The Alvin Sun (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, March 22, 1929 Page: 7 of 8
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’•
Hew to Get Rid of a
25£
lit*;,,,'
FUoIO I INI-HIN*.
Vlict*.
’ea
. nr*
• U, Mich.
- . JU.
», yon will
Ixx-k well
given up
.• better.
Iks hruul-
uxe. When
ighed 111
Iks Emu!-
pounds.
1Q two
• no ef-
"ry di*”
Sever* Cold ;
'‘Last August I took a very severe
Hill < hl I It l"l- -
Office Mating- r - He s having a little i 1'l
fun at your expense account.—Life. 1--------
but with
greater than Is
Popular Me< hanl
Vibrator Spread* Pollen
In raising tomatoes under glass, a j
W estern grower simplifies the task of
spreading pollen by using a vibrator
operated with current from small bet-
i-lies. It Lipa the blossom* lightly
a frequency many times
i possible by hand.—
tics Magazine.
In a hundred years or
be a revered '‘ancestor.’'
to your ml painting.
But Could He Laugh?
Snles!ii in < just returned > -W
the boss laughing «g hard about?
GIimII.iIu*. • 1 . r ■ ■ ■! -a- ■ I . ■ • . >
Termer *.Ih>U,.II <>*r*l*>n«. Mr»,-*i»»ilIr,
New Rota Plants
A simple Bietliod of In* ’•■i<!ig r -<*
make slips Is found by bending down
| i long branch until It ran be partially
buried In the earth. If it is pinri* 1
down In this position It will take root
at a Joint below ground and w ill soon
become firmly established, after which
it can Im- cut from tin- purert plant.
The method has the added advan-
tage of the nourishing of the new
plant from the parent plant while it
is growing
Brain Work Exhausting
I our hours of hard think;:
hausts the tissues as much i
hours <>f manual labor
| < t • i K< ,<d ......I II.iihIm r
/f-BOUS-SOPES of all KINDS
k BURNSCfcRBUNCLES
1. CUTS . STINGS SCALDS.
’mtment
K»H -VII
MS
V BEST B
tOD 109 YEARS V
Ur rd Nrienallf dr W
PtM.4«nt Andrew Jacksorv _______________
Jf T^ru txeJ Pru<M.st !r*zrt ri ■ W F CRAY CO. fUrhviito Tenn.
St.. Vviust
Sold by
antee to
ided.
a Hr
KO-E MAKIt.
‘ Last August I took n very severe
break It. up. I got so bad that I was |
confined ( • my bed lor live w«-*-k.-. j
doctoring all the time without getting
ui y reii«-f. I had r-*> nppetP*-, natural I
iy lost flesh. In fact. 1 had given ud I
all hopes of ever getting nny
"A friend recommended Milk
sion and I commenced its
able to leave my bed I ’
pounds. Now, after taking MUI
tilon the weeks, I weigh T-'f* ]
feel better than I have felt
years, can eat anything, have
fe< ts of the cold and work every day.
I thank God and Milks Emulsion for
restoring my health." MRS. MARGA-
RET WASHINGTON. 1099 E. 14th
Winston Salem, N (.’
nil druggists under a guar-
give satisfaction or money
refunded The Milks Emulsion Co..
Terre Haute, Ind.—Adv.
Q
t • •
Buy a bottle of Nujol today. Sold
only in scaled packages.
h is w ay
t—■<
of the v
an excess of body
injr (we all have
(heir removal.
"Do you enjoy
"Very tnueli,”
t» midyear exam.
stopited coni
til# r ■ to be passed ti
s satellites in the back <■:
■‘lor Pete's snl.o, who
Then the nth-
by the paper
Mrs. Margaret
Washington Tells
STOP THAT ITCHIXG
1 »e Blur Star Soap. then apply
BI.. *: ; Ih : r E . • .. itch,
t- i. rainworm. poi»on oak. dandruff,
rh-i !?-•-■ • si-r<-« crack*-! <> outs, sore
L • t and «*■-.-* forma of itchinv akin
d - —s. '' kill" rm* •■■op* ■ '■•••</.
usually restoring the skin to health.
4 ' ■ ' ■ .l‘ A-'.' '
On With the Dance!
dancing?'
nnsW' ied Miss Cfly- j
enne. "A good little Jazz bat. ’ pre* •
ven’s conversation and enables a I
f b‘nd who might be talkative to em- •
ploy his feet Instead < f trying to use 1
his mind ' Wu*' Tigton St; -.
Stumped
At tie recent dinner of the All New I
Er. .o>d Bl own c lub*. Cbur h-j* I'.Vulis i
Hughes told this tale to adorn a ;
morn!. An athlete, greater in brawn (
than in brain, carefully chose Ids I
■ -••nisi- mi that the strain might not !
be too heavy. In the due course of ■
' e, he, and kindred souls, enrolled
In Sen i’ 2 the leading cinch course '
pVERYONE knows the story of
■ up, until at 30he has retired,
’-.I h-<vy wetyht champion
world. From the vent begin*
. s career Tu r, ■ .» ; c>, r oocc
m..f get out of condition.
seven vein ag > The first month
Nujol brought rcm.irka’.<■ changes
in mv physivui conditio:: My elimi-
nation became a tive and normal,
bmcc that time 1 have taken Xu; d
about five rights n week. If 1 dis-
cover that I nave taken an excess I
Stop its use for a couple of days, when
1 renew my daily pr.i- tke of taking
a swallow from the bottle before rc-
years eitxrirr.ee v. n'i ?. ; i t'.at it
is n.»t hapir-fut ming, or in any way
unpleasant or harmful."
Nujol contains r.o medicine or drug*
It is simply a pure wars jI substance
(perfected by the X d 1 aborarories
26 Broadway, New York ) It not
only keeps an excess of body poisons
from forming (we all have them-)
but aids in
‘ Old fashioned discipline, too.
I Murif Miatched the box I
a hot;- !.
purse
acting
lleuter, wnlking slowly
suffering
i
only 25c
ORIA
WHAT WILL IT DO?
PILES CUREDJ
'AZO OINTMENT
n
This Mother
Had Problem
Every time
►wer him In
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
wlion
by
Irh enunl
getting L
soine
when ti
from I
To i found her?
with me, Miss Guo!
I
mctu
I jUBt
I
- I
■ ■
• s
s
■
■ ;in.|
to il .
Of
lZE
ibh-oir • rt;**
S3!
i.k-s. feelin*.
And «m h
j their way t
WUB.
that room and
<.»h, the awful,
was. Deny the
would ii«>t **peak
i t lie pour child *
h*.
It glittered
maaP*
tfc«* quit i E l gentle w i;
*£1 Hm» unio-iiv- wi-'o V
lag the trouble.
•ch and Ir v< is
Woniea are sajing: •'Pinkham's
Compound keep* me fit to do my
work.” "I waa nervous and all run
down. Now I eat better and sleep
better—". *Tt helped my thirteen
year old daughter.”—“I took it be-
fore and after my baby was born.”
—"I am gaming every day.”
fill!
zrd planer
oed
see it. Mr.
down the ro<
: hardly believe Ids
3 the life of the
., ...... ...... betm home so short
a tiui'. Though mother was mother,
still sdie wan Irnrd'y more thnn a name
years in the convent
which was to keep for her the little
Ixih Mme Bonhenr desired, rather
the overdressed but undercluthed
hat CoU
•ierJe
■ ■
i a •' • I.
t ■ ■ ‘
c
if- s
; is
;. • 'id
It muj pre-
-
i your
Li’.. Cfy
Il '
you forgive a man you
his own estimation.
No Worms in a Healthy Child
All children troubled with Worm* have
an unhealthy color which indicate* poor
blood and *a a rule, there ia more or lea*
atomaeh diaturba.iee. GROVE'S TASTE-
LESS CHILL TOI TIC <iven regularly for
two or three weak.' will enrich the blood,
V.V MM> uiavv, M* —id irt s: 2 f**”-
eral Strengthening Tonic to the whole
aj-iUm. Natnra will then thr-"-- nr
diepel the wnfma and the Child will be
tn perfect health. Plaaaant to take. Wc.
TASTELESS CHILL TONIC for thoae
» Uu W>a'u U. Uke ■ L-xativs xa co&se^inq
I K.U, Um, Tun,. ._____________________
I place, the iiaiuvnse difficulties i
icurlng It made it scarce and. J
luerviore, costly and highly esteemed •
At one time it was regarded us such a I
; luxury that moat mivernmenta levied t
} a tux on it, which led unscrupulous
dealers to mix it witn earth, it wus ,
thia prHctfee that Inaplred the fa ■
.uliiar pbruse; ”ibe suit bath ioai iu
sawr."
mid sparkling eyes
vparkllng. some tliought.
Murle said so flatly.
•'This is no tea dunce,
noon reception.
she Is anyway?
way. Why
calldown?
And yet,
I tie French _
I thing- quit without noti'-e '
It happened as most things do. just
when life seems a bit brighter than
iy she had had
little tornado.
her
while Mr. Reuter answered an Impera-
tive ringing of the telephone. It had
nut readied LoulsettC, who hud left
her desk to get a letter from the tiling
cabinet, when the door suddenly
opened and the ch.ef himself, Janies
Golden entered. Discipline was the
one thing James Golden insisted upon.
......z Miss 1'e
. .-.u.ic w ...- box from Lily
j « amp anti itiauc a n.i-. ,. ■ <-i<*.....
I her own de-k. Loulsette stood her
i gruimii at the filing calbnet. She .•'aw
I nothing to s'-tirr' around about. She
looked at her desk, next t** Mias De
Murle'*. It was in perfect order, as
always. This stern gray man fchey m;
shivtieil before bad, as the American
girls said, "Nothing on her."
It seemed, though, that something
w as on her after all A* it is so often.
| THE GIRL WHO
HAD GOOD i
MANNERS
‘Keter noiit l or howe’-
so q*e I California l !g
' jhy lift: - boy, « '
TO be Mire . •
the grtiM' « .,ld fa. >■< What coulti
she say? Innocence* needs such proof
as mere word* cannot give. She put
down her hard to take her purse, but
drew It bin 1.. She could not touch
thul box, that teii.i-o thing tliut lilf
there screaming "thief’ nt her.
So she flung shut the drawer, pushed
past the sturlng girls, rushed from the
room.
After she had gone no one spoke for
u minute. And then the brisk . art
tones of James Gorden made them all
come to Ilf**
"Go after her. Reuter. She’s not the
tidef. The girl there, at the next
desk. Yes, I remember the name ii.>w,
I»e Murle. She slipped the box in the
child's desk, when you all were gnje
Ing at me. Of course. Miss De Murle
will not expect to stay <•... Same girl
was in some trouble upstair* last year.
"But little whirlwind. . . • She
kept at her work when ail of you were
looking to see what I wus UK'1. I need
a new stenographer myself. Was what
1 came about. The b<>x doesn’t matter.
"Besides I've been hearing about
this 'Good morning' girl. We need
some manners in the main office as
well us attention to the business of the |
day.
"Ah, Reuter.
"Just come
Morning."
"Can’t
to Remp
building.
I jjg Murle.
I machine yet."
I Miss De Murle was uot only wining
b, wrap tlw little hex '' I''00** ,
of Inlaid work, but she passed it
| around to the girls near t?r to inspect, |
to g" to business, eh?"
I.oulsettte longed to reply ns she
heard the girls la that fascinating
American slang
"Yeah? How do you get that way?
Write It on the ice. all the pleasure
"The Old Man” Once Ruled
Roost; Now Look at Him
Students of primitive tribes nod
customs tell oi the existence of an ;
i individual known as "the old man." .
The old man ruled the roost. What '
he said went. What he wanted done i
became custom and In later times this
was put Into writing and liecauie law.
Perhaps that explains some laws.
They may represent days
i old man was suffering
raeumutism.
. . ....... If anyone dared tn cross the old
I kind neighbor who asked how she liked j n an iu* kept a slick handy and didn't
• place was satisfied that she hud
■formed a whole year's Boy Scout
' deed.
I "Wonderful chance women have In
Plenty of It There thix country. Mrs. I’.onheur. I'm sure
I "I like plenty of room," the pom ' If you were back in France Lmiiwetie
■D'j’ guy was saying. , would never get such a place. So
■ "Well, why don't you go out to the j careful (here, loo. Such a iii<e class
k park of a tail-end team during of employees. Must i*e a real pleasure
th' tag end of the season?'' snappe.'
■i victim us he dashed i.-r the car.—
pticlnnatl Enquirer.
cullne. Which was part of the reason
for the chili in the air when Loulsette
trie*! to t>e friendly with the other
gills. 1or she was sociable to a de-
gree ami longed for u real girl friend,
us th«e Americans joked about
' The “old man’* Is still Interested
I In customs, but he has lost lilt* knack
of making others observe (hem. There
Is nu longer need to hit him over the
' head. He is helpless without that.
Because lie Imagines that customs are •
stin Important, he sp.-mls his time
wondering what the neighbors will (
think. But most neighbors nowadays ,
have stopped thinking.
Ami so (he “old man" who once I
' wielded the power of life and deuib j
' has become a sort of beast of bur- i
den, good for tying up parcels amt.
buying postage stamps and running j
| girl’s desk with her nos*- In the nlr.
this mosaic inlay.
t you read, boy? This note Is
pell, in the Thirty third street (tiei
Wrsp this up ugaln. Miss
haven't started your
hesitate to use it. Most of (lie re*-
• inis dD'-ovcred of th*- peo| v of licit
I day are Imperfect. Eventually the
old man begun to lose his strength
•«n*l some day when he was dozing it
lounger man came along and put him
<>ut of business mid became himself
the new "old man.’
The "old man" survives today. But
hi.w he has changed! Nobody listens
to him. Nobody asks his advice. The
only stick he wields is a fountain
l*n which he u*es In signing his
name to the slips of paper that oth-
ers take to the bank. Where the fam-
ily once feared him they now feel sor-
| ry for him. To his fuce they may
' call him "Dad." but tiebind his buck
lie is usually "Poor Father. '
Salt Once a Luxury
, The importance of salt in earlier ‘
boy. this go--? •<* the wsre. • times and among primitive peoples Is ■
UVW-. departm®’’* Tb.-v have a re m.nnfml for by two In II)*.
pair section there, though I m sure first place, the cereal and vegetable I
they can do notldog with th!*. Won up„u whkh they largely »;,b ’
derful piece of work, but made abroad. , minted made salt necessary, ami Id the
---------i-i-- | — *• - • -....... **-•
In proc
irefo;
” there is for me at the Golden Prod
ucts. Inc."
But that wouldn’t do. A business
woman, whether seventeen of twenty-
j seven, must consider how hard It is
I to get another j* *>.
the very next day the lit-
girl did that unheard of
ever without ■
in your fagfl
need of It* (J|
ottle in t -.
and that
a a
mg folks, r
iag you
givlhg !
are dangi
lamfless
ond olil
e, and i
pare you a th
t is alwayg m
Large, Generous Sample Old
Time Remedy Sent Free Io
Every Reader of This Article
f..-,-,.; ,•
law s n,d •
Mt': ■ r:
ouiib for the household.
Is there any truth in evolution? Ask
Dad. He knows. If he d«*esn't. he i
: ought to.
^^^IIE <■ :ii|• ■ 'Vees of lln> Go! Ion
I ProdU't.-. In> . t ad a m w s. o.-.i
i I a-* i'"<*ip run throii.:'i
the different departments of a
large corporation. It exceeded the ,
S|s*ed limit when little Loulsette Bon- I
enr went to work in the accounting 1
room.
“She can’t be more than sixteen. I
thought they never *• tuidered t
under that."
"She must have some puli!"
the way she dr-
■ *t even lip«fi«-k
longer than my granny’s."
"Ah-lm ’ The little French
Wish I knew her."
I 'ii'ittc tried net to mind. Rhe
; told mamma that she cried at night
I because her tooth uched.
„ More than forty years ago, good
ei<i Eastor Koenig begun the man-
S|5|fa',ture of Pastor Koenig’s Ner-
teliftffffi1'' “ n ”•*<>/ recommended f- r
relief of nervousness, epilepsy,
^^■ktcplessrie's nnd kindred aliments,
remedy was made after the
RQMJormuhi of old German doctors
o-Ad-lr! -!• sales soon Increased, and an-
K.'ff£pt her factory wasadded. Today there
^^Bare Koenig factories In the old
rid and Pastor Koenig's Nervine
sold In every land and clime.
o ’. K Try It and be convinced. It will
I^Batmly cost you a postal to write for
------1h- large, K«'lieroil* •
B Address* Koetdg Meili* Ine Co, • *-'r
No. Wells Bt. Chicago. Illinois.
Mn(it.<lly mention y<*ur local p:q*er.
am h il-.-rr
i nt
dc-e:
• •'•• ■ .. ;
' - ■ : ■ • SV
purlock-.X'eclU. ■
GREAT DISCOVERY
MLLS RATS AND MICE,
BUT NOTHING ELSE
Wo*' ' Hill Litestock, Poultry,
0egs, Cats, or even Baby Chicks
K-Ha ' i K lb Rat* Only) i* a new exterminator
tMtcai't”- uaed about t be home, barn or poultry
yank vhlh aafety a* it contain* no deadly
■at*,,.. .'Z-R O » made of S: :
by U. S. Dept, of Agrn uhure. undei
thfcC"niiHble pcocr** which inaure* mai.nium
eutu*. h. Twv can* killed 578 rat* a' Ark«n»aa
Farm. Hundred* of other testimonials.
Seld on a Money-Hack Cu*?9ntee.
Irutt* u|H>n KR -O' Kill* Kat (Only • • e • 11*-nal
ext er initial r. All drugcit* 75c,or direct
if am yet stocked. Large *>re (four timet ae
■MMh *2.00. K-R-O Co.. Springfield. O.
Nor after-
Who does she think
Wasting time that i
doesn't Reuter give her a
Let one of us try that
racket . . . h’m.”
But no one reproved Louisette. That
, Is, in word-*. Some of the girls barely
■ answered her. Mr. Reuter maided
i gravely and absent-mindedly. Miss
De Murle made It u point not even
to glance up from her desk, whether
busy or Dot. Or if they met in the
ball she gave the newcomer one of
those stinging stares that women only
"Il I , 'i; 1 ••• ‘ ■ ■ ' ■ " ;
x,, ' the box wrapped? Here is Mr. Golden,
I who will take care of it himself."
i No, Miss De Muri'- hadn't the box
s:.< h..d • n letting one of the girl-
—letting Miss Bonheur—examine it.
Sorry, but Mi-s Bonheur too1' it out of
l.i-r I,it:'!. I ily • amp :: us I. nod
I o|iened tier mouth to s
it last when, like a
l.«>uisette crossed the room
desk, flung down the letters she Lad '
taken from the Hie, banged open (he
drawer w In-re her purse was. She
would walk out of
never enter it again.
I awful liar that girl ’
accusation? But she i
io the pig! And then
iiand w.i- stayed. *1.
purse, lay the mosaic box!
i><’ fortune had placed In
<-li.-ii re of a place with
I the Golden Products, me. B had been
i pull, in a measure, for a neighbor of •
1 the Bonheun, loving the lonely moth-
er. and fearing tor llie experiences
■ the daughter might have in some busi-
I ness ottiee. had pleaded with the
■ Golden chief to give Loulsette employ-
ment. So the word bad gone from the
private office on the top floor of the
Golden building, and Loulsette began
the strange ordeal of earning a living.
And Done too soon, for Mamma Bon-
heur lutd used almost the last of her
bit of money for that year of extras ;
at the convent, when the mysteries «>f j
stenography iiecame one of the little
French girl's assets.
But something else she had not
learned. That was the rushing care-
lessness of American business life.
A day was a d.«y, to Loulsette. and she '
iwi’itn it rivdit. Each morning when |
she entered the lang room where the .
. accounting force clattered typewriters j
| and adding machines all day, she be- '
j gun with Mr. Reuter, nt the uearesl i
I dtok, and all tl:e w ty JvWD the room
w islied each une "Good morning ! ' She j
• meant It, too. No one could doubt it
who glanced at the eager little face j
Too eager and too
Miss De
ffijMp Calculated Frenzy?
I "“>• i b-ran It right.
dinner «a« pra.rl.n.l In I’tir:« re- ....... ,
ceat r, according to the Lond>-n Morn-
ing Post. When the customer's bill
w*u presented to him he went off his
nnd had to bo removed to the
MU ' hospital under control. It Is
■ Batter for speculation whether the
eonr -Itlon of the menu or of the hill
Was he cause of the diner s attu- k of
♦rffli r.
___
In «ic Uko this. California Fig '
IflHm g)c < • falls tn work wonders, by
-----.1 . |t remOV(>8 [
which Is onus-
regulates the stem-
and gives these or-
•hub ton'- and strength so th* y con
to act normally of their own a<-
cord. Kciiildreu love Its rich, fruity
flavor and It's purely vegetable and
•arnue--. <v. n f~r T>.;tdi-s.--------------
Mlltor of mothers have proved its
merit and reliability In over .”>0 years
Increasing use. A Western
- Mrs. May Krtaveiy, M^t4r»^»e
Callfor' says: "My little girl, Ed
Da'*, Bndency tn constipation wn« a
fcrobler to me until I began giving the dally journals whh l were her
IB Cal'fornla Fig Syrup. It helped only appr<.:i< he.- to the dfi f the
HHGflbt away and soon her stomach I country that hail Iteen home so short
^MQ)vwe!-« were noting perfectly I
Binceltliiii I've never had to have nny !
T have id i after
Syrup witt j
fl «"'■'W " '
, . ... . ......„ the genuine I tl
physicians endorse, always ask j flapper.
fnr California Fig Syrup by the ful
Mr. Reuter actually smiled at her
when she began her good mornings.
Several of the girls added "Ij-uisette'
to their greetings. And Miss DeMurle |
had net come -<• there was no snub
from her for a bit. She made up tor
I it l v sailing past the little French
1 As a rule, milk Is
lat-'iit
W
Inff
'r- I off children I
I -ln'W feverish
o;
coaled tongue, sallow skin. Indiges , lal
*9 Mi" . mess, etc., that their stom [ ®1'
• aeh and bowels are out of order.
In
And die i
and a flip of her short skiit to put
ate her scorn. No one noticed
then though, for u bo." brought n pack-
age t<* Mr. Reuter. A package from ,
th® private office, with a note at
tadied which annoyed the manager. | ..... ,
"Herr. boy. this ge--« to the ware- ' thnes and among primitive
They have a —
Delicious
ON
Pan c ake s
I
THE ALVIN SUN. Oldest Paper Published in Brazoria County
K IA?£oJ
1^
Sr x
Here’s a
delicious, energy
food for Men
who do hard,
outdoor Work
i
'T'HE energy to work hard comes from the calories
1 in the food vve eat.
Karo is a delicious food—but quite as important, it is a
great energy-giving food.
There are 120 calories per ounce in Karo.
Karo immediately supplies muscular energy.
No digestive effort is required as in the case of many
other staple foods.
Karo lias almost twice the energy value of eggs, lean
beef, weight for weight—and it costs less, too.
Serve lots of delicious Karo—to the entire family—
especially to the children.
Keep them all strong, healthy and happy.
I
1
i-
I
I
iO 1
■
-
/
_______ £a«--
Not what you do, but how
you do it, that counts
_______
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Beck, John P. The Alvin Sun (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, March 22, 1929, newspaper, March 22, 1929; Alvin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1250007/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Alvin Community College.