The Flatonia Argus. (Flatonia, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 24, 1904 Page: 2 of 4
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sw
«NOI BE
jFCMArte^
WEAKNESS
Drouth in fcurope. ,
Tliis year a drouth spread <y»er
all Western Europe. On June 15
t it v.a» reported by our cousul that
the lack of normal rainfall through-
out Germany had become a wide-
spread calamity not only to agri-
culture, but to many industries
which were more or less dependent
Curivui Phenomenon.
A m'ngular phenomenon occurs
on the borders of the Red Sea ait
a place called Nakous, where in-
termittent underground sounds
have been heard for an unknown
number of centuries. It is situat-
ed at about a half mile distant
from the shore, whence a long
upon ir.land water transportation rosoh of sand ascends rapidly to a
for their supplies of materials. The t of 300 feet. This re c.h is
drouth continued nracticilly nn- wl(let and resembles
broken throughout June and July ampli(theater, being walled by >
a until near the middle of August, JW. rocks., I he ,«*ounds.coming
century of remarkable end uni- when_local rains, more or less cop- JJJ0™ ^'^TlT of ‘abou^ a"'
r^vKvvrvirrrswinrsTrTirfrirrfrvTivTrirvirsTrii
I SOUTHERN PR
SALOON.
Backed up by over a third nf ■
form cures, a record such as no
Other remedy for tha diseases
and weaknesses peculiar to
women ever attained, the pro-
prietors and makers of Doctor
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
now feel fully warranted in of-
fering to pay $500 in legal
money of the United States for
any case of Leucorrhea, Female
Weakness, Prolapsus or Falling
of Womb, vyhich they cannot
cure. All they ask is a fair and
reasonable trial of their means
of cure All correspondence
held sacredly confidential.
If you require medical advice
don’t fail to write Doctor R. V.
Pierce who will give you the
best advice possible. Address
Buffalo, N. Y.
ious, fell in the northern and central
part* of the empire. In conse-
quence of the drouth in Western
Austria, Barvaria,* and Eastern
Switzerland, the government of
Austra-Hungary prohibited the ex-
port of fodder for cattle in the shane
of clover, hav, oats, or corn, as the
supplies in that countrv are already
insufficient, in view of the pros-
pective failure of the second semi-
annual harvest.
Prominent Boar Take* the Oath.
Ex-President Steyn’s declared
intention of talcing the oath of
fealty to Edward VJI. seems to
have taken the pro-Boer* of
France by surprise. La Fame
could hardly bring itself to be-
lieve the astonishing news. It
remembers 'bow Mr. Stevn found
hour. They at first resemble a
low murmur, but ere long there i
is heard a loud kn, .eking some-
thing like the strokes of a hell, |
and wff ich at the end < f about
five minutes becomes so strong,
a* to agitate fire sand. The ex- j
rdrir ‘ion of 'bis phenomenon giv-
en the Arabs is that there is a j
convent under the ground here, j
and that these m mbs ring for ,
prayers. So thev rail it Nalcous,
which means a bell. The Arabs
affirm that the r.oise so frightens
tU ir camels when they hen it as
to ren ler them furious. Philoso-
phers : rihute the sound to Sim-
1,re ' volcanic ac‘:on—probably
to •' e bubbling of gas or vapor
under p- "and.
■ u iinv tus vs v* a#s
means to avoid signing the peace
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets conditions, and how, unlike Botha,
are a ladies’ laxative. No other Delarey and De Wet, he spurned
medicine equals them for gen* to touch the soil of England, and
tleness and thoroughness. 1 lt,sent *n env°y . «° Brussels,
j wiiere the ex-president, now in
:n..... - - - - - - - fair health, is at present staying.
ratonia argdsIs.*^UnS"ro"c"ni”e
Number of Jap* in Hawaii.
Of ’.'he total population of the
Hawaiian Islands, as given by the
census of 1900, the Japanese num-
bered <31,111 ; the Chinese 25,767;
[the natives, and those in part na-
On® Copv Out* Year.
live, sq.141. The strictly white
.... .........u. ,u..mi, of his' “sub* Emulation aggregated but 12.749.
mission to England” and his re- lhe P^centagc of Japanese has
turn to the Transvaal. The in- ;*in« ‘rfc«ed- ^inle they are
i to be found engaged in banking
and in mercantile pursuits, and
.....'jterviewer found little consolation.
I “It is true,!’ said .Mr. Stevn. ‘T
tsC. BLANTON. K.liu.r & J|n ^ ^ r'eturn to SouthfAI- , t’sT'UduSm
Japan Now Civilized.
Says Mr. Ilayashi. a dis’in-
guished citizen of Japan : “Today
we Japanese have battleships, tor-
pedoes, cannon. The China sea
_ fully two-thirds of the sugar and
! other crops on vs hich the territory
A Heavy Lo-d | depends for its principal revenue.
To lilt ii.i.t lo.xt Iiir Ml.' Mtoiiiueli Nearly all the immigrants coming
Tho Kind You llnvo Always nought, and which has licco
iu ns© for over 30 years, has boruo tho signature of
and has been made under his per-
Honal supervision since its infancy.
'♦ Allow no 0110 to deceive yon in thts.
AH Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good” are hut
KkperimeiitH tlmt tritlo with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against llxperimeut-
What is CASTOR IA
Costorln. is n harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare-
goric, Drops anil Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
emitnins neither Opium, Morphine mx* other Narcotie
substance. Its age is its guurantce. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It eures Diarrhoea and Wtml
Colic. II, relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy ami natural sleep.
Tho Children's Panacea—Tho Mother’s Friend.
CEPUH’S- CASTOR IA ALWAYS
Bears tho Signaturo of
The Kind You Me Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THK CCNTAUN COMPANY, TT MURNAV aTIttlT, NEW YORK cmr.
;mil Ice Cold lleer always in Sti
Ink.* KihI.iI |i|.-|>, p-ii. ('i,u*. II di-
y.-Ml- wh.it yon toil, Sour -looiivti
to these islands are from the re-
mote provinces of the Japanese
reddens with the blood o
f our i bi'lt'liing, *ii - on ilm Miooo.rl, mi l nil empire. They are the simplest
killed and of those we kill. Our
torpedoes roar, our shrapnel
shriek, our cannon breathe slaugh-
ter and we die and are the cause
of death. And you Occidentals
say to us. ‘You have won vouf
rank; you have civilized your-
selves.’’ Centuries upon centuries
we have had artists, painters,
sculp tors, philosophers. In the
sixteenth century we had pub-
lished in Japanese the tables of
Aesop. Were we then barbar-
ians ?”
An Undiscovered Recipe.
Few secrets have been more care-
fully kept for longer periods than
recipes of one kind and another.
tlisonlcra <>f I ho -tomm li ilutl nro
Ftmil'h', nro instantly ioliovc«l xn*l
pennontlv ciiwl tlx Imp ihi' of ivotl
rtl <’utt‘. s P. N*nit* »
at 21)7 main m Now llni.i.H
Conn mix!*: • Kothil « uio
is giving mio* univoisHl *miiI»• *• li• • i»
mill is mircWjb......infill* Wit* p »'i
live iplies iii»«l »n)»Ht»|nicnf «*uri* I'1*'
! | liis tiislipioing nitmeiii, 11• j»t I
1 iliiil I Mil) 'iIxvmxs '-'lift to urililx
j custniiiers l*v iofo;i)«*ihIinu it to Vin,
i 1 wiite t his to s11o>V how wi ll 11'*'
I remedy is spoken or Koilui
|)\m]i'|imm (‘me was tliM’oveietl after
veni’h of m'i* ntilJt* expei iments and
will positively t ine nil ((ouiiM'.li tr«m»i>
It's I'nr Mile l»V A, HruimJinmu
Kipling as a Preacher.
. Rndyard Kipling once acted as
but skill in chemical anaylsis has re- ^ preacher. The quartermaster of
vealed several of the elder secrets
One can tell, for example, approx-
imatelv, though not fully, the com-
position of Benedictine. But “the
little-more, and, <>h. much it is!
The ingredient which evades an-
alysis is that Which gives the this brief intimation: “9 p.m.—
liquors their distinction, and before ! gern10n by a layman.” The saloon
the flavor of combined herbs, a t was <-rfnv',ie<f with curious folk at
very great number of which are ! lhe appointed time, and Mr. Kip-
i. most rustic of the people of
Nippon, The new and surging
life of the Japanese renaissance
l.os scarcely torched them.
----------
Unwelcome Cue*!* in Japan.
The Tappnese have a multitude of
rusint customs, many of which
feel 1 ••>%.«. com " in sense as their basis.
111 v \, hen a guest has outworn h:s wel-
come, the mistress of the house
fli.es not "row outwardly impatient
in his presence, throw out little
hints of what duties will claim her
attention soon; but she prepares
the daintiest luncheon imaginable,
and puts it into the prettiest of box-
es, which she wraps in rice paper,
and tics with a ribbon. Then, some
morning when no other members
of the household are present, all
to keep out
of the way, she puts the lunch box.
into
his hands. Before the lunch hour
the truest, if he he wise, has van-
ished like a mornimr cloud.
the Empress liner, on which he
was a passenger, died, leaving a having been warned
widow and a large family. The of the way. s.ie puts
following evening there appeared with ^t.te ( ‘'BIT'k
on the notice board, halfway down
th e “entertainment ‘ programme ”
used in Chartreuse, the scientfic
analyst is who!l" at a loss.
Doesn't Respect Old Age.
I I‘h in* ful when you I li f;iiU I o
►how lenpiTt fer old *>£♦', hut
ling, fron tho front of an imjjro-
vised platfi rm. proceeded to preach
a begging sermon of some fifteen
minutes’ lenrth. The result was
gratifying. From a congregation
Cons
HpiiIiIi i- ii'.i'nliiti'b imp.wniMi', if
ooitHtjmi M.iity *‘i*i
j imi'M Ft’ft*.- »>!’ j|\M add kjdm*v
uNint h ivi* -|>rimt| from
c*i»»1 -1ipil i«Mi. .'•'•u*!* it 1 cnii
1 • • f l.ts • 11 I- lllilifl'i'Hs.irv. IT.r.D i-i it t* • 11 (*
T he Earth's Population.
The population of the earth at
the beginning of the present cen-
tury amounted to 1,503,300,000
souks, distributed over an area of
55.626,691 square miles, or about
twenty-six persons to the square
mile. The divergencies are, how-
ever, very wide in this respect,
varying from 104 to the square
mile in Europe to two persons to
the same amount of territory in
Australia and Polynesia. As to
the totals of the populations, Asia,
the home of the yellow races, is
far in the lead, with 819.556.000.
Europe is next, with 392,264,000.
Even Africa is ahead of North
America, the Dark continent be
ing credited with 140,00.000.
while North America is given
io5,7I4,o<jo. South America has
38,4R2,cxxd; Australia and Polyne-
sia, 6,483,000. and the polar lands,
91,000. As to the density, after
Europe, as shown above, with its
104 persons to the square mil*,,
comes Aria, with g' o. X r !■
America with 13, Mriru t
South America 5 and Aus
and Polynesia 2.
1 numbering le.-s than 200 the sum ""' it. Heri......will >■ reined)
. t river waraised Iliiilt"", I \ l,l.iil«dn\ , I * M.
nut the riuitr.u v hi the en-o of Dr. j aoa 1 |tr«»M-.oo Klit tviile.l, fell, fl 11)02;
23St!Z ChambeTialn s'oougiTRemedy ! W
Is Pleasant to Ttthe. ibottl". For - il,> !>,.• A • Hum.....nun.
irrespective of old »kh. Dvepeprlii.
Janndiee, Fever, (toiiHliuntlon nil
yield to thin | eifcct Fill. 2oc ut till
drug stores.
Coal Statistics.
The consumption of coal per head |
of the population in the I'nited'i
States has now reached the level
of that in the United Kingdom, a?
appears from the following figures
for 1903: L'nitrd Kingdom, 3.<).’,
tons; United States, 9.93 tons;
Relrnum, 3.07 tone; Germany, 1.75;
France, 1.19 tunsRussia. 0.13 ton.'
The average price per ton shows!
great varatNn, being in 1902, in
the United Kingtk rn $ :: in Ger-
many. $2.15 ; in France. 62.85; in I
Belgium. 82.75. nr.d in the United j
States, 81.58. Those figures, it is i
explained, represent a fall of about |
28 cents a ton in the United King-1
dom, 12 cents in Germany, 2.; cents
in France. 40 cents in the United
1 States. Semi-official Fgriirr s for
j 1903 indicate a futber fall of 14
! cents a ten in the United Kingdom
and 6 cents in Germany, with a
further ri-c of 20 cents in the
United States. Fence and Hel-
ium arc not me cud.
Skilled l.dhvC Scarce.
It is es.imated that of "he 11,-
' 3/.’’.;Vi2 workingmen in the Unit-
ed ' f.Cj at the time of the las:
1 cc p . less than our-third Co;;!;!
be classed as relatively skilled
workers, lilva.t is to say, as men
j whose wages approach $2.25 a
I day, or $13.50 a week in good
’ ! when employed. The
\i‘ ork department of labor
s s’H'.vn that about 15 per cent
►f the* members of unions arc itn-
| employed in good times. The
l North side of depot,
• AV. 0. KOCH, Proprietor.
VAJtJiaJUUSaJtAflAiLaJUSttJLILgJtJLaiLBJUflJUlAAJlJlJUUULJUtl
art-ar..- 1r 'it.-, sss -"s^rr. -- ■ 2--- rr —n=rajr'~.;a '« -"—ernergrt;
WWW WWW
:# Meat Market,
fi* Liinr’s Simnil. Klatonin< Tbshh.
J KERR & COMPANY, Prop’s
; FAT BEEVES SLAUGHTERED Dj
t Fresh hot s.iiis.'ig) and hot barbecued meats temp!
£ ly st”'”*'-1 Special attention given to out
- <1 tcvu and railroad orders. YVe
J respwlf illy solicit your patronage
, i STRICTLY CASH.
A afla afk / A A /k A.
I CJS’T
GLIDED
WT-* RE GUIDED
By wlm! you Imvo soon in tho pnsi or
oxpDF* h» mih in the lutim*. 'J his ih
headquurtei'M for low pneca:
f—»'
IwW*
«6Vf
km
Balzac’* Abitr- nnou« I;., j,
The Balzac revival goes on
apace, and the founder of the mod-
ern novel, who starved nearly half
of his life, is getting tremendous
posthumous g! rv. In . ! *
years he vvr r s ‘y-ritte s. *v
els, bc.- i ie- an aLn ;-ce nf tai'*-
and newspaper article . W! n in
full swing he led the life of a re-
cl use, refusing to sec even his I proper, ion among toe iiris-vicd
most intimate friends. He ttsu?d-1 ts j"^bablv 1 c-- . ,»",t even at that
ly went to bed at 8 o'clock, after
Tim linrHl qmilily of aminibit-d lnnf
i- ii>.cd in tin* mmiiifiM'Inro nf Oliiitn
Ii0rlnin’» OiidkIi llemeily, hikI the j
rnotH nxeil in im pinpnrHlion give it «l
Where Csmphor Comes from.
Three-fourths of all oamphor
1 ,. . [used in the world comes from
! fUvor hi 1111 Ihr In iiihiiIh iupvn making T. . ,
, . , U|._ 1 «... _ t i Formosa, and its producers arc
it (jliilo t'IBMmjiut to tnlv**. Mr. w, L. , , . , TT' , . . •*
ol ll.M'snek. of .............. M,l.. in M.„uU the head-minting llakka tribes of
“Bill” 1 an.
The present secretary ,n„ .....................,.......
whose di»nitv equals that of an.)' ! inK of this renmily nays ‘ 1 imyn 'mod the mountain region of the island,
judge on the supreme liench, is jnidh C"'ik*' 16 nvdv with A head-hunter will lie in wait for
known as "Bill'’ Taft to all his in- niv < Idldinn for Hewnd yi-rrn nml cun rlav’is for his viotim, and having
timates. In his case the nickname | imllifnllv nhv it is iln* hoel inH|mni j shot his victim at point blank
would seem to he a token of uener- ; lion of Hie kind I know nf. The rliil
al good will and friendly feeling.
divn like to tnke it mid it tins no
niter injurious eflcel.
Hold hv A Hniiinrinnn.
Largest Rapid Transit Tunnel.
New York, with her rapid transit
tunnel, will sewn he boasting of
range brings the .head to his
tribesmen, who receive him and
it with approbation and respect,
Scottish clans never carried on
more relentless and savage war-
fare among themselves than do
these camphor makers. Their in-
dustry is safeguarded from the
An Unlucky Monarch.
11 is said that the Emperor of
Austria has had more hard luck
during his fifty-six years’ reign
than any oilier monarch. He has ________( .......... __ ________o
lost every battle he has fought, his a WOnder of the modernized I Japanese, who now own the rsl.
wife was assassinated and his eldest wor1d. lt-is the longest of the un- ! ”n<l. for they know that to give
•on committed suicide. i tlergroiind roads having a total dis- UP means a kiss of their inde-
^ss== , 1
An extraordinary nickname has ; and the‘ rattletV-bang affair in
been given to King Peter of Ser-
via. The name is “Peter Prvov-
jencani,” meaning Peter the first
crowned, a title which was as-
sumed in 1195 by Stephen Uros,
being the first Servian king to be
crowned.
Survivor* of Ptle* Disaster.
Many inhabitants of Martinique
have become treasure hunters, and
Paris only 8 1-2, and the Berlin
underground 4 1-2. There are some
long tunnels in the Alps, the Simp-
lon being 12 miles long, the St.
Gothard 9 1-2. and the Mont Cenis
7 1-2. The famous old Hoosoc
tunnel is 4 3-4 miles long, and is
probably the best-known railroad
tunnel in this country. Boston’s
much-vaunted subway is 2 1-2 miles
lenrth, and so will not compare
pendence. There is enormous
profit in camphor, and the won-
der is that enterprising Ameri-
cans have not reaped some of it.
spend much time in digging in the: 'n length, and so will not compare
ruins caused- by the eruption of j w't*' ^ new subway at New York,
• ■ when length is considered.
Mothers Praise It.
Mont Pelee in hope of finding gold
and other treasure lost at that time.
Only Makes a Bad Matter
Worse
Perhaps yon have never llioniihl. of
it but (lie (act iniial l>e apparent to
every one that conatipsiion la eauae'l
by a lack of water in the ayewm, ami
the nne of drastic cathartics like liie
old fushien |Xilis only make a had
matter worse. Ulianiderlain’s Ht'on-
och and l.ivoi' Tablets are much more
mild and g«n|lt in their effect, and
when the primer done is taken the ac
lion ii sn natural that one can hard-
ly realise it is the ofTecl of Jtlie medi
cine. Try a 25c boltle of them.
For sale by A, Uruiuieinaii
Mothers avert where prai«e One
Minute Cough Cure for the suffering
it has relieved their little ones, A
oortani cure for coughs, croup and
whooping couch A. L. SpafTord,
PoatiunsUr of Che-ter Mien,,says:
“Our little girl was USSOliesiCIIS from
strangulation miring a lenhle attack
of cro ip. One Minute Cough Cure
quickly relieved and cured liar, and I
cannot praise il too highly,’’ One
Minnie Cavpli Cure relieve,, couglia,
makes hrealein ea»y, cols nun phegm
draws out inflammation and remov-
es eeery cause of a cough and att ain
on the lungs.
For sale by A. Brunuemau.
Ayers
We know what all good doc-
tors think of Ayer’s Cherry
Pectoral. Ask your own doc-
tor and find out. He will tell
Cherry
Pectoral
you how it quiets the tickling
throat, heals the Inflamed’
lungs, and controls the
hardest of coughs.
** Ayer’* Cherry Portontl !• wtll known In
our family. YVo think ll U th« b*tt mndlolM
In th# world for roughs and colds.”
Katii Fktbiiaon, PcUlnm*. C«1.
»«v,We..* too.
All dnn’glsts.
J. O. ATM CO.,
Lowell. Mxm.
^Hard Coughs
a light dinner, and got up at 2
in the morning to resume writ-
ing. At 6 he took his tub, 1; "g
in the water one hour, after w c!
he drank a cup of c, 'fee. ,*t
det, his editor, was n . . .
to bring proofs, take ;> •..1 ,• e t
rcctcd ones, and wrest, ii -!c,
fresh manuscript from ’ . . .1
9 he wrote till no n, 'v;:ui lie
breakfasted on hv boiled egg-
and some bread. From 1 to l> lie
continued his wr! '..g. For six
weeks Iu* would keep this up; lhen
he would mysteriously di appear
for months;
A Lawyer Adjourned Court.
On one occasion Wayne Mc-
Veagh succeeded in adjournii 7
t.hc supreme court 'before the usual
hour. Mr. MacVeagh never re-
mained iit Washingl'cii over night
if he could help it, and on this
occasion lie greatly desired 1 ; take
the 4 o’clock train for IMiiladol-
phia. Although talking to the
court, he kept his eye on the
clock, and*'ait 3:45, giving himself
just time enough to reach the sta-
tion, he ceased his argument and
said: “May it please your hon-
ors, I move that the court do now
adjourn. I want to catch the 4
o'clock train for home.” The cool
audacity of the request seemed to
paralyze the justices, but the chief
tins tic e made the customary order
without a protest and Mr. Mac-
Veagh got his train.
rat" the average rnnu»l income of
ni re than two - ir s if the work-
ers of th,e United 'Smtes becomes
slirbtly less than $600 in good
tiincs
r.
MMl! ra,
Women as Well as Men
Are Made Miserable by
Kidney Trouble.
Fine Furniture
Medium Furnitl
Cheap Furniture
Hut tun Fur nidi
Iron Furniture
Lenoleum u
Cu rpets T
Art Squares
Hu o's
Fine Pictures
II inftour Shades
Fur gains
II uvd.cn Toys
-<cr~5v4
CARPETS FU
Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, dis-
courages and lessen., ambition: beauty, vigor
„ ,v—- , ^ and clieerfclncss soon
i'>j,4___ disappear when the kid-
> A fleys are out of order
cr diseared.
IrtvANkU Kidney trouble has
"tKfNf y ' become so prevalent
y J] that it I3 not uncommon
li , •. V • I fur a child to be b-rn
/VU\ V \>S4'lS2i,af.'l!c'ed - ti’i weak iTd-
U r.oy.. If:-..- .child urin-
’e- t;c;i too - fieri, if the
urine scalds tho flesh or if, when the child
reaches an age when It should be able to
control the presage, it i. j ct afflir-c.d v/lth
bed-vrettlng. dep.md upon It. the cause oi
the difficuliy is h. ;i cy icc.'. 1;, end i'ie first
step should be tov/r.rd* t .c tror. -nent of
these Important or-v.rr. This unpit i ant
trouble is due to a cc.cnaed cendin ,n cf the
kidneys and bladder and net 10 a habit as
most people suppose.
V/cm-n as »-‘!| rs men S’ .t made mis-
erable with kidney and tin 'Jet ir niblc,
and both need the si-.s g at remedy.
The mild and the iinncdiate effect ot
Swamp-Uoct is toon leali.cd. it ia sold
by arugg'sts, in fifty- ?
cent am one hollar —
sices. You may l ave a
sample bottle by ms'l < —crx
|-ee. mco pamphlet tell- h.suh ot t—it,ot.
Ing all about it. including many of the
thousands of testimonial . letters received
frem sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer
Sc Co.. Binghamton, Is'. Y., be sure and
mention this paper.
rtbuTakf Quinine!
It.’s 10 to 1 you Uo if you are a viotim
of malaria.
Don’t Do It. It’a Danferoua
Wo’ll rulmlt it will enro malaria, but it leaves
almost (deadly after effects.
HERBINE
ia purely veefetable and absolutely guaranteed
to cure malaria, sick headache, biliousncw,
inH all stomach, kidney and liver complaints.
TKY IT TO-DAY
50 Cents e. Bottle. 4,*» 1" -v.
boia by A, Jbruuuemanu
WHITER
Cream Vermifuge
THE GUARANTEED
LadiesOnly.
It Is Women Who
Need Most Relief
From Little Irri-
tating Pains
and Aches.
Dr. Miles' Anti-Tain rills are for
women.
Woman’s delicate nervous organism
tingles to the leuFt Jarring influence, and
some ache or pain Is the result.
Tho remedy is at hand —
Dr. Miles’ Anti-I'nin rills.
They a^t most marvellously on wom-
an’s nervous organism, and relieve and
cure the pains to which sho is a martyr.
lleadncites, naurulgiac pains, monthly
pains and r.ll kinds of pains disappear,
us if a crentle hand lmd lightly soothed
them away. Dixztness. Rush of Blood
to the head. Toothache. Backache are
nil cured r»y these “Little Comforters.”
Cured without danger of disagreeable
after-eflTecir.; cured quickly; cured with-
out unnatural notion on liver, stomach,
or other intorr.nl organs.
Dr. M1I««h( Ar.tl 1’oln Pills please tho
women, and tha children tr.ko them l>o-
enuso they are easy to take and soot ho
all their suffering..
"l'or wears 1 had spells of sick head
it times Fuffeiiiij
IRELAND CAMP NO. I
W. of the WJ
MbhIh *,vi*ry Ut | ami lid
uixliU Iu uauli inuiilb.
II. MUKl’Ill
H. it. TIIIII.KMKYKH, Ct.«H«
WORM
REMEDY
ache, nt times suffering untold agonies.
I could not endure any excitement.
Going to ehurrh. and even visiting,
lu-ought on these terrible spells. I trt- d
numerous remedies without relief until
I tried Dr. Miles' Ant I-Pain Pills, and
they have cured me. When I feel *rmp-
haadache l take a pill and
attack. When I sn\ tlf* d
hey havo cu
toms of_i!ek h«i
My Spring and Sum-
mer Samples are in
Call and select
asia'ss^r&.snss.isi AN up-to-date suiT|Mi»(d;5«o-Una«.« c..
ward «'(T i ii<* attack. \\ net
and nervous, ft pRt soothes
HA RAI1 W ATKIN HON. HU
IVIes, 2&e o box.
me -MRH.
wlalrstoxvn, la.
Nev^r sold In bulk.
THE CHILDREN'S FAVORITE TONIC.
lEWAKI or IMITATION*.
THC GCNUINC HNfHtNCO ONI, IT
free rr to j",0forM^r'? A^"1
fain Plll«, tii-' *k>w Rctentin,' Remelr
for rnln. AIho Symptom Blank Our
BnecliillHt will diNKnoKH your c«hh. (.-II
you »l.nt In wrong, and how to right It,
rm. nn m i i.es mkoicai. co„
i-kUOKA rofutis, JiiUOlAitT, LNU.
Germania Loge, Nl
O. d. Vd. S.'
FJ.ATONIA, IEJ
Hiirlt ilno Yt>iHHinmliiiiKPii t
4Iimi Soimtnir ji'ilen Mumily
mittiiC" li Ulir in Htiiffct's IInlle.
roi'-pmlp" Mittirliiiler tics
Kind fi'oumllirliKt eiiit.'«liiiieii
Komn Vi'i'giiuiioluiiguu tlicilzuul
Heim. I’nTil
Freni!
C bloffui'K,
Mec’v.
CLARK OWEN LODGE NO. i
I O O F
Meets on tlm Vd A Tuesdnjll
of oiicli month K. Ilnll,^
ia. IVihi. J. A. Ca«lv
W. A. Hetiklisni S»*f
FLATONIA LODGE NO,
A. F. <Si A. M.j
Slveis tils tlud H.i inrd.ty in^lit in^
•noutli. All brethren in go>ut
Aie invited to ulio'U*.
A Hrimacmintj
P. Yniigto, Sec.
TO’*
Th« <
Early Rl
Mwimiii
Kodol Dyspepsia
DKaetti what vot •
I
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Blanton, S. C. The Flatonia Argus. (Flatonia, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 24, 1904, newspaper, November 24, 1904; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth989877/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fayette Public Library, Museum and Archives.