now resides
at No. 2439 Larkin street. San Francisco,
Cal. He is one of a great number who
can testify to the remarkable efficacy of
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills iu the treatment
of obstinate disorders of the stomach.
If yon would get rid of nausea, pain or
burning in the stomach, vertigo, ner-
vousness, insomnia, or any of the other
i miseries of a dyspeptic, get rid of the
' weakness of the digestive organs by the
use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. They
are sold by druggists everywhere.
Proper diet is, of course, a great aid in
forwarding recovery once begun, and a
little book, “What to Eat and How to
Eat,” may lie obtained by any one who
j makes a request for it by writing to the
Dr. Williams Medical Co., Schenectady,
N.Y. This valuable diet book contains
an Important chapter on the simplest
cieacs for the core of constipation.
Whistler as a Critic.
A new Whistler story is told by
friends of Miss Pamela Smith, the
young American artist who has made
a reputation abroad by her original
work in color and black and white.
Miss Smith’s designs, while they show
uncommon imagination, are technical-
ly crude, and a friend of hers who
knew Whistler, was anxious to get his
opinion of them. She took the port-
folio of Miss Smith's illustrations to
the painter and waited anxiously a?
Whistler examined them.
He looked them over carefully, and
remarked gruffly, “She can’t paint.”
Then he went through them again.
“And she can't draw.”
A third time he looked through the
portfolio, pausing thoughtfully over
each sketch. “But she doesn’t need
to,” he concluded.—Harper’s Weekly.
Gen. Sheridan and Texas.
While in Texas not long ago James
Barton Adams, the author, fell in with
an old cattleman who sang without
end the praises of the lone star state.
“You are not of the same opinion as
regards Texas that Sheridan was,” ob-
served Adams. “What opinion was
that?” queried the cattleman. “Why,
he said that if he owned a farm in
Texas and one in hades he’d sell the
one in Texas, as he would rather live
In hades.” “No, I ain’t of that opin-
ion,” observed the cattleman, thought-
fully. “and I’ll bet Sheridan has
changed his mind by this time."
In the President’s Pocket.
Not long before the president's
Western trip, and during the visit he
paid Philadelphia to speak at that
I city’s Union League, he was the guest
! of honor at a very elaliorate luncheon
1 served by the First City Troop, the
j “crack” organization of the Quaker
| town. While the feast was in prog-
ress Winston, the troop's black door-
man, went down to the cloak room
| and said to the colored youth tempor-
I arily in charge of hats and umbrellas:
“Say, kid. jes’ take a peep in de
| pockets of Mister President's coat.
See if he ain’t got a flask handy.”
“Kid” turned a shade less dark, but
curiosity had him in its grip, and he
looked into the Rooseveltian pockets.
“Gosh,” he whispered in stagy
tones, “der ain’t no flask liyar—but
der’s a gun.”—New York Times.
Aged Man’s Long Walk.
Samuel Hardy, celebrating his sev-
enty-seventh birthday, walked thir-
teen miles the other day from Mata-
wan to Freehold, N. J., to dine with
Deputy Sheriff Charles Close at the
Belmont hotel. Mr. Hardy is quick
of foot and made the distance in five
hours. He also returned home on
foot.
Congressman McClellan.' ‘Is that so?
Then take half of this apple. I sup-
pose if you were a senator I’d have to
give you the whole of it!’ ”
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, but because each
package contains 16 oz.—one full
pound—while all 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.
One of the secrets of being happy
is learning how to forget. If you have
found it exceedingly difficult to form
the cheer habit, no doubt the trouble
lies in your failure to forget.—Ex-
change.
fal$t
Suit
if properly laundered.
To get the beat results it
is necessary to use the
best laundry starch.
Defiance
Starch
gives that finish to the
clothes that all ladies
desire and should obtain.
It, ia the delight of the
experienced laundress.
Once tried thav will use
no other. It is pure and
is guaranteed not to in-
jure the most delicate
fabric. It is sold by the
best grocers at 10c a
package. Each package
contains id ounces.
Other starches, not nearly so good, sell
at the same price per package, but they
contain only 12 ounces of starch. Con-
sult vour own interests. Ask for
DEFIANCE STARCH, get it. and wa
know you will never use any other.
“That’s what I allowed when I first
driv up.” “What was that. Bill?’’
“Why that the place to buy Stencils,
Rubber Stamps. Seals. Metal Checks,
etc., is J.V. Love. 305 Ave. C. Galveston.”
Cleanliness is said to be next to
godliness, j%jt one seldom sees a laun-
dry next door to a church.
If you wish beautiful clear, white clothes,
use Red Cross Bag Blue. You will be well
satisfied. At grocers.
Defiance Starch Company, Omaha, Neb.
Let Common Sense Decide
Do you honestly believe, that coffee sold loose (in bulk), exposed
to dust, germs and insects, passing
through many hands (some of
them not over-clean), “blended,”
you don’t know how or by whom,
is fit for your use ? Of course you
don't. But
LION COFFEE
There is always work and tools to
work withal, for those who will.—J.
R. Lowell.
Skin of White Rhinoceros.
Maj. Powell Cotton, who is on an
expedition from the Nile to Zambesi,
has secured a skin of the northern
white rhinoceros, of which only one
specimen has ever reached Europe.
AN AWFUL SKIN HUMOR.
That and This.
"Twelve years ago I bought my
first bottle of Hunt’s Lightning Oil.
For Cuts, Burns, Sprains and Aches
it was the best remedy l had found
to that time. After the lapse of one
dozen years I can truly say it is the
best remedy I have found to this
time.”
John P. Thompson,
Red Rock. O. T.
Covered Head, Neck and Shoulders—
Suffered Agcny for Twenty-five
Years Until Cured by
Cuticura.
“For twenty-five years I suffered ag
env from a terrible humor, complete-
ly covering my head, neck and shoul-
ders. discharging matter of such of-
To whatever extent any person is
able te annoy you. to that extent yon
are his slave.
RAILROAD RATE LEGISLATION.
Testifying before the Senate Com-
mittee at Washington Inter-State
Commerce Commissioner Prouty said
in discussing the r ^position to give _
Is another story,
berries, selected
The green
by keen
fudges at the plantation, are
skillfully roasted at onr fac-
tories, where precautions yon
would not dream of are takes
to secure perfect cleanliness,
flavor, strengtk aud uniformity.
From the time the coffee leaves
the factory no ham/ touches it till
it is opened in your kitchen.
nb made LION COFFEE the LEADER ST ALL PACKACC COFFEES.
Millions of American Homes welcome LION COFFEE <laily.
There is no stronger proof of merit than continued aud increas-
ing popularity. “Quality survives all opposition.'
(Sold only in 1 lb. packages. Lion-bend on e\ cry package.)
(Save vour Lion-hends for valuable premiums.)
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
WOOLSON SPICE CO., Tob-do, Ohio.
fenslveness to sight and smell that I to that Commission (he power to regu- J
became an object of dread. I con- late railway ratta:
suited the most able doctors far ami ! think the railways should make
near, to no avail. Then I got Cuti- their own rates. I think they should
cura, and in a surprisingly short time be allowed to develop their own busi-
I was completely cured. For this I nesg j have never advocated any
British Aristocrats in Trade.
The number of British society lead-
ers who are taking to trade grows
steadily. Lady Wimborne owns and
manages a book store, Lady Essex
and Mrs. Hwfa Williams run a smart
laundry, Lady Duff Gordon is a fash-
ionable dressmaker, the duchess of
Abercorn derives quite an Income
from her dairy business, Lady Rachel
Byng sells artistic needlework and
Lady Aileen Wyndham Quinn makes a
good thing out of viclet farming.
Immense Game Preserve.
Herman B. Duryea and Harry Payne
Whitney of New York, and Hobart
Ames of Boston, own a 70,000-acre
game preserve sixty miies from Mem-
phis, said to be the finest in many
respects, of any in America.
Pinkham. of Lynn. Mass., is fully quali-
fied togive helpful advice to sick women.
Read Airs. Dimmick's letters.
Her first letter:
Dear Mss. Pinkhsm:—
“ I have been s sufferer for the pest eight
years with a trouble which first originated
from painful menstruation—the pains were
excruciating, with inflammation and ulcera-
tion of the womb. The doctor says I must
have an operation or I cannot live. I do not
want to submit to an operation if I can posh-
bly avoid it. Please help me.”—Mrs. Mary
Dunmick, Washington, D. C.
Her second letter;
Dear Mrs. Pinkhsm :—
“ You will remember my condition when I
last wrote you, and that the doctor said I
must have an operation or I could not live.
I received your kind letter and followed your
advice very carefully and am now entirely
well. As my case was so serious it seems a
miracle that I am cured. I know that I owe
Obeyed Orders.
A theatrical manager had printed
a number of costly lithographs.
Being busy behind the scenes when
they were brought to him. he called
a stage hand and ordered him to place
them in the foyer (lobby).
On entering the theater in the even-
ing he noticed that the lithographs
were not visible, so he sent for the
attendant and asked him where they
were.
"Shure. I burnt them, sorr.”
“Burnt them, you idiot! What for?”
“Bekase yer banner tould me to
io so. Ye tould me to put thim in the
foyer, and Oi wint roight off an’ put
them in the stove beyant.”—Ex-
change.
a pain, and I wish every suffering woman
would read this letter and realize what you
earn do for them.”—Mrs. Mary Gimmick, 59th
and East Capitol Streets, Washington, D. C.
How easy It was for Mrs. Dimmick to
write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass.,
and how little it cost her—a two-cent
stamp. Yet how valuable was the reply!
As Mrs. Dimmick says—it saved her life.
Mrs. Pinkham has on file thousands
of just such letters as the above, and
offers ailing women helpful advice.
W. N.U. HOUSTON—NO. 24. 1909
When Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper.
Rich and Rare Were the Geme She Wore.
Rich and rare were the gems she wore.
And a bright gold ring on her wand she
bore;
But. oh! her beauty was far b*vond
Her sparkling gems or snow-white wand.
“Lady, dost thou not fear to strav.
So lone and lovely, through this' bleak
way?
Are Erin's sons so good or so cold.
As not to be tempted by woman or gold?'
“Sir Knight* I feel not the least alarm.
No son of Erin will offer me harm:
For. though they love women and golden
store.
Sir Knight* they love honor and virtue
more.'
One ahe went, and her maiden smile
In safety lighted het* round the green 1
And blest forever is she who relied
i Erin’s honor and Erin's pride.
—Thomas Moore. I
Lancashire Exports.
Lancashire exported 1,530,000,000
yards of cotton goods in the three
months ended March, 1905. That is
153,000,000 yards more than the first
three months of 1604. Of that increase
China took 82,000,000 yards.
He Got His Kiss.
They looked very young and had ev-
idently been married but a short time.
She was going away and he went to
the train to see her off. They waited
outside the gate until the very last
moment, then they both tried to go by
the gateman on her ticket.
“Too late to see the lady on the
train,” said the gateman ifter the
young woman had passed him.
He stood a minute and looked long-
ingly at her through the fence, then
this idea struck him.
“Come up here, dear,” he said, and
they squeezed one kiss through the
pickets to the delight of the other pas-
sengers.
“Well. I got it, didn't 1?” he said
to the grinning crowd.
thank Cuticura, and advise all those
suffering from skin humors to get it
and end their misery at once. S. P.
Keyes. 149 Congress Street, Boston,
Mass.”
His Own Advice.
The refrain of every poet's
Never mind!
If your road is rough to go it's
Never mind!
If you’re losing all your hair
Just brace up and don't you care
There’ll be no more dandruff there.
Never mind!
If some fellow cuts vnu out,
Never mind!
Fills your girl's mind full of doubt.
Never niind!
If her daddy hands von one
On the nose that is a bun
When you go to pee your hun.
ivnr r*WtUl»
law. and I am not now in favor of
any law, which would put the rate
making power into the hands of any
commision or any court. While it
may be necessary to do that some
time, while that, is done in some
After asking a blessing on various states at. the present time, while it is
members of the household the sniad. done in some countries, I am opposed
• * The railway rate is
It is all the property that
boy concluded his prayer as follows: to p *
“And. Lord, don’t forget to bless Dr0Dertv
rhov^a^ra 8 “nd mak8 him 38 ^ ,he r*H»'ay h;ls *ot' The rest of its
8 >0> 33 am'___ property is not good for anything un-
. less it. can charge a rate. Now it has
Here is Relief for Women. always seemed to me that, when a
Motner Gray, a nurse in New Wk, rate flxed. if that rate was an tin-
ausiealISe —»*»'* ««• >; «*<: ™»-
LEAF. Cures female weaknesses, Back- roa<I compan.. of its p.opertj pro
ache, Kidney. Bladder and Urinary, lunto. It is not necessary that you
troubles. At all Druggists or by mail i should confiscate the property of a
f>0c. Sample mailed FREE. Address, railroad: it is not necessary that you
The Mother Gray Co., LeRoy, N. Y. should say that it shall not earn three
- | per cent or four per cent. When
One difference between a horse and you put in a rate that is inherently
a man is that you lead a hoivs to unreasonable, you have deprived that
water and you can t make him drink, companv of its rights, of its property,
whereas if you lead a man to a bar it am, ^ Circult Court of the United
There is a gentleman living in
Welling, in Kent, Englaud. whose hoo-
by is to collect the -eggs of wild birds,
of which he has a very large assort-
ment. There are two of each variety;
on one he paints the picture of Hie
bird to which it belongs, and on the
other the name.
PP§
I Antiseptic o
FOR WOMEN
troubled with ill* peculiar te _
their eex, uted as a douche is Bsrveli
cessful. Thoroughly cleanse*, kills disease
stops discharges, heals
ises, kills disease germ*,
tnflairmatioa and local
soreness, cores leucerrboea and nasal catarrh.
Paxtine is in powder lurm to be dissolved in pure
Injunction Is Issued.
A stringent injunction has been is-
sued against the malignant activity of
dyspepsia, amongst all people, by Dr.
Caldwell'S (laxative) Syrup Pepsin „ter, and i. far’ more clesnsin* healing, ge.
Do not tail to invoke the powerful i agronomical than liquid antiseptic* lor all
aid of this great enemy of all stomach 1 TOILET AND WOMEN1* SPECIAL USES
and bowel disorder at the least sign For **le *t druggists, so cent* * bo*,
of trouble in any of your digestive or- Trial Box and Book of Instructions Prao.
gans. It will promptly and surely set j Tm* **• F**T®W Conran* Boston, mom
them right, and make you well. Try
it. Sold by ail druggists at 50c and
$1.00. Money back if it falls.
One discouraging thing about the
maxims of the great is that they gen-j
erally formulate their maxims after|
becoming great.—Chicago Record-Her ]
aid.
White Clothes
is easy enough to make him drink.—
Somerville Journal.
FREE TO OUR READERS.
Botanic Blood Balm for the Blood.
Romo has seminaries an monaster-
ies representing eighty-seven different
orders, and the number is steadily in-
creasing. There are 130 convents,
ninety-four of which devote them-
selves to education and hospital du-
ties.
Every Japanese barrack has a gym-
nasium and the Japanese soldiers
rank among the best gymnasts in the
world. In half a minute they can
scale a forty foot wall by simply
bounding on each other’s shoulders,
one man supporting two or three oth-
ers.
Duty is a pricldy shrub, but it’s
flower will be happiness and glory.—
M. F. Tupper.
Never min
If the weather gets too hot.
Never mind!
If you do not like thi
Never mind!
When the poet gets a bump
nob i
Tell him: “That's all right, you chump.
tis rot.
On the
and wears a lump
all right, yoi
Never mind!’
States has jurisdiction under the four-
teenth amendment, to restrain that.
* * * I have looked at these cases
a great many times, and I can only
come to the conclusion that a rail-
road company is entitled to charge a
If you suffer from ulcers, eczema, scrof- fair and reasonable rate, and if any
ula. 'blood poison, cancer, eating sores, order of a commission, if any statute
itching skin, pimples, boils, bone pains, nf a state legislature takes away that
swellings, rheumatism, catarrh, or any , .. , .___,, ______.___.
blood or skin disease, we advise vou to ra*p- ,*le fourteenth amendment pro-
take Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B ). Es- tects the railway company.”
peeially recommended for old. obstinate,---
deep-seated cases, cures where all else
fails, heals every sore, makes the blood
pure and rich, gives the skin the rich
glow of health. Druggists, $1 per large
bottle. Sample sent free by writing
Co., ' ~
Dealers say that as soon as a eus- ]
tomer tries Defiance Starch it is im-
possible to sell them any other cold!
water starch. It can be used cold or \
boiled.
are a delight to all
good housekeepers.
“Tall oaks from little acorns grow,”
and big aches from little corns, you
know.
CANCER CURED
To stay cured. No rutting. X-ray. nor
Balmy Oil used. I cure after all others
fail. Write for hook of treatise and
testimonials.
L. F. STAFFORD. Specialist
Room 216. Levy Building, corner Main \
makes them so. Get a
package of vour grocer
for your next washing
and convince yourself.
Remember the name.
The power to do great things gen-
erally arises from the willingness to
do small things.—Emerson.
Just Outer Covering Gone.
A well-known physician of Brook-
lyn tells an amusing incident that
happened at his summer home in New
Hampshire when his daughter, who is
now a leading society belle, was a
very small girl. Her grandmother
asked her to bring an egg from the
hennery. After several minutes the
little girl returned with her apron
full of eggs. While yet. a distance
away the grandmother asked. “Well,
did you break any eggs on the way?”
“No, grandma," was the prompt re-
ply; “but the shells came off a few."
—New York Times.
A show of confidence inspires a feel-
ing of friendliness even in a disposed-
to-be enemy.
Blood Balm Co.. Atlanta, Ga. Describe
trouble and free medical advice sent in
sealed letter. Medicine sent at once pre-
paid ; 3 for $2.50, 6 for $5, 12 for $10.
If You Want Rest.
Rub a little on and watch the itch
go away. Hunt’s Cure, we mean.
Cures any itching complaint ever af-
flicting mankind. One application re-
nent among them is the Elanai-Robi,i iieves—one box cures. Its guaran-
the rater of which has a diameter of | teed.
nearly four miles. A German acten-!--—
tific expedition is at present iuvesti-j Modern Japanese coins and bank-
There are several active volcanoes
in German East Africa. Most promi-
gating these volcanoes.
notes bear legends in English.
Even an electric button won’t accom-j
plish much unhass it is pushed.—Phila-
delphia Record.
Get Rid of It.
You can’t scratch it off. You cau't
wash it off. but you can rub it off with
Hunt’s Cure. We mean the itch—any
kind on earth, it simply kills any
form of itching known. It’s worth
your while and it's guaranteed.
SONG H*n,i name**nd ad'trrwNHi of young people
BOOK SSsSSS5SS«153
book rontaiitiiiK vordi sn l music of o*er
rpCP 00 old fav-trlie *onfrs. IMe»*e mention tkla
■ paper. Andrea* either plm'-e
WHEELER BUSINESS C0LLE6E,
Btrwisfhsni, Ala., Sew Orleans, La., Hisstss, Tea.
$100 Reward, $100.
Don't believe the fellow wo tells you
what he would do If he were in your
place.—N. Y. Times.
WANTED
Competent men In th«
printing trade*. 8*n
Francisco p*f* tbe
klgbest «-*«e* In tlio
United Stnte*. Permanent Job* given to good non-
union men who can furnish sstUfscuirp recommend-
ntion*. This 1* not n strtkr-bronklng proposition,
the Psclfic Const Tjrpothetne h*« derided to go to the
OPEX SHOP nnd that tneen* Job* for competent
men nnd nbsolute protection. Address W. C.
ALEXANDER, Secretary Citiiana'Alllance.
SOI Croasley Building;, ban Francieoo.
In Wales th«re are about 508.000
people, who cannot, speak English,
Welsh being their onlv language; In
Scotland there are 43,000 persons who
can speak nothing but Gaelic, aud in
Iceland there are 32.000 who can ex-
press themselves only in the Irish
tongue.—Exchange.
Mormons Acquire Land.
A fine cattle ranch of 66,500 acres,
near Calgary. Alberta, British Colum-
bia, has been bought for $400,000 by
; Preldent Smith of the Mormon
; church, aud the land will be colonized
by Mormons, of whom there are oth-
! or colonies in that part of the coun-
■ try.
Hundreds of dealers say the extra
The readers of this paper will be pleased to leant quantity and superior quality of De-
thst there la at least one dreaded disease that selottoe : fianc** Starch is fast taking place of. -------
th‘^r «» other brands. Others say they can- j „Zftt
^eSSS^SSSSSK»«SSRS ! n0t 8eU an!' °ther 8tarCh-_ 1 .oSt«Uh.Sn?her
The Swiss police are being trained!
in the Ixmdon model.
McCANE’S DETECTIVE AGENCY,
Houston, Texss, operates the largest foree ■
of competent detectives In the Soath.
Upon
The commandment didn't say “Thou
shalt not lie;’’ it said “Thou shalt not
bear false witness against thy neigh-
bor.” That's a mighty different thing
from just plain lying.—New York
Times.
Snails have eyes at th« ends of
tubes, which they can profbet like
guns from a turret, enabling them to
see in all directions at once, whereas
most fishes—being without necks—
have to turn their entire body to see
more than » small part of their sur-
roundings.
Russian Sugar Exoorts.
The Russian Association of Suga
Industries calculates the exporiatioi
of Russian sugar for the year 1901
at 379,983.888 pounds, which is 14S,-
320,000 pounds less than the experts of
the preceding year
cur
bclasf a constitutional flrequires a constitu-
tional treatment. Hall s Catarrh Cure 1» taken in-
ternally, artlnj: directly upon the blood and ieucoua
earfacee of tfao •ret'em. thereby destroying tbe
foundation of the disease, and giving tbe patient
strength by building up the conttltutlon and aaalat-
log nature* 1n doing It? work. The proprietor* have
•o mtiGb faith in Its curative power* that they offer
One Hundred Dollara for any rase that It fall* to
cure, ^end for IJet of testimonials.
Address F. .T..CHFXFT A CO.. Toledo, O.
fcoirt by all Druggists. 75r.
Take Hall** Family Pill* for constipation.
Prominent, men advise young men to Thu tin peddler, strang? to say, looks!
go into politics. A great statesman! for customers who have the tin.
once said: “Politics comes nearer re-j---
ligiou with me-a party more like^ a I
church, error more like heresy, preju-1 Fem»<tT. worm famous forowsn7*«r«. u*botti«. j
Storekeepers report that th» *xtra
Th«» vast majority of the Japanese
1 have nev-sr heard of Japan. They call
j their country Nihon or Nippon.
of competent detective* in tae
They render written opinions in ct
handled by them. Reasonable rat
ase* not
ea.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carafolly every bottle ef TAfiTOIttA,
a safe and ears remedy for Infante and ehitdran,
and see that it
WE SELL A $75 ORGAN FOR $60
to introduce them Also m $300.00 for
! $220. Terms if desired Write u*
OLIVER’S MUSIC HOUSE, fST
dice more iike sin—than I find
be with better men.’
it to
The artificial foot manufacturer
responsible for many false steps.
Bears tbe
Signatory of
la L'as For Over SO Year*.
The Kind Ton Have Always Bought
u^ .V..^fTh»mp$oii's Eyt VttM
Nothing so good as Red Cross Bat Blue.
Housekeepers are delighted with result,
and want no other. Grocers sell it.
the “wireless” in his house.
_ Syrap.
in Ume. Sold by drugs*
SKP
Comes of Colonial Stock.
Gen. James A. Buchanan, who has
i been appointed brigadier-general, is a
treat-great-grandson of Samuel Ogle. *
| -olonial governor of Maryland.
We can all be millionaires of love
and live in calm content if—tv can
just pay Tae bouse rent, and the gas
bill, and tae grocery bill, and meet the
millinery statement and keep the chil-
dren in shoes—God bless 'em!—Atlan-
Princess Is a Linguist.
The Princess Margaret of Con-
naught, who already knows German.
Italian and French, is now studying
Swedish, as she is to be married to
the crown prince of Sweden in the
fall.
There is something about a circus
that carries a man back so far he al-
most forgets he is married.
Pico's Cum cat*Dot be too highly spoken of as
a cough cure —J. W. o'Briis. $22 Third Ave.
H . Minneapolis. Minn-, Jan. 6, 1900.
The number of insane in London ex-
ceeds 20.000.
A London electrician ha« established A man takes contradiction and ad-
vice much more easily than people
think, only he will not bear it when
violently given, even though it oe
well founded. Hearts are flowers;
they remain open to the softly falling
dew, hut shut up in violent down-
pour of rain.—Richter
The sheep that has no wool
from Barbados.
Tbe British admiralty has just made
its first dental appointm.'nt.
Telephone to Palace.
The imperial palace in Pekin to
be connected by telephone with (he
offices of the different ministries.
i
Plantation Chill Cure is Guaranteed
To our©, or money refunded by your merohant, so why not try it? Price 50o*
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Herman, George C. The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 15, 1905, newspaper, June 15, 1905; Batesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth974913/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .