The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, April 21, 1911 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
kJ'
submit this bear
happy old lady In Wisconsin
delay;
ejVd -yxe if- ■
X-
^1.:
Ik
i
tion of the island which gave
crown to King Victor's house.
last my home,
to Oregon f
CHAPTER XVIII.
^^astle
’utiful in
COFFEE CONGESTION
Causes a Variety of Ails.
I
Mr..
irtr'W
The Missing Slipper.
There will always remain something
to be said of woman as long as there is
—-j———n—,, rterf '■*“ _lEmtsIlAWg
“We are bound in opposite di-
the fall they will be
„ aiiu A Al e|/wtve xja imj wv aa u*wvv’w*/>
— .8^'_ 21!'.°^ -W H l»«to»«to. .tel" Th.1 l»
kk-
U0L.X‘;; •
Modern Sardinia.
King Victor’s decision to pay Sar-
dinia his first visi. since his accession
is a reminder that this large Italian
island still belong to the middle ages
It is hard to believe that Sardinia,
Known to the ancient Romans as the
granary of the empire and its min-
eral treasure house, should so recently
as 1828 have been entirely without
roads. The beautiful highways over
which, in Augustian days, the golden
harvests had been wheeled to *he
coast had been lost since the fail of
the empire. Eren feudalism retained
its hold on the life of the Sardes till
1858. Pestilence due to neglected and
undrained swamps has no doubt
helped to retard the return to clviliza-
th«
L J&v
is curious,” I said
"Mein Gott! It Im more thaadM
bus. It Im vonderful! I haf two Ama
soniM collected by my own hands,
and 12 species of my own discovery.
much? Listen. It iss notings! Here
Im the discovery!”
[
■ *’ fta
but i
I only
■T
is unique, as all
^^^^ffnnentH are composed of texts
MKripture In Latin. Commencing at
the south end of the west wing Is the
inscription, in bold letters, ‘‘Except
the Ixifd, the Keeper, keep the house.
In vain he watches who keeps it.”
Then fo’lows another Inscription
dated 1«24, the year the house was
completed, "Except the Lord build the
house, they have labored tn vain who
build it.” Along the outer balustrade
we read. "Blessed are they who fear
the Lord, who walk in his ways.
Praise ye the name of the Ix>rd.
Amen ” Lord Northampton is. It may-
be stated, the president of the Bible
society.
,thy seemed to sit
the shatters were
irli the hour was now mld-
Sonfc thing said tome that It
welMor me to turn back.
ell have done so. We
little walk, and 1
r
nlled. "It Iss^ 'v
ertalnty,” he sat^^HIR**
^ed last night. Englnd will
I march thia summer 700 men up the
Peace rlvttCln the fall they will be
I across the Rockies. T
Xtake boats easily down the streams to
Oregon. Tou ask If there will be
troubles. I toll you. yess.”
"What ---- __
with her brigades, west-bound, my
I dsis ■ eg *>” I aabsMl Him onanollv 11A an -
pv- I
: -■.
L • "
says:
"During the time I was a coffee
drinker I was subject to sick head-
aches, sometimes lasting 2 or 3 days,
totally unfitting me for anything.
To this affliction was added, some
years ago, a trouble with my heart
that was very, painful, accompanied
by a smothering sensation and faint-
ness.
"Dyspepsia, also, came to make life
harder to bear. I took all sorts of pat-
ent medicines but none of them helped
me for any length of time.
"The doctors frequently told me
that coffee was not good for me; but
without coffee I felt as if I had no
breakfast. I finally decided about 2
years ago to abandon the use of cof-
fee entirely, and as I had read a great
deal about Postum I concluded to try
that for a breakfast beverage.
"I liked the taste of it and was par-
ticularly pleased to notice that It did
not 'come up' as coffee used to. The
bad spells with my heart grew less
and less frequent, and flnailv ^eased
altogether, and I have not had an at-
tack of sick headache for more than a
year. My digestion is good, too, and
I am thankful that I am once more a
healthy woman. I know my wonder-
ful restoration to health came from
quitting coffee and using Postum.”
Name given by the Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich.
"There’s a reason." and It Is thia.
Coffee has a direct action on the liver
with some people, and causes partial
congestion of that organ preventing
the natural outlet of the secretions.
Then may follow biliousness, sallow
akin, headaches, constipation and final-
ly a change of the blood corpuscles
and nervous prostration.
Read the little book. "The Road to
WellviUe," in pkgs. "There's a Rew
eon.”
km reek SWrt letter? A eew
one epee* re from time to til a 1*0*
snxnstoa trn, and t»U « kaaaaw
He need not know airthat
knew, yet in case of any accident
myself or any sudden contretemps, he
would serve both as a witness and as
an excuse for disarming any sus-
picion which might be entertained re-
garding myself
The next day he readily enough fell
in with my suggestion of a morning
stroll, and again we sallied forth, at
about nine o’clock having by that
time finished a dejeuner a la four-
chette with Jacques Bertlllon. which
to my mind compared unfavorably
with one certain other 1 had shared.
, A sense of uneasiness began to op-
press me, 1 knew not why, before 1
had gone half way down the little
street from the corner where we
turned. It was gloomy and dismal
enough at the beat, and on this morn-
ing an unusual a pal
upon' It, for few of
down, althoui
morning.
would be as wel
1 might as w<
passed up the
tag' George himself.
____22 2_____
the voyageur ti
or four months. -------
&£ twice that long, or more. For you In
the states, you can go faster. And
ah! my friend, it iss worth the race,
that Oregon. Believe me, it iss full
I of bugs—of new bugs; 12 news species
<1 haf discovered and named. It iss
sometings of honor, iss it not?”
you say interests me very
much, sir,” I Mid. "I am only an
American trader, knocking around to
see the world a little bit. You seem
to have been engaged in some scien-
tific pursuit In that country."
“YeM,” he said. "Mein own govern-
vuant and mein own university, they
"Thgt is very possible.” I answered.
and this time at least I spoke the
truth.
ructions, but If yon \are sailing for
Europe this spring, you would eave
time and gain comfort by starting
from New York. It would give us
■goat paoasure If we could welcome |
frlonfi?” I naked him CMually.' He an-
swered with gratifying scientific pre-
cision. ~
"From Edmonton to Fort Colville,
west of the Rockies, it hass been done
in six weeks, and five days, by Sir
_____' J From Fort ColviUe
down it Im easy by boats. It takes
— ghe voyageur throe months to cross,
. It would take troops
twice that long, or more-
Mr a
In writing his material asintrylng
to land it, he would beconie a Dickens
in no time.
"An amateur said the other day to
an editor I know:
" ‘Allow me to
story.’
“ ‘My readers don’t care for bear
stories.’ said the editor. ‘They want
something spicy.’
" ‘But this,’ said the amateur, ’is a
story about a cinnamon bear.’ ’
4*
MX.
Celebrating Hie Death.
tJ. B. Corbett of Crabwell hall. Mol-
llngton. Cheshire, left directions in
his will that he should be cremated,
and added: “I should wish a £3 cup
to be given to the Cheshire Golf
club, to be competed for on the
day of my cremation and on the
six following anniversaries."—Week
minster Gazette.
send me to this.country to do what
ha— not been done. I am insecto-
loger. Shall I show you my bugs of
Oregon? You shall see them1 yess?
Come with me to my hotel. You shall
see many bugs, such as science hass
not yet known.”
I was willing enough to go with
him; and true to bis word he did show
me such quantities of carefully pre-
pared and classified insects as I had
not dreamed ou> own country offered.
"Twelve pew species 1” he said, with
pride “Mein own country wHl gw
me honor for this. Five years I spend.
Now 1 go back home.
"1 shall not toll you what nickname
they gif me in Oregon." he added,
smiling; "but my real name Im Wol-
fram von Rlttenhofes Berlin, It warn
last my home. Tell me, you go soon
leave For 11■
ly aftei the 1 ~
oi k<i ahead of
saw them turn
wm familiar to myself. The^^Wed
on. turning from time to time among
the old houses of the French quarter.
Presently they entered the short side
street which I myself had seen for
the first time the previous night 1
pretended to busy myself with my
pipe, as they turned in at the very
gate which I knew, and knocked at
the door which I had entered with my
mysterious companion!
The door opened without
they both entered.
So. then, Helena von Ritz had other
visitors! England and Mexico were in-
deed conferring here in Montreal.
There were matters going forward
here in which my government was
concerned.
At the moment nothing better oc-
curred to me than to return to my
room and wait for a time. It would
serve no purpose for me to disclose
myself, either in or out of the apart-
ments of the baroness, and it would
not aid me to be seen idling I >out the
neighborhood in a city where there
was so much reason to suppose stran-
gers were watched. I resolved to
wait until the next morning, and to
take my friend Von Rittenhofen with
me. He need not know airthat 1
to
Power of Small Vegetable.
Nature manifests her latent power
in strange ways. Radishes which it
was thought had all been uprooted are
growing through the asphalt In the
playground of St. George’s schools.
Northampton. England, the site oi
which was^formerty a market garden,
and it la feared they may Injure ’*•
buildings themselves
< I 'V <L'’. -■
finger on the little desk.
"What you See before you Im the
sign of the Great Monad! It Iss
known in China, in Burmah, in all
Asia, in all Japan. It Im sign of the
great One, of the great Two. In your
hand iss the Tah Gook—the Oriental
symbol for life, for sex. Myself, I haf
seen that in Sitka on Chinese brasses;
I haf seen ft on Japanese signs, in one
land and in another land. But here
you show It to me made by the hand
of aome ignorant aborigine of this con-
tinent! On this continent, where it
did not originate and does not belong!
It iss a discovery! Science shall bear
of it. It iss the link of Asia to Amer-
lea. It brings me fame!”
He put his hand into arpocket, and
drew it out half filled with gold
pieces and with raw gold in the form
of nuggets, as though he would offer
exchange. I waved him back'. “No,”
said I; "you are welcome to one of
these disks, if you please. If you
wish, I will take one little bit of these.
But tell me, where did you find these
pieces of raw gold?”
"Those? They are notings. I recol-
lect me I found these one day up on
the Rogue river, not far from my
cabin. I am pursuing a mos, beauti-
ful moth, such as I haf not In all my
collection. So. I fall on a log; I skin
me my leg. In the moss I find some
bits of rock. I recollect me not where,
but believe It waM somewhere there.
But what I find now, here, by a stran-
ger—it Iss worth more than gold! My
friend, L thank you. I embrace you! I
am favored by fate to meet you. Go
with you to Washington? YeM, yeM,
I go!”
There
one on earth.—Bauders,
We y*seed the luncheon hour at the
hostelry of my frl^d Jacques Bertil-
lou; ||fter which I-suggested a stroll
aboqf- the town for A time.
Before we started, I asked him to
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The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, April 21, 1911, newspaper, April 21, 1911; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1265362/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.