The Nocona News (Nocona, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 4, 1909 Page: 4 of 8
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PARKER'S
' HAIR BALSAM
Cleans and beautifies the hafy.
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Pails to Restore Gray
Ilair to its Youthful Oolny.
Curee ecalp diseases & hair falling.
63c, and g 1.00 at Prugy.Ml ^
TEXAS STATE LAND
Millions of acres of school land to be sold by the
state, >l.U0 to S5.U0 per acre: only one-fortieth cash
and 40 years time on balance; three per cent inter-
est; only S12.U0 cash for 1(4) acres at S&00 per acre.
Greatest opportunity; g<x>d agricultural land; send
50 cents for Book of Instructionsand New State Law.
J. J. Snyder, School lai nd Locator, 19U V h »U,
Austin. Tex. Reference. Austin National Bank.
I the last ten years of my life to Lydia !
‘ L’ PinVbnm’aTTarra
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Vienna, W. Va.— “I feel that I owe |
. o Lydia I
E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound.
Eleven years ago I
was a walking
shadow. I had been
under the doctor’s
carebutgotno relief.
My husband per-
suaded me to try
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com-
pound and it worked !
like a charm. It re-
__________________ lieved all my pains ,
and misery. I advise all suffering
women to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound.”— Mrs. Emma
Wheaton, Vienna, W. Va.
Lydia E. 1’inkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound, made from native roots and '
herbs, contains no narcotics or harm-
ful drugs, and to-day holds the record |
for the largest number of actual cures
of female diseases of any similar medi- ,
cine in the country, and thousands of
voluntary testimonials are on file in
the Pinkham laboratory at Lynn, ■
Mass., from women who have been
cured from almost every form of
female complaints, inflammation, ul- :
ceration,displacements,flbroid tumors,
irregularities, periodic pains, backache, |
indigestion and nervous prostration. !
Every such suffering woman owes it to ;
herself to give Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound a trial.
If you would like special advice
about your case write a confiden-
tial letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at
Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free,
and always helpful.
OWES
HER
LIFE TO
For
« _> r
Lame
Back
An aching back is instantly relieved by an
application of Sloan’s Liniment.
This liniment takes the place of massage and
is better than sticky plasters. It penetrates—
without rubbing—through the skin and muscu-
lar tissue right to the bone, quickens the blood,
relieves congestion, and gives permanent as
well as temporary relief.
Sloan’s
Liniment
has no equal as a remedy for
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, or any
pain or stiffness in the muscles
or joints.
PrlM 28c., SOc^ and *1JOO.
Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mam., U S. A.
fc—bw, ■■<»!! mu j
POTATOES
V Ferry's nrel>cst because every yrar W
~ the retailer gets a new supply, freshly 1
tested and put up. Yea run no risk of
poorly kept errenmant stocks. Wo take
the pains; you get the results. Buy of the
best equipped and most expert seed grow-
ers in America. It Is to onr advantage to
satisfy you. We will. For sale every-
where. Our 1009 Seed Annual free, ,
k Write to J
D. M. FERRY * CO.,
Detroit, Mloh.
60 cts.
___ a bu.
HHB Per Salzer's catalog page 129. GBBBB
Largest growers of seed potatoes and early ■
vegetables in the world. Big catalog free : or. ■
send 16c in stamps and receive catalog and!
1000 kernels each of onions, carrots, celery. ■
radishes, 1500 lettuce, rutabaga, turnips. 100 B
parsley, too tomatoes, 100 melons, 1200B
charming flower seeds, in all 10,000 kernels, B
easily worth SI.OO of any man’s money. Or, B
send 2Oc and we add one pkg. of Earliest B
Peep O'Day Sweet Corn. ■
SALZER SEED CO., Box V.', La Crosse, WIs. B
Moro enjoyment chewing than eat-
ing—if you chew WRIGLEY'S SPEAR-
MINT.
A Trained Taste.
“But, Dorothy, dear, don’t you care
for this lovely sunset?”
“Why, you know very well, mamma,
that I've got lots of picture post cards
that are much lovelier."
.aTell a married man he doesn’t look
it and he will be terribly flattered.
For Colds and Gripp—Capudine.
The best remedy tor Gripp and Colds is
Hicks’ Capudine. Relieves the aching and
feverishness. Cures the jold—Headaches
also. It's Liquid—Effects immediately—10,
25 and 50c at Drug Stores.
Even in fishing for husbands it is
generally the big ones that get away.
EVADE WHITE PLAGUE
THE READING HABIT.
DR. SHIVELY IS INTERESTED
Is
papers
and
tn
The lace muH not be rubbed, wrung
months
received
are
“THE GRACE OF GOD.”
tempted,
factory in Marshall.
ZT3HEN
Abinet
a hitch or fear of congestion.
bushels of I taw division to McAlester, Ok.,
From the principal points
delegates
Galveston has handled an average of
more than $1,000,000 worth of cotton
every day since the opening of this
season last September.
pearl
Jennie
sheep
heavy
Then fry in butter and
A tomato sauce is an im-
scoff;
heart,
not
yet
the
the
filed with the city secretary a
ment of its earnings and
ments for
1908.
statement the income exceeded
expenditure by about $45,000.
committee to insist on a law curbing
operations of exchanges.
and
.be-
with
I
9
Now reading is a habit that plain folks
should not abuse,
And papers surely are not made to mere-
ly tell the news;
Why, keeping clean the kitchen floor is
really their best use.
will appear before the congressional
... U > A__ ... ____ 1 .. I.
says:
In vain
shout!
The
strike
takes
out.
ton seed meal ; ' ’
sands of tons of other commodities, families front this city.
WO wives together stood;
A Magdalen passed by.
Said she. the woman of a
gentle mood:
“Ah, there, but for the
grace of God, go I.”
con-
Through serv-
will
train
this
first-page
him,
the :
by
the
of
Building in Childress.
Twenty-five new
t-q p.
Si.®
Bridget’s Beatitudes.
Blessed Is the milk which Is kept In
a shallow tin. It will not sour so
quickly as If kept In a pitcher, because
of the possible aera.lon.
Blessed are the. scraps of meat
which are reads* «d Into fat by being
placed in the oven. This prevents the
odor from permeating the bouse.
First District Cankers.
Galveston: The annual conference
of the First District Bankers’ associa-
Yc of the happy hearth,
If sin has passed ye by,
Say to the
wretched ones of earth:
“Ah, there, but for the grace of God,
go I.”
A Clever Scheme.
The housewife who has dainty hands
and wants to keep them so, will
touch the scouring soaps, and
these are necessary for keeping
utensils bright. A way out of
difficulty is to attach a strong rub-
ber band to a large cork. Hang this
to the kitchen wall above the sink,
and near the receptacle for soaps, etc.
If a knife or pan needs brightening,
rub It with the cork which has been
brushed over the scouring cake. Then
let the cork swing back into place.
You need not touch the soap, and the
cork Is out of the way and ready for
the next rubbing.
Waterworks for Milsap.
Weatherford: George M. Hall
this city is organizing a stock <
Twenty-Five Lives Lost.
Guayaquil, Ecuador: A passenger
train Wednesday was thrown over a
cliff 100 feet high at a point near Rio
Choctaw Division Plans.
Denison: Unconfirmed rumors
New York, Feb. 25.—Mrs. William
K. Vanderbilt, Sr., will invest $1,000,-
000 in constructing tenements with
special reference to warding off tuber-
culosis, according to an announcement
made Wednesday by Dr. Henry L.
Shively, in conformity with whose
ideas the buildings are to be erected,
between Seventy-Seventh and Seventy-
Eighth streets and Avenues A and 11.
Dr. Shively is the chief of the tuber-
culosis clinic of the Presbyterian hos-
pital, an institution in which Mrs. Van-
derbilt has been deeply interested for
the last five years. The Presbyterian
hospital soon will be removed to a
site on the East river, between Sixty-
Seventh and Sixty-Eighth streets, half
a mile from the proposed tenements.
It is intended at first to give the pref-
erence to families in which there is
one tubercullosis member, and
those who receive treatment at
clinic it is estimated a large part
the buildings will be occupied.
McKinney:
17 years of
Parsnips—a Warning.
There is no vegetable which Is so
little appreciated, or so carelessly used
as parsnips.
In the first place, they should al-
ways be parboiled to dispose of the
rank taste,
serve hot.
provement.
Beware of using parsnips in soup.
The flavor of the vegetable is so
strong as to permeate the soup to the
exclusion of other ingredients, and the
□weetest tang is far from pleasing.
MRS. VANDERBILT PLANS FIGHT
ON TUBERCULOSIS IN -NEW
YORK CITY.
Cleburne Gets School.
Cleburne: Prof. A. B. Barret
Paint Rock After Railroad.
Paint Rock: The railroad commit-
tee has begun a thorough canvass of
the county to secure the required $50,-
000 and right of -way through the
northern end of the county for the
proposed railway. Over $30,000 has
so far been subscribed and the bal-
ance is in sight.
Against Cotton Exchange.
Atlanta: "We are getting ready to
give New York and New Orleans cot-
ton exchanges a vacation without
pay," said President Barrett' of the Na-
tional Farmers' union Wednesday as
he departed for Washington, where lie
Fira Lost >30,000.
McAllen: The large wholesale and
retail store, hotel and lumber yard, all
owned by Manuel Samano at this
place, were completely destroyed by
fin* Tuesday. Thirty thousand dollars
Is the estimated loss.
Wilton to Retire.
Fort Worth: Dr. J. H. Wilson of
Quanah, chairman of the live stock
sanitary commission of Texas, says
that he has notified Gov Campbell he
will not consider reappointment on
the board, and that as soon as the
governor uames his successor he will
retire.
io
>
Cattle From King County.
Fort Worth: The first of the deals
to be made for Texas cattle by A. E.
de Ricqles, general manager of the
American Live Stock and Loan com-
pany of Denver, Colo., was consum-
mated Tuesday in the purchase from
R. B. Master of 2,200 head of young
cattle from the King county ranch.
Exclu-1 moving the headquarters of the Choc-
the
This will
of
Denton said that the contracts had
been signed up and that the contracts
had been signed up and that the Chris-
tian college for this city was a cer-
tainty.
I scrub It with a will and
lay the papers all
about,
Then one comes In
"What's here?”
my warning
Million Dollar Building To Be Con-
structed That Disease Can’t
Enter.
head-lines
, and he
first page
Youth Drowns in Well.
Everett Smith, a yout
age, was discoverer
drowned, in a well at the home of’
his father, James Smith, near Weston
Tuesday morning. It is supposed that
some time during the night he went
for a drink, and, getting upon the
curbing to arrange the pulley, he lost
his balance and fell into the well.
Over $1,750,000 is to be
in the erection of eight
This represents
=3 HE greatest trial in the
world, the one that
frets me more
Than anything about the
place; that hurts my
feelings sore,
when somebody walks
upon my brand-clean
kitchen floor.
| K. Beaty Tuesday.
Galveston in a sand pit about five miles from !
in I town and unearthed the skull, which !
Bamba, and crashed to the bottom of
the ravine. Twenty-five persons were
killed and forty wounded. The acci-
dent was caused by a displaced rail.
Cotton Handled at Galveston.
Galveston: Saturday
crossed the 3,000,000-bale
cotton receipts since Sept,
and twenty days,
Sundays and holidays, Galveston lias j
and handled C1C3,.
worth of cotton, receiving and hand- ' ________________________
ling in one day 70,120 bales without to the effect that the Katy purposes
a hitch or fear of congestion. Exclu- j------*■ — ■ ■
sive of the millions of hnRbnis nf 21 2 1__
grain, the thousands of tons of cot- first of the coming month.
— .---- ----1 and the many thou-; result in the moving of about forty
*
To Wash Lacs.
Now that lace is so much in vogue,
and used on almost every toilet, it be-
hooves us to know the best way to
keep it in condition.
Except in the case of the more valu-
able pieces, which may be sent to the
I experienced cleaner, It is best to do
j the lace at home and save the rough
i wear of the average laundry.
i ------. --------j The lace must not be rubbed, wrung
In five , is fairly well preserved and shows the j or even definitely squeezed. Just press
. Some-
times if it is but slightly soiled, a
shaking through equal quantities of j
fine salt and flour will serve the pur-
pose of water. Dry magnesia, too, is j
good.
To obtain the soft, creamy tints so
fashionable, rinse in carefully strained
coffee, after the fashion of our grand-
mothers.
For a slight degree of stiffness, rinse
in water to which milk has been add-
ed. If still more “body” is desired,
add sugar, and there are some laces
which are improved by starch. Dip the
fabric in stiff, hot starch, then rinse
immediately in two clear waters. This
preserves the color of the lace, and Is
especially good If it is on a net foun-
dation.
Collars and small pieces of dainty,
elaborate design, are best sewn to a
bit of linen wrapped about a smooth
glass jar. Fasten carefully the points
and pattern in position.
Petrified Skull cf Buffalo.
San Angelo: The petrified skull of
j a buffalo was taken from a pit by W.
. He was at work
$1,750,000 in Eight Buildings.
Dallas:
expended
buildings in Dallas,
structures ranging up to eight stories
in sizeJ the majority of which are to
be of steel and fireproof construction.
$50,000 Necklace Stolen.
San Francisco: A $50,000
necklace belonging to Miss
Crocker of this city was stolen during
the Madi Gras ball given by Mrs.
Charles O. Alexander at the San Fran-
cisco hotel Wednesday night.
Severe Storm in Colorado.
Denver: A sever storm is raging
throughout the eastern and central
portion of Colorado and while rail-
road traffic is not blocked it has been
specially severe on cattle and
and stock raisers will suffer a
Marshall Wants Glass Factory.
Marshall: Robert Ballentine of
Washington, Pa., who represents the
United States Glass company, passed
through the city Monday on his way
to Shreveport. He was met here by
a committee of citizens and a proposi-
tion was made him to build a glass
and sees the
"God Rave me husband,
friends.
With flowers strews my
way.
Mayhap temptation on her
way attends,
I dare not
thankful
pray.”
File*? *ts Annual Statement.
Dallas: The 1V?rthern Texas Trac-
tion company, which also P^na the
Dallas and Oak Cliff railway, Monday
state*
disbur se-
ttle year ending Dec. 31,
According to the figures of this
the
Childress: Twenty-five new resi-
dences are under construction in this
city and local lumber men say that
the building boom has just commenc-
ed. Some of the finest homes in the
city are under construction now
moreof costlier proportions will
gin immediately.
Young Man Dias From Scalds.
Fort Worth: Arthur Day. 23 year,
of age. died Tuesday from being scald-
ed in a vat of boiling water at the
Armour Hacking plant.
Eliot Leaves A. - M. College.
College Station: President Eliot of I lion of Texas was held in Galveston
Harvard college, Mrs. Eliot and Mr. I Tuesday. F
Warren, private secretary to Presidenti in South and East Texas
Eliot, left Agricultural anq Mechani- were in attendance,
cal college at noon Wednesday for! ----------------
Austin. From Austin they will go to
San Antonio, Houston and Galveston
successively, visiting Galveston about
March 2.
Cattle Burn In Train,
Greenville: A Kaly freight
caught fire Tuesday night Just
side of Campbell and a hurried run
waa made to this city to have the
flames astlngulahed by Abe fire de
parlment A car of beef cattle con-
ristlng of tweniy-two beat* waa con-
sumed in th® Unmet.
Interurban Enlarges System.
Denison: Effective May 1, the Tex-
as Traction company, operating the
interurban line between Dallas and loss.
Sherman, takes over the operation of
th\? Denison and Sherman railway.
The latter company owns the street
railway system in Denison and Sher-j
man as well as the interurban
necting the two towns,
ice between Denison and Dallas
begin on May 1.
of
com-
pany to put in a system of water-
works at Milsap. The people of that
(own have subscribed .$7,000 of the
necessary $10,000,
toddles Two-year-old
comic color sheet;
Then Tom comes in—the funny pages
straight his blue eyes greet.
By this time naught remains between my
clean floor and their feet!
Fertilizer On Cotton Land.
Paris: A great many farmers or
Lamar county will use fertilizer this
year in raising cotton and a move-
ment is on foot among business men
of Paris to order it by the car load
to sell to farmers at actual cost.
mark
1. 1
including . animal to have been a very large one. j It between the palms carefully.
‘StOIl Bns ' --------------------- Hmna if U Io U,.*.
$180,000,000 i
r
..
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
CARTERS
■iTTLE
ST IVER
I
X
j
CARTER'S
I ITTLE
IVER
Kh.ls.
SICK HEADACHE
Positively cured by
these Little Pills.
They also relieve Dis-
tress from Dyspepsia, In*
d igestlon and Too Hearty
Eating. A perfect rem-
edy for Dizziness, Nau-
sea, Drowsiness, Bad
Taste in the Moutb, Coat-
ed Tongue, Pain in the
Side, TORPID LIVER.
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
-
to
br:
av
av
nu
1
an
to
lot
do
da:
tie
idl
an
al«
hai
pi«
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hii
ar
* ov
F ta:
th
so
th:
lo1
an
fre
ab
/la;
/ Tf of this paper de-
Keaders sitj,^to.buy
anything adver-
tised in its columns should insist upon
having what they ask lor, refusing all
substitutes or imitations.
£ ? 5*
to 555
«
rt CL H «
23 n M O
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Carter, B. A. The Nocona News (Nocona, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 4, 1909, newspaper, March 4, 1909; Nocona, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1253675/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Friends of the Nocona Public Library.