The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 17, Ed. 1 Friday, May 31, 1912 Page: 3 of 8
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WOMEN SHOULD
VENICE A CITY OF DREAMS
O.N1GDI®
BE PROTECTED
Venire
•A 0
Those col- |
BABY’S ECZEMA AND BOILS
r
Not
to ba draffad out, and chalra
’o
It
end
leave,
I
In k-sa
l
Oh, well—that Io—you see.
D®.
I ween.
RE
[AS
DM*DC
0
■•mum of those uffly, grtuty, (ray ha Ira.
Uaa "LA CRKOLg" HAIR ORgSBINfl.
FRICK, •lXX>. retail.
u I
• .. .
You Look Prematurely Old
Against So Many Surgical Op-
erations. How Mrs. Bethune
and Mrs. Moore Escaped.
Mrs. Herberger, Who Would Not
Coasent to Go There, Finally
Relieved At Home.
Ask for
this
Box
s
s
F-J
■ 1
Wlreleea Btatlono to Bo Used to Make
Tom poets tend Their Own
Warning Ahead.
DOCTORS ADVISED
THE HOSPITAL
Her View.
*1 think It io so nice," said the fair
young thing at the boarding bouse ta-
ble during a labor discussion, "that
the men ran have their strikes during
Um hot months, when they would be
wanting vacations, anyway."
Infants and children, and see that It
Hears the ,/ tri '
Rignature of
In Use For Over 30 /ears.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s (as to ria
Whan Caesar Crossed th, Rubicon,
Julius Caesar wu» about to cross the
Rubicon.
In an extreme case like thia," he
said, blithely, "I wouldn't mind going
— —------------- . .._j, even
If I had to pay seven cents for the
privilege."
why
though
you
at
Wr wifi “*—
tag wffewr c__,
AJiIf— nape B.
»»-
Ail
i or-
iaM.
flip
II or
tti
atb
trans
With
i all
■Rer-
■' T
STORMS TO PREDICT SELVES
-if
IF-
s
EseO
sa
W
Jsl
u«t Is there
' Have
Many Charms for ths Tourist In This
Picturesque City of
Italy.
The Paxton Toilet Co. of Poston.
Maas., will send a large trial box of
Paxtlnw Antiseptic, a delightful cleans
Ing and getnilcldnl toilet preparation |
to any woman, free, ui»on rgr»M
Taught *ro<*r M,r
»,^...cns—No; they re all
nsnoot afford 10o .Iran
Marla
of extra quality tobaooo.
If you
J.KWfa*
• Imploot Way of All.
The following story the- Saturday
Evening Post says la told of Col.
George W. Goetbals, who at the time
It took place was an Instructor In en-
gineering at Weat Point.
Ono day, In a recitation, ho gave out
thia queetion to a class of cadets:
"The post flagpole, alxty feet high,
has fallen down. You are ordered by
your commanding officer to put it up
again. You have under your command
a sergeant and ten privates of the en-
gineer corps. How would you get the
pole back Into place?"
Each cadet, after long consideration
and much figuring over the derricks,
blocks, tackle and so on, evolved a
different method.
"No," said Goefhnls, "you nre
wrong. You would simply say: ‘
geant, put up that flagpole!”’
I was in bed for four
or flve days at a Umo
NasS^ every month, and so
■ weak 1 could hardly
I walk. I cramped and
had backache and
headache, and was
so nervous and weak
that 1 dreaded to see
anyone or have any-
one move in the room,
uj The doctors gave me
f medicine to ease me
said Unit 1 ought to
Their Happiness.
"How about that newly-married
deaf mute couple next door to you?
Do they seem happy?" "Unspeak-
ably.”—Boston Transcript.
pomade Vaseline
A obolne drawing and praservellve for Ilia bslr. Highly
refined, delicately perfumed.
Checks dandruff and keeps scalp In heahhy eoodttloa.
Pomade Vaaellna Is pul Up tn attractive boUJoc and In
eollapeiMa tabes Insist on pom ads VABKLINK.
If ’oar dealer dose sol carry ft, write ua
— lalen kaelaS to e»»S yee toes uiwtratoH knnktaf. n n* Sasenie
.-E**1?* Vsartlae nrsearaUMM »■» u>o«<a«4 ms
I l*»t't ■>
Cheaebrough Manufacturing Company
7 gtata Sweat _______<Caoa.bd.Ud > Mo, Y«4,
ball?':, and 'Galon' Is about th.
gest dam I know of."
A man never complains of bls
wife's relations—If she hasn’t any.
. Nil,
Ing da;
W1LDVR D.NESPIT
Mr. Man
feson Moving
Storm esnters move usually In an
•astsrly or northsaatsrly direction.
Hence the prediction of storms on tbs
Altantic coast Is possible, sines most
of them come from tbs Mississippi
valley. Some come up tbs coaat from
the Caribbean sea, but even In this
ease we have no warning.
But western Europe is lees fortu-
nate. Its tempests come from the At-
lantic, and with little warning. Euro-
pean weather men have made aa much
as possible a study of the paths of
American atorma across the Atlantic
and are sometimes accurate tn pre-
dicting the time of their arrival; the
same has been done with storms com-
ing up from the Routh Atlantic.
But It often happens that storms
vary either their routs or the rate of
movement, so that predicting cyclones
on tbs coast of western Europe Is
more or less guesswork.
As a possible help In this respect
Director Andre of the Lyons observa-
tory la making a deep study of the
galvanometer records of various wire-
less telegraph stations.
Ho has found that the antennae are
sensitive to any stray electric currents
as well as to messages, and he hopes
to discover a way to make the atorma
telegraph their own warning ahead of
their arrival.
Every storm la accompanied by elec-
trical disturbances, and already M.
Atylre has accumulated a mass of ovl
donee to show that each storm In this
way gtvea warning. Just bow (o road
this evidence is the problem to which
be Is devoting himself.
By gracious, but I'm sick and tired of It!
But kicking doesn't help a littli bit
If I could make the calendar, well, say,
I'd fix It so there was no movli
THERAPION
•Aba i in ' i in i niji ijpijji N|
FILBM (H A If (JUIfftA AKIN
IksM arid fees «wt * Hr 9
BID LO VKMTOCB RD. MAMPnIKaD.
Garfield T«- ' -•*mllt*dly the slmpleel and
b*,, . .mj Tor Ooatupeilon.
Fourteen per cent, of the egg la a)
bumcn.
——i
•■•v. •• tow vqgwrJ, Bmokdl
Binder straight 5e—niada
w
That Settled Him.
"Do yon think that the dogstar has
Anything to do with the heat?" they
asked of the Eminent Scientist.
Now, the Eminent Rclentlst was Al-
so a witty person, Indeed, and be an-
swered them:
"Mrlusly speaking, I do—”
At thio point the enraged <opulace
foil upon him and smote him blp and
thlgb.
W 7 ;
. V ’*■ ■. 1
, r * *
A Quarter Century
Before the public. Over five million free
Miupleo givan away each year. 1 ho con-
stant and increa.mg sales from ssruplue
proves the grnuinn merit of Allen’s Foot-
Ensn, the snliseptio puwder to be shaken
into the sh'M-s for Corns, Bunions, Aching,
Swollen, Moist, Tender feet, bold every-
where Kc. Don't aicffit any »ut'»titul».
Kahmle free. Address, Alien 8. Olmsted,
Le Roy, N. Y.
EZ
Important to Mother*
Examine carwfulfy every bottle of ____________,, . ...........
CAHT0R1A, a safo and sure remedy for ' through th* Hudson River Tube,
AUTO OWNERS ATTENTION
Don't Buy Any Tires
UNTIL YOU GBT OUS WRICKS
SAVE l/aTst 30%^
CJsAVBWfWwJ T1SWW B«eM l»F tl»« ObI* Lsjiksl MslLoJ
FW.F MM rwwlew FKKB UMlilJT WW.I.UJ
3 ways taftsur
PREMIER S
come back,
1 weigh 160 lbs. and feel nn«.
Cardul aaved me from an operation.
I am going to keep It In the house,
for 1 would not be without It."
Cardul's strengthening effects quick-
ly show themselves in many different
ways. This Is because the ingrodi
ents, from which It is made, go to
th* source of the trouble, and by act-
ing spsclflcally on the cause, relieve
or cure and help bring back health
and et'sngth.
In <bs past 60 years, more than a
mlllirn women have been beneflted
by Cardul. Just try It.
N. B.—Writs toi I.wdles* Advisory
Dept., Chsusnoofi Medicine Co., Chat-
tanooga, Teaa., for Special laatrwo-
tioas, aad S4-page book, "Homs Treat-
■seai for Womoa," sent In plain wrap-
per, oa req asst.
They were erect-
ed by a Ixnnbard engineer —Christian
Science Monitor.
It can't beat moving day, not If It trice
You take a house or flat
Sikeston, Mo. —"For seven years Isuf-
| fared everything.
How's that?
now, I
Just couldn't 1st my businseo go by.
t told my wife that l*d give her full
swing—
But. esy, thio moving Is an awful thing.
Substitute for Third Degree.
A New York dentist advocates
laughing gas as a substitute tor the
police third degree. He believes thnt
this, the least dangerous of anesthet- ,
les, lays open what already is In. the (
mind, unconscious of the search for
its secrets. He believes that If a
man who haa committed a serious
crime should bo questioned about It
during a certain stngo of recovery
from nitrous oxide, or laughing gna
anesthesia, ho would not only reply ■
and truthfully, but bnlf a minute later
ho would realise fully what ho bad '
said.
Ths most stubborn oostlvsaeM yields,
gently and sslurally, to tbs psrsuaslr. notion
of Gsrfle Id Tea.
Vouss-clssnlns day? Why, friend, that's
paradise I
ft BBn't
Its level best
And clean It, and stay right where you
are at.
But when It comes to moving, then, you
know,
Tou clean the place you
whore you go.
Fou have to clean that place as well,
before •
Tou send a single stick In through the
door.
An Old Neighborhood.
"You live In an old. retired neigh-
borhood, don't you?"
"Yoe, indeed Every one of our
neighbore has long since got over the
Idea that bo can save money by rais-
ing his own chickens.”
There fe do reason
shouldn’t try again, even
first you do succeed
IM
at those times, and
have an operation. I would not listen to
that, and when a friend of my husband
told him al«>ut Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg-
etable Coni pound and what it had ITooo
for hia wife, 1 was willinfTtn Take IL
Now 1 look the picture of health and feel
like It, too. I can do my own housework,
hoe my garden, and milk a cow. 1 cun
entertain company and enjoy them. 1
can visit when I choose, and walk aa fur
as any ordinary woman, any day In the
month. 1 wish I could talk to every
suffering woman and girl.’’—Mrs. Dema
Bkthunk, Sikeston, Mo.
Murrayville, 1)1. —"I have taken Ly-
dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
for n very bad cnsc of female trouble
and it made mo a Well woman. My
health was all broken down, the doctors
said I must havo an ojirraUon, and I was
ready to go to the hospital, but dreaded it
so that 1 began taking your Compound.
I got along so well that I gave up the
doctors and was saved from the opera-
tion.” Mrs. ( HAHl.EH MooRK, R H.
No. 3, Murrayville, Hi.
A "Cues" Word.
"And why," asks the minister of his
deacon, with whom he Is playing golf,
"do you exclaim 'Gatun!' ev—~
you make a Dne»?,»g." explains the
11 ■ s t hS^'Su'f,
(oodneas
ofthiBruot-
bBBrSBWCllBB
its tonic proper.
tits that maha It
ao (reat a favurita.
0»« ppehagB males • gaJI«ns If
year gi—t I skbbIIaA we will
mall y»« a aaehage •• raaatpt W
• Be bssse five bls aaau
H'refa fnr pr»fninm ^waa/a.
ML CMAILf l t. MIRLB CO.
N. Broad B«.. PhHadwIphU. fra.
To the wanderer In Italy,
has a peculiar attraction. Arrive there
st sunset, or better still by moonlight,
and you will fancy yourself
planted to some city of dreams
daylight this feeling may weur off to
■owe extent, although theru Is never,
at any time, as much bustle and stir
in Venice as in other towns. Morn-
ing, noon or night, Venice bus a fas-
cinaiion all her own. This Is partly
due to the fact that she is a city built
on the water.
To explore Venice and to become In-
timately acquainted with her, u gon
dole Is not a necessity, rather It Is
n luxury for sunset evenings and
moonlight nights It la a delightful ex
perlence, and not a difficult one, to
find one's way about Venice on foot;
quulnt, old world corners are discover-
ed, bits of ancient architecture, carved
door ays and little bridges, with a i
feast of color here, there nnd every-
where. Apart from nil the beauty of
scenery, there Is the enthralling Inter
eat evoked by her history and tradi-
tions
Among the trndltlons we rend that
St Theodore was the flrat patron saint
of Venice, to he superseded later on
by St. Mark. The wanderer In Ven
Ice becomes familiar with the Lion
of St. Mark. More prominently than
anywhere Is It to be seen on one of the «
columns on the I’lnzz.etta, whilst on |
the other Is St. Theodore
limns of beautiful red and gray gran-
ite are supposed to have come orlg
Inally from H) ria.
"My eon was about three weeks old
when I noticed a breaking-out on hie
cheeks, from which a watery sub-
stance oozed. A short time after, his
arms, shoulders and breast broke out
also, and in a few days became a solid
scab. I became alarmed, and called
our family physician who at once pro-
nounced the disease eczema. The lit-
tle fellow was under treatment for
about three months. By the end of
that time, he seemed no better. I be
camo discouraged. 1 dropped the doc-
tor's treatment, and commenced the
use of Cuticura Soap and Ointment,
and in a few days noticed a marked
change. The eruption on his cheeks
was almost healed, and bls shoulders,
arms and breast were decidedly bet-
ter. When bo was about seven months
old, all trace of the eczema was gone
"During his teething period, hie
head and face were broken out in
boils which I cured with Cuticura
Soap and Ointment. Surely he must
have been a great sufferer. During
the time of teething and from the time
I dropped the doctor’s treatment, 1
used the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura
Ointment, nothing else, and when two
years old he was the picture of health.
His complexion was soft and beauti-
ful, and his bead a mass of silky curls.
I had been afraid that he would never
be well, and I feel that 1 owe a great
deal to the Cuticura Remedies.'*
(Signed) Mrs. Mary W. Ramsey, 224
E. Jackson St., Colorado Springs, Col.,
Sept. 24, 1910. Although Cuticura
Soap and Ointment are sold by drug
gists and dealers everywhere, a sam-
ple of each, with 32 page book, will be
mailed free on application to "Cuti-
cura," Dept. L, Boston. , ..
* - .»at is there
Beat ••-et’tlelng? Have you
s mskSo that question of yourself?
The millions that advertising has
made for merchants are uncountable,
yet there are business men who even
dow don't believe In advertising, just
as there are people who sill think it
Is safer and more convenient to travel
in a prairie schooner behind a pair of
alow oxen than In a Pullman palace
car. Yet this type of business man is
seldom rated In commercial rating
books—Exchange.
PRI VO<V'P Tutt . Pill. II taken In tIms
Ml osir a remede lor. hut will prevent
SICK HIADACIII,
bltlntaansas, constipation inj k Indeed dleeoass
I Tutt’s Pills
TNINtWFRINCHRtMbDY I?" 2,”'. |.
----------1 rrr.K’h
| lloMtritAkJft With
e , r,. Al'l'kB IiIRFaBAM
KKfFTKiRR RITAB8RRK
DR I F <
, MJRIHIM KN4A
Bt. Louis. Mo.—Mrs. Mary Herber-
ger, of tbis city, says: "I was sick in
bed for ten weeks, with womanly
troubles, and had four of the beet
doctors waiting on mo.
Every one of them said I would
havs to go to the hospital and have
an operation, but I would not consent
to that.
I thought I would give Cardul a
trial. When I began to lake the first
bottle, 1 could not turn over In bed,
but bad to bo lifted.
Before I finished the first bottlo, my
pains wore leaving me, slowly, and
soon I was out of bed and walking
around.
My pains have not
since.
To Revive House Plsnts.
Charcoal and a small quantity nf
potash mixed to a fl no powder and
fed to the roots twice a week for n
few weeks will revive a drooping or
dying house plant This seems to
act as a tonic and has been tried oev-!
ernl times with good effect. In k-sa'
than a month's lime the plant will !
take on now life nnd flourish vigorous-
ly If all the necessary elements are
not out of the soil.
Think this over!
Zs therv a nu beverage that^
gou Dee cup than
LIPTON’S TEA
GOES lARTHEbr FOR THE MONEY
Well, sir, this moving Is an awful thing-
lust thinking of It makes me dread the
spring.
I wouldn't go through It againt
me
fd rather simply stay and lot things bo.
why, think of all tho worry and the
muoo,
furniture that'e broken, and tho
fuse,
I Mover put In euoh a day ao this—
Tee, moving day Io one I'd like to rnloo.
lust a homeless, helpless sort of
day,
With robbing vanmon that you have to
p*y.
And rugo to bo dragged out, and ohalre
to lug,
Snd crates to heave, and mattroooeo to
tug,
and that piano!—My, it wslgho a ton
I’m glad that we have only got tho one.
I've boon up now oinoe 4 o'clock a. m.—
The vanmon? Waited half an hour for
them.
The Bongo of Yoetordsy.
Wo bear » lot of old-time conge.
Romo people will implore the slngere
to arise and sing the good old songs
of yore. They sigh and moan about
tbe joy they havo in olden days, and
say their hearts are yearning for the
songs of other days.
O, read a book of anole** 10
"Tho Mocking HP-”" ,rtn ,n “,l th*
in a)1 -*• '•'™ *om* on* dead for
, the chorus then Is full of sobs
•nd bitter, bitter tears.
All broken hearts and busted hopes
and crushed and shattered dreams tbe
olden songs go walling on and havo
no joyful gleams; they’re mostly made
of empty homes and unrequited love,
with sad refrains that give you pains
•nd say "we ll meet above."
Next time somebody bogs of you to
slug some song that's old, lift up your
voice and sing the "Silver Threads
Among the Gold" or that gay one
which begs you to "Hoe That My
Grave's Kept Green," and nevermore
the eonge of yore will be called for,
"•(lent Actors" Not Silent.
Tencent grand opera Is fast near
Ing a reality.
A patent was granted last wra-k to
C. Milton of London, Eng, for com
blntng a phonograph and a moving
picture machine, so that they will op-
erate tn absolute harmony
As soon uh this patent Is placed
on the market, It will In all probabl!
Ity mean that moving picture shows
will soon have phonographs In their
houses, nnd will reproduce the words
or songs of the now ‘‘silent actors" |
at the same time thnt the film ts be 1
Ing projected on the screen.
It’s 11
day,
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The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 17, Ed. 1 Friday, May 31, 1912, newspaper, May 31, 1912; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1265139/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.