The Alvin Sun (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, January 3, 1902 Page: 6 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brazoria County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Alvin Community College.
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*
II
UNDER THO FLAGS
GROW OLD GRflGt.FULLy-^
<V
THISTLES AND DANDRUFF.
SINGERS OONORtD
QUENTIN ROOSFVELT
Quentin is the only member of the
RE-
""^1
I
fl
1
as
u
produce flour
9
r
Tf.E SUCCESSFUL HE
it
is
If not, g<-t a package from
today. Purest of all foods.
Log «* ■"
the President of
This would be a b-jtte
Man is the only aninid that eats ole
the
■ and employe a physician.
1
r|
llRve Yon Fried At Im Oataf,
»ur <f»
Charles A. Prou*y of Vermont
been nc ruinated by the president
an interstate commissioner.
The simaton in Venezuela Is criti-
cal and fears are expressed of a general
tiprising -.here in January.
Over ore-third of the manufactured
goods wh ch are made in France are
the product of female labor.
One of the minor expenses of a lo-
comotive is 100 gallons of lubricating
oil a year
It is be ter U hit .he nail on
head than on ihe finger.
has
to
Secretary Long hl
additional estimated
provements, including
naval station at Caviti
T L. Glenn, of Idaho; one of the new
members of congress, says that what-
ever success he attained is due to hav-
ing real when most of his neighbors
slept, or while he was waiting the pre-
paration of his meals, as he seldom had
the opportunity to study during the
daytime.
The man who knows the least shows
It tha most-
Street corners, are the ti
In many lives.
Children who eat at set
after their parents.
The Argentine minister of !
bafc reeei *d from 'Paris an offer of a
Ioan of 2 000,030 pounds.
Mother Gruy’fi weet Powder* tor Cbilctreh
Snocessf illy med by Mother Gray, nur?e
tn the Chil irm f Home in New York. Cure
Feveriahnees, dad Stomach. Teething I i«-
orders, move and regulate the Bowels end
Destroy Worms. Over 30.000 testimoniids.
At all druggists, 25c. Sample ruts. Ad-
dread AJeu b. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
tney un
of the
in tl
mid.
The Boers are keeping in the field
from 8000 to 10,000 mer., and they are
in as good condition as the British.
I do not believe Plso’e Cure M
has an equal for ooughs and m
Sot an, Trimly Spring®. ind, 1J
:y
‘ifif
IMCX
‘•iblic.
iHy. ■
lurfi
ree.
COB*®1*
I
t* *1
i
]
WHEN YOU BUY STl
buy Defiance and get the be
10 eents. Once used, alwayl
I* *
5
Mrs. William Douglas Sloane, of New
zYork. proposes to cut the “400” to 100,
the latter being the number of guests
she will invite to the dinner she is to
gi\e at her home on January 2. Ward
McAllister limited New York society
to 400; then Mrs. Ogden Mills narrow. <1
it down to 150.
in the trage
It is also dai
iown medicine*
flatulency, -
--feV(
Frank J
inter
ying
id Stite
> suru
•h and
I
what is done.
eties are equally vain;
There are several hundred Americans
residing in Berlin.
exposed.
‘‘The letter of Messrs. Oxnard a ad :
Gutting was probably written for tie •
I know what one day will
White House in his estimation is a
poor substitute for tue home at Oys-
; ter Bay. He does not relish being con-
Usually the newest thins; |n flannel
is a baby.
Among the title bearers not destitute
of otter honors is Lord Kinnaird, of
England.who is not only an authority
on football, but a duly ordained preach-
er of the Established church.
Sf& i
t earn -nt.
‘ ; Fcx.
In Winter L«e Alien** root >'.n*e,
ft powder. Your feet feel uncomfortable,
nervous, and often cold and damp. If
70u have Chilblains, sweating, sore feet
or tight shoes, try Allen s Fool-Ease.
Sold by all druggists and shoe stores.
25?. Sample sent FREE. Address
Allen S. Olmsted. lx* Roy. N. Y
Voice Carrie* Eight. Mlle*.
Eighteen miles is snid to be
longest distance on record at
a man’s voice has been heard,
occurred I a the grand canyon of the
Color?do, where one man shouting the
name “Bob,’’ at one end, his voice
was plainly heard at 4 he other end,
which is eighteen mt les away.
on ths Beet Stig ir industry In thi*
country, appeared on the editorial pag*
of the New York Evening Post of De-
cember 12th. 1901, and as every house-
hold in the land 1* interested in sugar
the article will be of universal Interest.
‘ The Evening P >st bids the heartiest
welcome to every American industry
that can stand on its own bottom and rows are for the troubles of others,
make its way witbout leaning on th®
poor rates. Among these self-support-
| | THE BEET SUGAR INDUSTRY.
A most liupo.tant article, giving
| Messrs. Oxnard’s and Cutting’s views
fktr Save *«• in/lua’l.,7 Jaa thia
is
M. Capazza, who crofifi
ranean from MarsellM]
balloon, now intends *
Canary slands to Panaj
way. The distance iaj
1.1 k rd thr Frock.
An English soldier s Wife once tocl£
1 her little girl to see her father, who
was on sentry duty, lhe sdd;er. who
was in a Scottish regimen, wor* \he
orthodox tartan and kilt. Ths little
girl, not having seen her fithe:* before
in suck a garb could not mder.-tand
it, and looking up at her nother. ex-
claimed "Mother, when fitter has
found the man who stole 111 trousers
may I have that little frock?1,
pound. Yet a net pr< fit of $3 per ton
was made by the lief t-sugar factories
under those epnditio is, not counting
any bounty on the ho ne production of
E
“Tt» man without a country"
generally regarded as an anomaly, but
there is something far stranger—a
postoil ce that does business under two
flags, it is located at Beebe Plain,
a town that is half in the state of
Vermont and half in the province of
Quebec. The building was erected
some aeventy-five years ago exactly
on tho line between the Uni tec States
and Canada, so that it stands in two
countries and serves the postal serv-
ice of two nations.
The cellar of the build'ng connects
the two countries, and some years ago
when the postoflice was a general I
Miss Mary McFarland and Miss
Marie McFarland, twin sisters of Den- cnuld clear >65 per acre by cultivating
IRONING A 8HIKT WAIST. (
Not infrequently a young woman]
find* it necessary to launder a shirt
waist kt home for some emergency
when the laundryman or the home ser-
vant cannot do it. Hence these direc-,
tion.s for ironing the waist: To iroM
si m ner shirt waist* so that they will
look like new it is needful to hava
them starched evenly with Defiance
starch, thru made perfectly smootll
ard rolled tight n a damp cloth, to bJ
la d away two or three hours. WllfM
ironing ha\e a oowl of water and
clean piece of muslin beside the PGn- ,
ing board. Have your iron hot, but
• not sufficiently so to scorch, and abso-
lutely clean. Begin by ironing the
i back, then the tront, sides and the I
' sleeves followed uy the neckband endl
the cuffs. When wrinkles appear ap-1
ply the damp cloth and remove thtnJI
Always iron from the top of the waist!
to the bottom. If there are pWWlM
the front iron them downward, afleil
firs’ raising each cne with a blunl
knife, and with the edge of the IroJ
follow every line of stitching to give ii
distinctness. After the shirt waist id
ironed it should be well aired by the]
fire or in the sun before it is folded]
end put away, says the Philadelphia]
inquirer. I
“I attribute my vigorous old age in
part to advantaging circumstances, ’
she says. * in part to a hapny, hopeful
temperament, a keen seme of humor,
sympathies for all ray fellow beings
and a deep interest in all the vital
questions of the hour.
‘One must have an earnest purpose
in lite beyond pei-sonal air bit Ion and
family aggrandizement. Self-centered
characters do not possess lhe necessary
elements of a high development, if one
would have a happy old age the first
/i f i
// z
c
Mia® Mary McFarland.
ver, Coo., who are well known
much for their beauty as for their tal-
ent as tongsters, have been chosen to
sing at the co-onation ceremonies of
King Ecw ird VII. to lie held next sum-
mer. The Misses McFarland have been
great travelers and it was upon one of
their journeys through Europe that
they met the pieser.t king of England,
1
The Old M>m and Women Do HleM Him,
Thoirar Is of peopl® come or «end every year
fcu •’**< p. M. 8tb for his Brnmy Oil to cur® them
•of ot her malijmant diseases. Outof
tniN numb p*«r-atmuay very old people.whose
agesrantre Ii t'ic -^^nty to on<» hundred y< ur*.
or. scco >E-or dlsti.r.c« r nd infirmities of age.
Uevsend foi home tn.a tree bo ’
•ent tellinr -vh tt they nuj
AddrcsJ f'Rf D.3L BvkCo. B-x , ? Suias?
ihd
j, J
Tetter’ti® Cure* Quickly.
S “J
Jaliso M So- >nu »o. f ^rsaaah, Oa- 50c a tea by riaH
from J. T. ShupulM, Savannah. Ga.. If your drug.;ht
4m*I keep It.
Representative Grow, of Pennsylvan-
ia. was first seat ?d In the national
boiise fifty years ago thfa month Had
his service there been continuous he
wo il-1 have had a parliamentary career
as extraordinary In duration as that
of <ome members of the British com-
mo it.
,cu
Human nature always crops out evJ]
ery time a collection is taken up in
church.
LARGER SCHOOL BUILDINGS
QUIRED.
Owing to the recent large influx of
population into Western Canada it ’.as
become absolutely necessary in many
parts of Manitoba, Assiniboia, Sas-
kat he wan and Alberta to increase th®
•cbool accommodation. In may places .
buildings ^ave been erected that are
only half-occupied. This is perhaps as
gool evidence as will be found not
only cf their satisfaction with their
presen’ school system and their con-
fidence that it will remain as it is, but
also of their firm belief in the future
expansion of the country, in increased
immigration, and it further indicate?
that they have little fear that the well
esta blished rate of births lized
communities will not jje maintained
then?.
Tte free homestghd laws and the
cheap railway lands offer great induce-
xnenLs, which are^peuing up the new
BgttlementsJSwvfiffnts of the Govern-
‘ "-mhF,‘^*Y*inada are actively at work
in different portions of the States for
the purpose of giving information to
possible settlers, tnd advertisement*
are now appearing in a large number
of papers, giving the names and loca-
tions of these agents
Sweat or fruit acids wHl not discolor’
gooes dyed with PUTNAM FADELESS
DYES. ‘Sold by druggists, 10c.pa,-k*g<
the
which .
This !
Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton has’
been writing on the subject of how to
grow old easily, happily and gracefully.
She is now in her eighty-:lfth year and
she says life to her is aa t we*t as ever.
She has no pains or aches, no regrets
or forebodings for herseli ; all her sor-
plfi *dMj*4^sir ow’u adv>(
‘
Time proves Mithlii
Wizard Oil cure
years. Many people Tai
At i0»‘
L o-6’
■< '"‘k'
■k
Ktat* or Ohio, City or Toledo, »
I eh«*n»v mak t oath that he ie th*
•enter partner Of the fit w of F. J. Cheney &Co..
*oiug boainesf in the City of Toledo, Cc uuty
•nd State at<»r-?5aid. awl that said firm w'li pay
the sum of ON’E HU.'PKKI) DOLLARS for
•ach and •-as- of Catarrh that cann A be
•urvd by tao use of Hal's Catarrh Cure.
I HANK J. CHENF’
Sworn t"> b**C">re m« and subscribed in
presence, this Uh day o. December, A. D, I
fcK. 1 A. W. GLEASON,
Notary Put...-
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and
acts dtroc: y <» the bloc-1 and mucous surfaces
of lhesystem. Send foi testimonials, fix—
F. j. CHENEY & JO.. Toledo. Q
Sold by Drigr.sts. 75c
Hali’b Ft.xr.ily Pills are the best
Ing Industries, we are glad to know, is '
ihe production of beet sugar. At all
events, it such two years ago. We
publish eldBk'bere a letter written in
1899. and signed oy Mr. Oxnard and
„„ „ . Mr. Cutting, the chiefs of this indus-
store. vhisky was known to be sold trY on the easterr side of the Ro*ky
in on* country and delivered in an- Mountains, showing that this was th**
other without ever having gone out
from mdei* the roof of the old struc-
ture. This combination postoffice is
now Im ing run by parent and child,
the father being postmaster for Can-
Appuialunes for Making Coffee.
Thousands of apparatuses for mak-
ing coffee have been invented. The
Patent Ortic*? is packed with pots, etc.,
some of wh ch cost ,25 apiece. Some
experts say boil the coffee; some say
don’t boil i . Sorue foreigners prefer
to make it m a saucepan, and they
have it sb clear as crystal and as
strong as al ?ohol. While I was in Su-
matra, sexetal years ago, I drank cof-
fee made c-f the dried leaves of the cof-
fee tree instead of the beans. At first
I supposed they were brewing tea. But
it was as f ne coffee a-3 I have ever j
tasted.
purpose of Inducing the farmers of the
Mississippi valley to go more largely i
into the cultiratioi of beets for the |
sugar fa< tories. This was a laudable j
motive for telling the truth and show- '
ing the large promts which awaited
! loth the beet-grower and the manufae- '
i turer if the Industry’ were persevering- j
ly and intelligently prosecuted. To this
end it was pointed out that farmers
President’s family who can boast of
the capital as a birthplace. He was
born just prior to the Spr-nish-Amcr-
I lean war at 1735 N street, while his
father was organizing the Rough Ricl-
I ers. He does not think nun h of Wash-
ington as a place of residence. Tbe
beet sugar industry, these gen- .
admitted for six
months at half tie present rates of j M
luty, their false pietences ought to be j cnl Regrets for the past are vain; the
page is turned; there is no remedy for
. As to tbe future^ anxi-
we do not
bring forth; J
what we hope or fear may never oc-
cur; the present is all that; is ours.*—
New York Sun.
‘•ROSTRATE WITH RHEUMATIC FE-
V£R SIX TIMES WITHIN
TWEMTY YEARS.
This was the case of Mr. EH Wilt-
■hi-e of L*nc®down Terrace, Caine,
Wi».. who during this time suffered th®
ciost intense agony. He writes:
• I heartily indorse tho testimonial*
which Vou pub :sh of St. Jacob's Oil
u'a pt in killer, for I have been a suf-
ferer 'rom rheumatism and kindred
complaints at different times during
the last twenty years. I have beeu
Lid prostrate w;th rheumatic fever six
times during that period, therefor® 1
eonsider I know something about rheu-
matism. During all of these twenty
y» ars I ha' a tried vaiious advertised
rheumatic remedies, oils, ointments
and embrocations,. None of their gav®
tn** much relief, tut when I tried St. Ja-
cob s Oil 1 found quite different results.
It eased the pain almost immediately
ai. I has done for me what all other rem-
edies put together never began to do.
‘ 1 oou d give you several cases that
have been cured, which have come un-
der my rotice, and through my recom-
mendation; also one of toothache, one
of laceache, and one of sore throat.
have recommended St. Jacob’s Oil ! postoffhe is a large post which marks
and shah continue to do so by every
nears in my power, as I consider you
deserving of every support.”
bald lie®*. If you
havf nc dandruff
hair Newbro’® Ii
preparation In ih<
ruff fal”
the germ.
profit while working under absolute ’
free trade, and they hive a right to be ■
proud of this result of their skill and
industry. Many beet -sugar factories
had beer*started ir. bygone years, hack
in the, sixties and seventies of the nine-
teenth century, and h?d failed because
the projectors did not. understand the
business. Since then gieat progress has
been made, both here and abroad, in
the cultivation and nia lipulation of the
bee*. What was impossible thirty years
ago is now entirely f Asible. The in-
dustry is already on a solid and endur-
ing basis. There are factories in the
United States, these gentlemen tell us
X^tn their letter, capable of using 350,000
of beets per annum at a profit of
$3 and this would make a
profit as the income to
be earned free trade.
“It must be rs of this
letter, s’.gne 1 by the of the
beet-sugar Industry, tlat theph^j- iQ
Washington who rre declaiir?Si
against the temporary measure which
the President of the United States
urges for the relief of the Cuban peo-
ple. are either grossly ignorant of the .
subject, or are practis ng gross decep-
tion Tne tenable ground for them is
to say: ’Other people are having pro-
tection that they do not need, and
therefore we ought to have more than
we need.’ r'hls would be consistent
with the letter of Messrs. Oxnard and
Cutting, but nothing else is so.”
Toxhiro a Gold in One day.
Take La-:.di*.e Bromo Qatoin® Tab.eitk Al
druggists refund money if it fails tocure. 2uc
I happy condition of the trade at that
time. If parties masquerading as beet
sugar producers ar** besieging the Pres- i
blent and Congress at this moment, : condition is a sound body: to that end
exercise, diet, dress, sanitary eondi-
; tiqns are all important.
I “My philosophy is to live in the pres-
There arc two clpss e of human ey»*s.
savs Pioffegsor J. M. 3imon. the em-
inent ocenlisi. First, the cold and in-
different eye. which falls nnoit you
with the same interest that t would
fall upon some large building pi any-
thing else. Then there 1> th 3 warm,
flattering eye that indicates human in-
terest.
The gray is the strong one I have
observes in the majority of ?afes of
people who have risen to eminence
that the eye has been gray, nithough
am inclined to believe that the gray
^AK.w^aker than any other. A gray*
rye an(| |n every instance
I give a e^k*that color of eye
more consideratrefr--^ jf s eyeB
are of another color.
Oar Proaltfent** 1
AH of the presidents of th.
Si ate® have been tn the habit of
freely with the people.,but the danger of
tti* procedure was very emphatieaHy
pointfd out in the tragedy of a few
months ago. It ig also dangerous to trifle
with unknown medicine* for indigestion
dyapepsia. flatulency, constipation, bil-
tuusnesH or malaria, fever and ague. The
Ha fest medicine to take Is Hostetter’s
Stomach Bitters, it will positively cure
tlje.se diseases. Try it and see.
WMt rr M THE BEST
Is because made by *n entirely differ* nt
process. Deltance Starch is unlike any
other, tetter and one-ltiru more for U>
cents.
1 beets, anti might et en make >100. But
In order to assure the cultivator that
he would uo^ be eeposed to reverses
by possible changes in the tariff, they
p-oceeded to show that tbe industry
stood in no need of protection.
‘ Th® I ’ ’ ■
tlemen say, “stands ou a*iirm a basis
as any bnsiness In tbe country.” They !
point out the fact- a very important !
one—that their product comes out as a
Mulshed article, refined and granu’at- •
ed. It is not, like cane-sugar grown |
; In the West India Inlands, a black and j
offensive paste, whi .h must be carried
In wagons to the e<aboard and thence ■
: by ships to the United States, where, j
! afrer another handling, it is put ‘
; through a costly -efinery, and then
! sbitiped by rail to the consumer, who *
‘ may possibly be .n Nebraska alongside
j a >eet sugar factory which turns out |
the refined and granulated article at j
one fell swoop. Indeed, the advan- |
tages of the producer of beet sugar for |
supplying the domestic consumption
are very great. We have no doubt that ;
Messrs. Oxnard and Cutting are within ’
bounds when they say that ‘sugar can
be produced here cheaper than It can
be in Europe.’ The reasons for this
are that—
“ ‘The sugar industry is, after all,
merely an agricultural one. We can
undersell Europe In all other’ crops,
and sugar is no ®xc< otion.’
"It follows as naturally as the mak- j
Ing of flour from wheat. If we can |
produce wheat cheap *r than Europe, i
then naturally we can
: cheaper, as we do.
! “But the W’riters of the letter do not
depend uj»on a-prfori r easoning to prove
that they can make .sugar at a profit
without tariff protection. They point to
the (act that under th? McKinley tariff
of 1890, when sugar was free of duty,
the pricejif the articb ^was^ 4 cents per fine(| to a small part of the mansion
.. -..* a* « . would like to roam at will through-
out th»* building and investigate the
progress of public business fro.n time
to time. The other day he c esired to
..™e_y wa,k through the flower-beds or stilts
i His father told uim that the gardener |
i objected. The youngster arts we ed: “I
don’t see wbat good it does for you to
be President. There are so many
things we can’t do here, f wish 1 was
i home again.’’
12^^.
Li
I Mark Mel .«rli«nd.
flnanes I me P'in‘;(“ of Wales,
fl*>* Hp royal command to slug
•at the ceit-proceeds directly
| from the tang the outcome
| of the plans of ie ^^tee which
has this matter iu hand. •*.
Ar luterenthiE Parallel and a Valuable
Deduction Tit* re from.
Cutting down thistles qo 'more reltevaa
the lard of (hlNtlea than <ioes scouring
the scalp cure dandruff In each case
permanent relief can only come from
eradicating permanently the cause. A
germ that plows up the scalp in search-
ing for the hair root where it sap® the
vitality, causes dandruff, failing hair, and
kill that germ, you’ll
but a luxuriant suit of
erpicide is the only hair
world hat cures dand-
illing hair and ba’.lnes® by killing
rm. “Destroy the cause, you r®-
tnow, the effect."
and pretending tha . they will be ruined
adian Cuebee and the daughter post- • Cuban sugar is
mistress for Vermont
Standing in front of this strange j
poscomte is a large post whlen marks ,
the boundary line, and it is said that ;
at one time a nun who wanted to get
a roadway to hif premises moved this
post, nr.d many thousands of dollars
acd no little, time was spent n es-
tablishing the exact line again
i;anls of
I). M. Byf tt
‘•*<adoibei
juinb
igefioic
______into: disu
-uev scud lor luwrr _
?-nt telling wh it they
Addres.* bitf D.MBykCq..
(If not aft!let d, cut this >ut at
•unerinj one.}
to on<
•nd ini
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Birchfield, A. J. The Alvin Sun (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, January 3, 1902, newspaper, January 3, 1902; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1250575/m1/6/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Alvin Community College.