The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, February 23, 1912 Page: 2 of 8
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I
TIMES
CLAUD CO UN Cl LL, Publisher
SAYS COMMITTEE
DEPORT, - -e
TEXAS
*
GIVE NO REC
:NDATIONS
I
DECORATION CONTRACT LET.
we
t
!
!
BRITAIN SENDS ENTOMOLOGISTS.
<
RESTORED TO HEALTH.
I
fi
Many a girl fails to select the right
1
I
II J J
COLD
to
■hrer read tbe above letter f
gj~—— —
CAMDEN MISS
HELPED BY CARDU
* .
Don't worry about the high price of
potatoes. A pound o rice, which costa
ten cents at retail, contains as much
nourishment' as several pecks of pota-
toes, and the supply of rice Is ample.
Another easy way to break Into
print just now is to announce the dis-
covery of the first robin.
THE DOCTOR HABIT
And How She Overcame IL
FOR EVERY FAMILY
MEDICINE CHEST
Brooklyn Man Discovers He Could
Have Saved $90.90 on In-
jured Leg.
Big Sum to Be Spent Incident to Fat
Stock Celebration.
Belief That Monopoly Keeps Price of
Commodity Up Io Expressed
by Members.
REPORT OF HARDWICK INVEST!*
GATORS HAS BEEN MADE.
Many a woman encourages a man
by trying to discourage him.
One way to not please a woman in
to let her do as she pleases.
Min Wilsos Suffered for Nia<
Years, but Finally Obtained
Relief by Taking Cardin.
Michigan professor has invented a
new alphabet with seventeen letters.
Much to the jubilation of actors and
statesmen, be has retained the capi-
tal I.
■vs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for cnuidrea
teething, softens the rums, reduces indammw
•ton, aUays pein, cures wind colic, S&c a bottle.
A J
1
M E XIC A N
MUSTANG
LINIMENT
Hetty Green’s son
than 2,000 marriage
year,
trials during leap year.
'J
■d
Maine farmer claims that he has a
duck which has laid three eggs a day
for the last six months. If anybody
deserves a Carnegie medal, that duck
does.
Forgers mulcted banks of America
of fifteen million during the past year,
*nd yet some people say forgery Is
not a success.
more
last
husband because she Is afraid of be-
ing left
■s
■ ' »
The latest Chinese punsle t* to pro-
nounce the names of the members of
the Chinese cabinet
Up to date nobody has attempted to
compile a list of the 20 greatest weath-
er men. The reason is simple—there
ain’t no such thing.
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, small, sugar-coated,
easy to take as candy, regulate and invig-
orate stomach, liver and Dowels and cure
constipation.
The man who insists that he still
takes a perfectly cold bath every
morning is clearly entitled to a Car-
negie medal. He is taking the risk of
being considered either insane or a
prize liar.
Lucky.
Howell—It costs a good deal to live.
Powell—Aren’t you glad you are a
dead one? ,
It is suggested that Feb. 29 be made
a legal holiday. The plan has the
hearty support of every schoolboy in
America. •
Professor Baker of Harvard advises
theater goers to hiss what they do
not like. If the professor's suggestion
was carried out some of our plays
would be one long hiss.
Tyrus Cobb tells us that the stage
Is a snare and a delusion. Ty’s tem-
per has been soured by the fact that
he has acquired a batting average of
.002 In the theatrical league.
------- - 'i j
"S’
7 \
■’ V
■usrtunww
The asbestos shingle is said to be
,’ growing rapidly in popularity—especi-
ally with small boys who know the
warming qualities of the wooden kind.
We are told of an animal' trainer
who has taught turtles to do tricks,
but we never have heard of anybody
training a mock turtle.
Sharp-Eared Maid.
Wife—Our new maid has sharp
ears.
Hubby—Yes. I noticed that the
doors are all scratched up around th*
keyholes. ■
A milkman may be as rich as his
•ream tad still not be wealthy.
. ----------
jfl
Imagine spending One Hundred Dol-
lars for preparations to heal a wound
on the leg, and then finding that a
fifty-cent Jar of Resinol did the trick!
That is Just what C. M. Waggoner, of
Brooklyn. N. Y., did. He tells briefly
his experience hi the following letter:
“A few years ago I seriously Injured
my leg, and tried everything I saw ad-
vertised. Finally, 1 was advised to try
Resinol Ointment, and in a very short
time the wound was completely
healed. One small Jar of Resinol Oint-
ment did what one hundred dollars*
worth of other remedies had failed to
do- C. M. WAGGONER,
“Brooklyn, N. Y.”
Resinol Ointment Instantly relievos
eczema, scalds and burns, tetter, milk
crust, ringworm, barber’s itch, all
eruptions and Iritations of the skin;
pimples. Itching, blackheads, bolls,
chilblains, chaps, etc. Try a fifty-
cent jar of Resinol Ointment, to be
gotten from your druggist, and you
will be more than satisfied with the
expenditure. Free sample can be had
by writing to Department 83, Resinol
Chemical Co., Baltimore^ Md.
YOU CAN
ASSIST
YOUR WEAK
STOMACH
back to its normal
condition by taking a
short course of
Hostetter's
Stomach Bitters
It tones and invigor-
ates, also prevents
Poor Appetite, Indi-
gestion, Heartburn,
Costiveness, Colds,
Grippe and Malaria.
TRY A BOTTLE TODAY.
After Suffering with Kidney Disorder*
for Many Years.
Mrs. John S. Way. 209 S. 8th St., In-
dependence, Kans., says: “For a num-
ber of years I was a victim of disor-
dered kidneys. My back ached con-
stantly, the passage
of the kidney secre-
tions was Irregular c*
and my feet and an- ZT
kies badly swollen. ^7 JJT
Spots appeared be-
fore my eyes and I
was very nervous.
After using numerous
remedies without relief, I was com-
pletely cured by Doan’s Kidney Pills.
In view of my advanced age, my cur* I
seems remarkable.”
“When Your Back Is Lame, Remem-
ber the Name-DO AN’S. 60c. all ntnrae
Foster-Milburn Co, Buffalo, N. T.
„ Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle ol
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy ton
Infants and children, and see that It
Signature of
In Use For
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Caston*
Wealth may not bring a man hap-
piness, but It surrounds him with a
multitude of would-be friends.
fcV -.1^1
Newspaper is the Medium.
“The importance of this whole ques-
tion of publicity to the consumer is
growing on the manufacturer. He
sees his competitor or some man in
another line turning the trick of pub-
licity and he sits up and thinks. He is
gradually realizing that localized,
crystalized publicity In the home is
what pays best and that he can only
get that through the newspaper.”—
The Dally Club.
MOoWkSm*. TMmOmS. Vm
—- «■«—> toOyPnMtoz.
IHGQXEI!E&HEQQ
Pennsylvania girl, we are told, has
made two leap year proposals and has
been refused both time*. In her case
this Is not what might be called a
tappy new year.
1 RELIEVED NEURALGIA. I
■ 3. A. Ingrain. Morriaon Bluff. Arkwrite*! I
■ ‘‘I hare tried onebcttleofyour Muxtang ■
■ Liniment and it ha* proved very aatisfae- ■
■ tory. My *ister hu been goffering with ■
■ Neuralgia and Rheumatism about 18 year! ■
■ and your Liniment quickly relieved her. I ■
■ am obliged to aay it’* theliest leverused ’’ ■
■ $Bs.B(fc.$laltotls at Drag * Ge^lStas^ |
Tutt’s Pills
Jut*« t®n>M Itver, .treagtbes tbs
ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE. ,
Elegantly sugar coated. Saw* does. Prtoe,XM.
Depository Fund Increseed.
Austin, Texas: The Stat* funds In
the fifteen banks now designated as
State depositories has increased S15.-
000 in each depository, bringing the
deposits up to the maximum of $60,-
000. A few days ago the banks each
received $10,000. During the deficien-
cy from October to January State de-
posits in each of these banks were
reduced to $25,000. There is now
$760,000 to the State’s credit In the
depositories ud cash on hand approx-
imating $$00,000 in the treasury vaults
St. Louis has a hale and hearty citi-
zen of 80 who claims he never has
consulted a physician. Nevertheless,
the undertaker will nail him at the
finish.
An Oregon man who killed 276 rat-
tlesnakes in one day claims to hold
the rattlesnake record. We are will-
ing to let him cling to IL
When well selected food has helped
the honest physician place his patient
in sturdy health and free from the
“doctor habit,” It Is a source of satis-
faction to all parties. A Chicago wom-
an says:
“Wo have not had a doctor in the
house during all the 5 years that we
have been using Grape-Nuts food. Be
fore we began, however, we had ‘the
doctor habit,’ and scarcely a week went
by without a call on our physician.
“When our youngest boy arrived, 6
years ago, I was very much run down
and nervous, suffering from Indiges-
tion and almost continuous headaches.
I was not able to attend to my ordinary
domestic duties and was so nervous
that I could scarcely control myself.
Under advice I took to Grape-Nuts.
“I am now, and have been ever since
we began to use Grape-Nuts food, able
to do all my own work. The dyspep-
sia, headaches, nervousness and rheu-
matism which used to drive me fairly
wild, have entirely disappeared.
“My husband finds that in the night
work in which he is engaged, Grape-
Nuts food supplies him the most whole-
some, strengthening and satisfying
lunch he ever took with him.” Name
given by Postum Co., Battle Creek.
Mich.
Read th* little book, “The Road to
Wellvilla” in pkgs. “There’s a reason.”
— — ---— ■ A Baw
ttaza to time. Tkay
«r*e, Mg tail ef knaaan
But Mamma Didn’t.
Little Mabel was always tumbling
down and getting hurt, but as soon as
her mother kissed we bumped fore-
head Mabel would believe it cured
and cease crying. One day she accom-
panied her mother to the Union depot,
and while they were seated In the
crowded waiting room an Intoxicated
man entered the door, tripped over a
suitcase, and fell sprawling on the
floor. The attention of every one was
attracted to the incident, and in the
sudden silence following the fall Mar
bel called out:
• “Don’t cry, man. Mamma ’ll kiss
oo, and 'en oo ’ll be all right.’’—Lip-
pincott’s Magazine.
Creature of Habit.
“Man,” didactically began Professor
Twiggs, during a recent session of the
Soc Et Tu Um club, “is a creature of
habit.”
“Eh-yah!” grunted Old Codger.
“’Tennyrate, my nephew. Canute J.
Babson, seems to be. He has been
run over by the same automobile
twice. But then Canute always comes
home down the same lane about the
same hour In the evening, after he
has partaken of about the same
amount of hard cider.”—Puck.
Washington: The Hardwick “sugar
trust” investigation committee, after
many weeks of open hearings here
and in New York and in almost con-
tinuous work since last May, reported
to the House Saturday that a sugar
trust exists, while the report, which
is signed by all the members of the
committee. Republicans as well as
Democrats, makes no recommendation
whatever as to how the alleged trust
and those responsible for it shall be
dealt with, suggesting that this phase
of the situation is one to be handled
by a standing committee of the House.
As to the effect of'the combine on
the cost of sugar to the consumer, the
committee expresses the belief that
monopoly keeps the price up, but
makes no attempt to fix accurately the
extent to which reasonable prices that
might exist under competitive condi-
tions are exceeded.
The report severely condemns the
original promoters of the sugar trust,
but describes the 18,000 present own-
ers of the stock of the American Su-
gar Refining Company as “Innocent
purchasers’’ of profitable stock which
was unloaded on them by the few men
who organized the sugar trust.
A food expert advises us to substi-
tute rice for potatoes, but there
would be no fun In throwing rice at
the Irish players.
Another year of tight skirts is not
calculated to' make the textile manu-
facturers any happier. Isn’t it about
tlnfe for some of them to suggest gov-
ernment regulation of the fashions so
$h* mills can be kept bua^T
\ ;
L
’- X
Styles In Aliments.
“Well, here I am,” announced the
fashionable physician in his breezy
way. “And now what do you think
is the matter with you?”
"Doctor, I hardly know,” replied the
fashionable patient. "What Is new?’’
■■ ■ 1 1 '.......—W ■ I
"TuZ ” “ m EXISTJ'
A nUnUtltU UULLAno f»BVf$ nminiTxr
COULDN’T
received
proposals
We shudder to think of bls
To the head of every family the
health of its different members is
most important, and the value of an
agreeable laxative that is certain In
its effect Is appreciated. One of the
most popular remedies in the family
medicine chest is a combination of
simple laxative herbs with pepsin that
is known to druggists and physicians
as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. This
preparation is mild and gentle in its
action on the bowels, yet positive in
its effect A dose of Syrup Pepsin at
night means relief next morning,
while its tonic properties tone up and
strengthen the muscles of stomach,
liver and bowels so that these organs
are able In a short time to again per-
form their natural functions without
help.
Druggists everywhere sell Dr. Cald-
well’s Syrup Pepsin in 60c and $1.00
If you have never tried thia
yet
Treasury officials report that there
is a shortage of $1 bills, just as if
we didn't know it without a report
from the treasury official*.
Camden, Min.—"About five yean
ago,” aays Mln W. E. Wllaon, of thia
place, "I had to undergo an opei>
tion, and after that it hurt m* to
stand on my feet or walk much.
I had suffered, more or less, with
womanly trouble*, for more than nine
year*, and I wa* very weak and nerv-
ous.
A* soon a* I commenced to take
Cardul, I felt better. Now I am not
taking any medicine, for I don’t need
any.
Cardul has done me more good
than anything I have ever taken. It
Is the grandest medicine for women
that was ever made.”
This remarkable letter, from a lady
who has actually tried Cardul, ought
surely to convince you of the genuine
merit of this successful medicine, and
Induce you to give it a trial for your
own troubles.
Cardul 1* the Ideal remedy for all
weak, suffering women, young or old.
Cardul acts specifically on th*
womanly constitution, preventing un-
necessary pain, and building up
strength where It is most needed.
During the past 60 years it has prov-
en Itself to be a reliable remedy for
weak women. It has helped others,
and should certainly help you. At all
druggists. Try it
W- IL—Write tot Ladies* Advisory
Bept., Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chat-
tanoocn, Tenn., for Special Instrwo-
ilona, and 64-pn<e book, “Home Treat-
ment for Women," sent in plain wrap,
per, on request.
A Tacoma woman has the distinc-
tion of being the first woman to serve
on a Jury with her husband. Possibly,
also, she has the distinction of being
the first Juror to cast two votes.
A highbrow tells us that most
great men have blue eyes. We are
willing to risk a few shekels on the
theory that this particular highbrow
has eyes of bonny blue.
One of our contemporaries advlae*
u* to let the weather alone, but
would be far more pleased if the
weather would let us alone.
YOUR SUCCESS AS A FARMER.
Toly *uco**s m g fanner dep«*dg
Bpon year selection of a farm. W<
are ~ offering substantial farming
homes, *o reliable la thalr nature ang
on such -easy terms, that .any thrift*
farmer can make the land pay Itself
out in a short tlm*. We are selling «
wondorfuUy fin* body of laad a* owm
ers, guaranteeing perfect title, to thg
bomeseeker—consequently no selling
oommission increases the price to th*
purchaser, who get* ths last dollar og
vain* la th* laad.
Good crop* were raised In this *e*
tion last season when so many localb
ties made short crop*. Send to u*
for free Illustrated booklets, giving
complete information. The fame*
who 1* now working land that he can
sell for high prices can re-invest in
land* just as productive, just as cen-
tain, getting a big Increase tn acreage
it this wonderful new country. Th*
renter can here become owner of •
home of his own.' It is a solid op-
portunity for the rich farmer to be-
come richer and for The fanner with
•mall resources to become indepen-
dent Terms, one-fifth down, balance
In 1, 2, S, 4, 5, and « years—-Prices $ia
per acre and upward—Notes payable
on or before maturity.
'Address:
CHAS. A. JONES,
Manager S. M. Swenson & Sons,
Spur, Dickens County, Texas, ,
Mean People.
Henry Russell, the bead of- the Bos-
ton opera, was describing his foreign
tour In search of talent.
“They were mean people,” he said
of the singers of a certain city. ”1
could do no business with them. They
thought only of money."
Mr. Russell smiled.
"They were as bad as the man who
discovered the Blank theater fire.
“The first intimation the box office
had of this fire came, at the end of
the third act, from a fat man who
bounded down the gallery stairs,
stuck his face in at the ticket window
and shouted breathlessly:
“‘Theater's afire! Gimme me moi>
ey back!’ ”
THE OEPORT
Two Representing Board of Agricul-
ture to Make Investigations.
Dallas, Texas: Detailed by the
Board of Agriculture of Great Britain
to Investigate American methods of
studying agricultural pests, A. H.
Strickland and R. W. Rutherford are
expected In Dallas soon to spend prob-
ably the greater part of the coming
spring and summer in field work un-
der the direction of W. D. Hunter, in
charge of the Government Experimen-
tal Laboratory in East Dallas.
They are coming to Dallas by way
of Florida, having recently returned
from Trinidad, S. A., where they went
to attend the West Indian Agricultur-
al Conference. They are spending a
few weeks in Florida, making Inves-
tigations, as to pests affecting the
orange groves, and will come on from
there to Dallas. It is expected that
they will remain here until next fall,
with some side trips for investigation.
J
V ‘“I
1
bottles.
simple, inexpensive, yet effective
remedy, write to Dr. W. B. Caldwell,
201 Washington St., Monticello, Ill.,
and ask for a sample bottle. Dr. Cald-
well will be glad to send it without
any expense to you whatever.
Blanket your horse! Thia la th*
Mme of much thoughtless cruelty to
Balmala.
Fort Worth, Texas: The biggest
decorating contract ever let in the his-
tory of the Fat Stock Show has been
secured by a Fort Worth man. This
contract calls for the expenditure of
several thousand dollars. The decor-
ations will be completed several day*
before the opening week of the show,
March 18 to 23.
In previous years the Coliseum has
been decorated by running the han-
gers across from side to side, which
gave the structure d stuffy appear-
ance and caused it to appear much
shorter than it is. This year the dec-
oration will run lengthwise with the
building and great streamers of ap-
ple green and white, the show’s offi-
cial colors, will run from end to end.
All of the decorations will carry out
this color scheme and the merchants
will be requested to use the same col-
ors in decorating their display win-
dows.
Entries for the Horse Show* are
coming into the manager’s office dally,
and at the present time the list of
exhibitors far exceeds the completed
list of former years. Besides Miss
Long, another lady exhibitor has ask-
ed for reservations. With these wo-
men exhibitors there will be many
of the most notable exhibitors of the
United States on hand.
Texas washerwoman has been be-
queathed 1100.000 by one of her cli-
ents. It Is safe to bet that she never
put too much starch in hl* shirts.
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The Deport Times (Deport, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, February 23, 1912, newspaper, February 23, 1912; Deport, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1266248/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.