Alpine Avalanche. (Alpine, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. [19], Ed. 1 Friday, May 9, 1902 Page: 3 of 4
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Home Women.
tltrwMtf mImuMIiMwi
sahsss
Minna 0wM
OwMte/MCkM
TWt m wohm who Asvste tWr «Ub lh« to
hoiikc lutiM May ol whoa kaow what io to drag
aloof day after day aaflannf tstesacly. Tha ijap
la aw ara apissl waahaeaa, dinlaaaa. cacitability, haaa-
iag dowa, all-gone feeling, and auddao fain fa ana. Tha
only aafa and paraaaont cm far thin la Vigilrr'a
( uralive Compound, which acta directly an the Siam-
ach, IJvar, lCldaaya, aad aital organa of tha hady. ft
re me vae all imparities from tbc blood. It iaagMto
atraogfli, vitality, and vigour in all caaaa from whtoh
“ homo women " anfler
A free aampla hottla will be real on ippHrartan to
St. Jaaahe Oil, Ltd., Baltimore.
A woman’s Idea of refinement la to
be tall and thin.
In Colorado last year sugar beets
grown on irrigated land averaged tft
acre, and on nonlrrigated land eel/
111 an acre.
FALLING
HAIR
Prevented by Shampoos of CWTICURA SOAP
and light dressings of CUTICURA, purest of
emollient skin cures. This treatment at once
stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales, and
dandruff, soothes Irritated, Itching surfaces,
stimulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots
with energy and nourishment, and makes the
hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy
scalp when all else falls.
MILLIONS USE CUTICURA SOAP
FARM AND FLOCK,
Anlited by Ctm
IT CcnODEA OINTMENT. nr preserving, purifying, and besutlfy-
lag tha akin, for tfleansing tha scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and tha
noaes of tha toilet, bath, and nursery. Millions of Women uae Ccticura
SOAP In the form of baths for annoying Irritations, Inflammations, and
exooriattons, for too free or offensive perspiration, In the form of washes far
ulcerative weaknesses, and for many antlaeptlo purposes which readily sug-
gest themselves to women aad mothers. Cuticura Soap oomblnes delicate
emollient properties derived from Concuss, the greet skin care, with the
of cleansing ingredients, and the meet refreshing of flower odours.
Mo other mmtttofei soap into be compered with It for preserving, purifying,
end beautifying the akin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or
domestic toil* soap, however expensive. Is to he compared with It for all the
purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus It combines, In Onb Soars*
Oms Pmcx, the rest skin and complexion soap, and tbs best toilet and
baby soap In the world.
Complots flxtomal und Internal Truutmont fur Ivory Humour,
" * " “ ~Se.). to clause tea ikta of owe
eed enttole; cancan* Onrmanf
laflamwaUea aad lnrHattoa, aad
Rbsolvut Pills (Me.k to ud
»q naaa— am wm. Aimu lr la eftoa a.ftetoat to eeie
-... E2£
•not: S Rue dels Pals, Paris.
Radishes are numerous
Bren Is in good demand,
Blackberries find ready sale.
Vegetables are in abundance.
Mathis ships many vegetables.
Strawberries are numerous now. *
Thsre is little old torn on hand.
Cabbage continues to find ready sale
Scurry and Fisher counties have bad
fine rains.
Johnson county, crops are in flnt
condition.
Kaffir corn will be largely planted
this season in Oklahoma.
Over 800 acres are planted in melon*
near Tbomaston and Nursery, Tex.
Some Collin county farmers report
wheat suffering from wind and sun.
I. A. Wyeob sold at I.lano 320 bogs
They were raised in Kimble county.
S. P. Jones of Gonzales shipped eigh-
ten carloads of cattle to the Territory.
Twenty-two sections of rice land
have ben sold around Katy. near Hous-
ton.
J. A. Miller of Bandera sold a bunch
of steers at San Antonio at cents
a pound.
Hailstones. It is claimed, as large as
lemons, fell in Cooke county on the
28th ult.
Llano stockmen are driving their tat-
tle to I^ampasas for shipment to the
Territory.
S. P. Jones lately shipped from Gon-
sales to the Indian Tcntory eight t ars
of cattle.
Rains in western Iowa and Nebraska
have carried wheat beyond the dan-
ger point.
Recent showers have put watermel-
ons and other crops In the Mathis sec-
tion in excellent condition.
On the irrigated farms adjacent to
Larado ther will be an increased onion
acreage this season. Laat year over
$600 was netted per acre.
E. A. Bohwartx. an entomologist of
the United States department of agri-
culture, has found evidences of boll
weelvll near Victoria.
In a number of Fannin county grain
fields wheat and on la are In a critical
condition. Stalks are turning yellow.
Farmers ars not agreed as to the
cause.
C. C- Baldridge of Victoria shipped
from Alva and Keeran the McFadden
steers, which about winds up bis ship-
ments for the season to the Indian
Territory, aggregating about 2f>0 cart
in all.
Many farmers near Tulsa. I. T have
formed a melon growers' asso, lalion
and will plant 1000 acres of canteloupes
and several hundred in watermelons. A
Chicago commission house has ar-
ranged to send a buyer to Tulsa.
There Is a great demand for egga
In several western states, caused by
certain Chicago packing houses pur-
chasing all the available stock. As a
consequence prices have rapidly ad-
vanced and may go to a much higher
figure.
Went of Brandon, Hill county, the
high winds did a great deal of dam-
age to growing crops of all kinds, but
mors especially to cotton that bad not
been plowed. Some farmers say from
SO to 60 per cent of their cotton was
ruined.
E. F. Schwartz, an entomologist of
the United States department of agri-
culture. who has made Victoria his
headquarters for a year, has returned
to Washington. He expects to return
in the fall. Mr. Schwartz fears the
WANTED «££••
LUMBER AND TREE8.
Extra fries Paid lor 14 and 10 Ftct Long Lags.
Adorn V. C. MOSEL, JR * SIR CO..
Iw.ry.wtri. LOriSVIIXE, RT.
Aloomo Sanatorium
nesssi. st isatinc mtmm voi csss os
DRUGAND LIQUOR HABITS.
Frlveis: Horn* Like; Removed from
City’. Temptation*. Speetel Accommo-
dation- for Ladies. Coro Ooorootood
la All (Wm*. address. i
FA L C O M O SANATORIUM,#
as I 7 Aoatla ML. Haulm. Tea.
pUNTHER FOUNDRY MACH-
U INE AND SUPPLY CO.**
•AS ISO I MBS, PUHF1HO JACOB, OIL
BURNERS. BOILERS. STBAM BNOIMBS,
BTC. IRRIOAT1NO AND ICR MARINO
BACSINBRI a SPRIT a LTV. BAR AM.
TON IQ. TEXAS
SAVE YOUR GRAIN SACKS
•od |.l mi for them Ms
MERCANTILE UBAIN CO.. Haute*. Tom.
Qootolioa* on tar L*M W Hay, tola sad
(ted. span application.
BICYCLES {ESTC:
••noli Watchm. Bapalnaa a Spavlslty. NaU
•rd*n prompt an* alius. Addrmt.l. Waits Cot,
ISM Ttio Avaaaa, Hour to. Taaat-
The police have ordered Russian art
dealers and book sellers to give a
pledge is writing that henceforth they
will not exhibit portraits of Count
Tolstoi. All postal cards bearing bis
picture have been confiscated.
■RON I WO A SHIRT WAIST.
Net Infrequently n young woman
finds It nssBsssry to launder n shirt
waist at home for some emergency
when the lanadryman or the home ser-
vant snaaot do It Hence these direc-
tions for Ironing the waist: To Iron
rammer shirt waists so that they will
look like new it Is needful to have
them star oh ad evenly with Dedans#
starch, then made perfectly smooth
and roiled tight In s damp cloth, to bo
told away two or three hours. Whoa
Ironing have a bowl of water and n
clean pises of mnslln beside the Iron-
ing hoard. Have your Iron hot bat
not rafficiently so to seoreh. end abso-
lutely slsaa. Begin by Ironing the
hack, then the front sides end the
sleeves, followed by the neckband and
the cuffs. When wrinkles appear ap-
ply tha damp cloth aad remove them.
Always Iron from tbs top of the waist
to the bottom. If there ars plaits In
the front iron them downward, after
first raising each one with n blunt
knife, and with tha edge of the Iron
follow every lias of stitching to give It
distinctness. After the shirt waist Is
Ironed It shonld be well aired by the
firs or In the sun before It Is folded
and put away, says the Philadelphia
Inquirer.
Tbs stringent law against the use
of preservation in meat products in
Germany, which mss intended to shut
out nearly $6,000,000 a year of Amer-
ican exports, is found to Imperil tbs
home-produced frankfurter.
Guori enough
for anybody!
flu. Havana
FLORODORA’BANDS are
of same value as tags from
'STAR' DRUMMOND’Nauiaal Uat.
ROOD LUCK’ DID PEACH & NONET
RAlOR'snN TRICEGREENVILLE'
Tobacco
Excursions to Pacific Coast
Vis
SAN ANTONIO A ARANSAS PASS
RY. AND “SUNSET ROUTE"
la apaatol Irstaa with Ikrufk alaapars. avav s
teamsovirsnsi liw aaaala basely, tbs teem
trsvsrsiu a laud of trsdtUos aad blatary aad
balOag aflaeaMoaa af paaaitar taiarvat.
flf AA Saa marts** aad ratars,
Ifij.WU aaaat Impanal Uaaaatl, Nsblse
•f tha Myatlr Ohrlha, Jaaa, IBS*.
BtaaalSl maatlaa Eatahte af rytblaa. As
■■at. 1MB
| FA AA Fartlaad. Ofwgaa, aad ratara.
J JV.UU asaaaai Nattoaai Oaavaatiau
Travalera’ Fiwisellvs Aasoclsllss af Amarlaa.
Jaa* IM
Aaclaat Ordsr Tailed Walkman. Jaaa. 1
■Is'* Lkrtaiiau llnloa
Voun, raapl
■ssietf,
► or raider*. Illoairated lltaratara, aohadalaa,
•to., and all particular*, write.
R. E. UKSKUK. A. V. MARTIN,
D r A "Saaaal Haute. ” r*a* Agt. I. A.
W »c. Tvy *• A A. r
THE 60HTEHTED FIR1EI
*• the man who never baa-a failure In crop*.
for hi* labor*, and has
| heat aortal and rsfip
return* tor
Chraair Tetter.
»t JsmssC Lawl* T»r Tup. By write*: •*! have
m tavaltd trteed wbu ha* had ,r«-at Ivult true,
Taatarlav la rbruatr tvtur. Hand a bui to «b«vs
addvam." (Or a baa by mall from J. T. bkuptrlss.
advaalagen, to-
wlib splendid
lOUM
climate and *xosU*al
health. Theee we flivs
»m Oso
luprWa
tin and
r a tel by mall from J. T. Sfcu
L, If yaar dru,(l*i dua l kaap It.
to the settlers on
_landa of We
fUtfaUI^Bada. w
■PHSHRBHtha ar
linde of Manitoba. As
■atabawan. Kiueatlo
w rates of fare ara given te those dsslt-
ot laapeotins the fall grant la ads, Tte
forty-page A Mae of Wasters <
|the great grain and
toba. Aual bo la. A1 bane
Kiveatlonai advantages
[Tven te “
Tbs most dvm ensary thing in a flir-
tolloo is to be a good liar.
ihlSgl
and Saskatabewnn.
aad law rales of far
Of
handsome forty-page Alias of Wsstora'Ou-
ada oant free to all apsilcanta. Apply to P.
radio/, Superlnteadrat Uamlgratlon, Ottawa
Oanadia: or to J a. OrawforJ. YU W. Ilk It,
assess City Mo or Oapt. E Borrrtt, Busstos.
Tax.. (Waadlan Ooverameat A gen la.
boll weevil will return.
From present Indications the c:otton
acreage of Oklahoma this year will be
fully twice as large as that of last
year. This in due to the fact that cot-
ton Is usually a sure and profitable
crop In that territory.
A. P. Rachal has shipped recently
from Alice to the Indian Territory
thre trains and sight carloads of cat-
tle one day. and the next day Mr.
Rachal shipped three mors trains to
the same destination. They have been
pat on grass in that section.
Worms are operating in rioe fields in
the vicinity of Jennings. la., and do-
ing much damage to the young plant*.
This condition is due to the extremely
dry weather that has prevailed in that
Section for a long period, causing re-
planting. .
Tbs secretary of agriculture sent
fifty pounds of selected Japanese lira
to the Orange County irrigation com-
pany to be planted by that company.
Tha rice will bo given a fair trial and
eompnred with the Honduras quality,
oloa being grown.
If s stateemait is a dead politician. 0. Wsplst, The Houston Dru
ran • apply you b* mini or *ipr*a*. I'OI
gTOia OB Ml BHKR t.OODb ANl> MEI>
a salat is a sinner in bis grave.
tiinisr
IIND F0W9I
Casts Oily 25 ceats at Draggfets,
Or mall BA casta to C. «l. MOFFETT.
idsME EC., No*. ML 1*400.-1 was flrtt adriacd by oar family physiriaa la ('bach
oar baby whea ba waa bat • *><ry yuan* latent, a* a pra**ntl*a of eollo oad to warm
r M wm aoofnl la teothlai troablo*. and It* r ft art ha* barn found tabaaoaary banrfloial aad aofrao from
bars noa to r.gard It. aflai
| Caret CMm-taftatML
Disrrhocs.Dyasiitory, sHU
tbs Bowel Trsnhks of
Children of Any Ago.
I Aide Digestion, fegolales
the Bowcle, StreMthgss
the Child sad Makes
TEETHING EASY.
M. D.. ST. LOUIS. MO.
Cbarlaatoa to aaa TKKTBIMA
>4 awaatai ibaatoaaafc
OB I
that ara < onaaqu.nt oi—.n lb. uaa of druya an
lag It to our
hahtwkll
*0114roa. aomaof Ike naoaaalbaa whan tbaro I* a n* naby la thi
w* jakoplasaara in m ommrmlUf It to our frianda Inatead of lb
bob* on lot. HARTWKLLM. AYER. iMaoa«ar Pally
•oothloa Scrap*, that w* bar* naa to regard It, after I
naby ta tha bnaao aad aunt lb* teolbias troublaa ara avar, i
tead of lb* horrid atuff that ao maay p-opla aa* to kaap 11
ily Tlmaa and Waakljr Xlmaa-Maaaaagar.)
HABITUAL
MISCARRIAQE
la not only the result very often of
some form of uterine disease, but
also Is tha onus* pi many other dernngw-
nksnts of the womb, vriifoh bring endless
pain and misery to a large percentage of
_ married woman. The ex ports nos of
MRS. EMMA SHORTER, of Prospect. Tenn., to so like that of hun-
dreds of others that bar story told by herself must be of interest and
enlna to all who have suffered aa she did. She writes: “Owing
to some serious organic derangement, I was subject to hebltoal
inlsenulsje and its attendant flooding and danger to life and
health. I also had whites a great deal and waa in a miserable
condition generally. 1 decided to try what tbs O. P. P. Treat-
ment would do for me and will toll you how It resulted. I took
only two bottles of the medicine, but It made me sleep well at/
night, gave me a good appetite, the whites ara entirely cured, (
and Instead of the dreaded miscarriage I have a fine, healthy
baby boy who weighed ten pounds at his birth. O. F. P. costs
only one dollar a bottle, yet ito actual worth to disuses d and suffering
women eannot be estimated It baa proven Invaluable to me and Brill
to others if they will but realise It*”
WMtaariAde'MmMC
AwakOafkfrto eed MeSreto
SOM esMtoyee see OasByeafsas
Was dee #M a. A K Womyom
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Carnes, J. M. Alpine Avalanche. (Alpine, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. [19], Ed. 1 Friday, May 9, 1902, newspaper, May 9, 1902; Alpine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth802991/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bryan Wildenthal Memorial Library (Archives of the Big Bend).