The Grapevine Sun. (Grapevine, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 15, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 9, 1904 Page: 2 of 8
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la
l.iu
and Destroy Worms
Dials. At all druggist*
yond.
•‘■.:3g
n. The
for the
8oun(
the
nona
, cure
1
Any oculist who buys a blind horse
should also consult, an oculist.
I
i
coin was one of the few white men he
ever passed an hour with who failed
to remind him tn some way that he
was a negro.
Defiance Starch Is guaranteed big-
gest and best or money refunded. 18
Fruit adds will not stain goods dyed
with PUTNAM FADELESS DYES.
....... " ■■ _
Men who rush the growler are sel-
dom In a hurry themselves.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothlog Symp.
A>r ehtldrsn tsethls*, softens tbs gums, reduces tn-
flsnmatton. allays pam, cores wind colto 25c a bottle.
A girl with a dimple will laugh at
any fool thing a man says.
val Battlee Few.
It to only two occa-
t>hn.8,oJe wakthe de 10 cent* Tr> U1OW.
farklsh squadron at
number of vessels
h the latter were
size and armament.
J, was in the Crime-
ci Black sea fleet die
tervlce, but hardly of
L demanded of the
rial navy, when she
hips like coat barges
ince to Sebastopol.
K .
Kc.
The King of blood purifiers is Dr.
Simmons' Sarsaparilla., It rids the
system Of the winter’s accumulation
of Impurities. Il makes the young feel
well—the old feel young. Now Is the
time to renovate ydUrself. Simmons*
Sarsaparilla cannot be excelled.
Price 50c. and 11.00.
- Even the prediction of the weather
man who waits come out.
r 1
r' ■ 0
r’ MH
H 1
was the execu- Constipation, Fe
Bowels: ' “
testimonials. At
Me Spring.
E April 4th.—Mrs. H.
U place, says:
jras in very bad health,
[would get so low that
| do my own work. I
ferae in the spring than
I of the year. I was
id miserable and had
[fey back and head. I
Idney Pills advertised
d began treatment of
hays certainly done me
Ianything I have ever
jht last spring and felt
ave for over ten years.
1 of age and am strong-
I have been for nfany
re Dodd’s Kidney Pills
I wonderful improve- ^o*£^n;'
t of Mrs. Harty is only
I many where Dodd's
live proven themselves
i best spring medicine,
passed as a tonic and
fedicine used in thou-
Kday’s work on the
(talent in cash. There,
du .les on rtfceipts,
ory notes, etc.; in fact, ,
I only for postage. The
pawnshop.—Brooklyn
I am sure Pieo’s Cure for Consumption saved
my life three yean ago.—Mr*. Thos. Robbins.
Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y„ Feb. 17, 190ft.
It isn’t always a compliment to tell u
a girl that she’s as pretty as a picture, truthfulness may*have been due to
-|j. . -. l ~i ii~i~ nr . - — X
To Cure a Cold in One day.
Tbke Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund money if it fails to cure. too.
Girls who are pretty as pictures are
seldom as pretty as their own. »
Try me just once and I am sure
to come again. Defiance Starch.
I ■ - _-| -• W"-' • 1 1
Pigeons return home usually early
tlve carriage employed to carry such
a guest to the White House. Douglass
subsequently remarked that Mr. Lin
* it *
' ■ V. -.
' once senTthe
and take a cup
Invitation was :
first time in our
of Japan. ;,
i of us, from our feet to
ance far away, the
mountains, peak upon
junks in a Chinese
" rond range in- i
Is of mortal life e
rock while the s
SjrS.'• .• •. *
1
nvw B 1 uis r
c.,„ , co T.M., O. 1
j'.t-.iii wsssa sxswtohK
orsble tn all builnew trsnracUons and Snanctally
“• ” tss&tasr
» a.ywsTawrtaa ;
dlreoUy upon the blood and maooua (urfaces of tbs
(/stem. Testlnumtala Mnt fros. Fries 75 esnu par
----- --‘Ibyall DrURlsta. ;
George Washington’s reputation for ,M
the fact that he hever traded horses.
... ir i l i. - ii. lii "
The right and wrong of this life rest
not in the human mind it is a matter
I
...... W.WUW
, move and regulate I
Vz V0I* —,,
druggists, 2Sc. Sami
of record in the mysterious world be-
yond. ' '
—
' Miss Hapgood tells bow she I
‘i—“.awful anqMoo hr
takham’. V«e-
x*- si-5,..
Don’t Walt—Take the Central.
The H. & T, C, R. R, will sell colon-
st tickets at 425.00 to California. On
Bale March-1st to April 30 th. Through
!.l
late the
f 30,000
testimonials. At all druggists, 25c. Sample
FREE. AddressA.S.Olmsted,Le Roy,N.Y.
Eternal vigilance is the price of re-
taining a borrowed umbrella.
Try One Package. 1
If “Defiance Starch’’ does not 1
please you, return it to your dealer.
If it does you get one-third more for 1
the same money. It will gfve you
satisfaction, and will not stick to the
iron. |
............—■— --------' .. ■ i 3
Don’t despise small things, young
man. A 19-cent box of candy goes a
long way with some girls. J
„.t ■„ , ■;_ i
How’s This? ‘
aww;
V. j. CSBHBT « CO. O.
undersltfMd. tavs known F. J, Cheney
15 yes«*. «nd believe him perfectly hon
iy obltgatlonsniads by
Core ia ukeo
> bl - - -
bottle. Sold by all Pruntota. "
Take H»U’« family Fill*for oowUpaUon.
-
-■
runners
winters in India and
dblmzw warn ww jnlzatam
wn. a vujuij ©•nnuo,
base runners inclined u
pected on the bases, a
1’ :■ >r
•T*5 ■ ''
-.f/i
The Speed of Storks
b?'.-
for Brocton and Patsy Flaherty of the
seine team was on second base. Ban-
non cut loose with all bls might at a
straight ball, and the next instant the
leather was shrieking in line flight
toward center field. The center fleld-
er was seen to put up his hands for
the ball, which was going straight at
him. The sun was in the center
helder’s eyes and he slightly misjudg-
ed tbc ball, which sailed just over his
head. But as he had his hands all
set for the whisxing pellet, some
thought he bad caught the ball. Ban-
non saw that the ball had not been
caught and with head down tore
around the bases, kicking up clouds
of dust en route. He was reposing on
third base by the time the ball was
fielded in.
No living thing, not even a scared
jack-rabbit, can travel with the speed
displayed by .such birds as the stork
, and tho northern bluethroat. Not
only do these btrffs fly with a speed
which can hardly be conceived, but
they keep up their rapid flight for one
or two thousand miles at a stretch
without apparently tiring.
Evidence has been collected recent-
ly which shows that the bluethroat
flies from Central Africa to tho shores
or the North flea, a distance of 1,600 *
miles, tn less than a day and a night,
and making it, moreover, in one un-
interrupted flight.
The storks, which spend their sum-
mers in Austria-Hungary and their
¥ u k v Vv ■■ k t t tf^Ll
„
.. .. «u«. m auin-d oo,
bit, ran up to Umpire Hunt, m
time getting the ball and tagging i
non, and made the claim that Bai
was out.
“No, that don’t go,” exclaimed
umpire. “Bannon touched all
bases all right.”
The Providence captialn relter
his contention, and again Hunt
dared the man safe.
“But,” protested the Provldi
man, “what to Flaherty doing on
ond baser ‘
• The umpire looked, and, i
enough there was Flaherty on set
base, and the man who had ba
after him a base ahead of him-
absurd situation. Flaherty,
thought the ball was caught, and.
stuck to his base, and Bannon, witl
noticing him, in the excitement,
run past him. There was nothing
the umpire to do but call Bannon
The next time Bannon came to
there was nobody on base, amj
bleacherite sang out in earspltt
tones the following timely advlci
“Now, then, Tommy, soak.lt,
Tne captain of the Providence team, * this time run as tar as you like!”
Central Europe and the winter in C
tral Africa travel with the same rap
ity.
Slat in Pasha, an Austrian in the ■
vice of the Khedive, and now gijve
or of the Central African province
Darfur, was for many years’g captl
in the* hands of the MahdL autht
Khalifa when the dervishes killed G
don and established their empire, n<
overthrown, in the Soudan. One di
at Omdurman, he saw a stork with
metal band attached to one
hind legs. He caught the bird a
found engraved upon the band t
name of an old friend in Austria.
He wrote a note to his frlen< B
tied it to the metal band. When t
the start art read the meseagl^Bl
“I
you
un-
' 1
W»i
I
) you know that the color of a
once betokened the rank of the [ muffs were very small and consisted
ily dra*
>e most
carried in
(0 a mnff
t deemed
Record.
Llleil all
. I did
ny trou-
ig from
t'a
s
1 could Put.up In tin boxes only. Price 25<;.
It’s surprising how sweet a homely
girl’s voice sounds through a tele-
phone. ; ■
. 4 _________
robably
ping the
rhick ii
power’ ai
to our fl
silky has
each toll
too, to i
comps;
tent f
one-four fl
island of]
continuous
of the sus
s very wi
these latlt
northerly I
which they used either as p muff or a -
'■'•Wh
er Road.. ?
:, ultimately, bring
sits to A commum
»la not mskfiMk.'
nB|ll Or IdBi
I
btllty, and originated in Venice. These
How On
“While J
troubled m|
Columbus,]
cine all thd
was the bei
get, had td
the time al
not know i
ble was bu
day to day,
cine all the
“About s
and coffee <
and I have
filled sine
to me for
cause et a
er suspec
“When
feel since
1 i
at
M’
Jidn’t Know the
Nothing makes a quarrelsome man
io mad as the refusal of his wife to
talk back.
..................... 1 "7 ■■
’4 Does Not Irritate.
“I have found Simmons Liver Puri-
fier tho mildest and moat pleasant in
action, yet the surest remedy for con-
stipation, torpid liver and all kindred
troubles, I have ever used. It does not.
Irritate or gripe. ’ Very truly, S. P.
of a single piece of velvet, brocade or
silk, lined w’.th fur, and the openings
fastened wl*Jh rich jewels. Such ar-
rangements came in during the early
part of the seventeenth century, but
in the previous century the ladies
frequently carried a piece of rich fur,
neckpiece.
“The muff reached its highest point
In the reign of Louis XV., when the
productions were expulstte. Then
fashion declared for a cloth muff In-
stead of fur, and the furiers made a
great uproar. They petitioned the
pope to excommunicate the wearer
of a cloth muff, but to no purpose.
Finally some Ingenious merchant
bribed the headsman to carry a cloth
muff on execution day. The women
shrank from such association, and the
fur won the day. We now associate*
the muff only with cold weather, but
It in quality or quantity.
The highest Ideals of life are those
hat He close to the sub-conscience;
jot those things observed in the wofk-
he local color in
d, instead of the
atmosphere that
•m of the picture
mt, luminous air
eye with telescopic
the whole landscape
a soft suspicion of
o float a halo round
b'. hill. Switzerland,
a world, but small
t; the entire con-
st to Geneva only
igth of', this single
thousand mljes of
e. And the quality
what separates, by
a summer’s day In
om one in more
-Cornhill Magazine.
f NOW-
in Quit Medicine,
t user my stomach
ars,” says a lady of
11 had to take medi- --------- - - F
So w*1 thought Cleary; Jackson, Tenn> ’
you don’t get the biggest and
it’s your own fault. Defiance
•h is for sale everywhere and
i is positively nothing to equal
y:
1
TOE IS NO .
SLICKER LIKE^sfts
Forty JJMT3 a$o and after twymral
of use «h the eastern coast. Tower AI
Waterproof Oiled Coats were Iritroduoed
in the West and we called dickers for
the pioneers and cortxys. This graphic
none has cone info such geaeraJline' that
it fa fteqinthr though wrongfully applied
Ufawy substitutes You unnt thejmiw
Look far the the nSh.and
the msne Tower en the buttom.
wearert” said a furrier the other day,
as he stroked a beautiful sealskin
muff. “In the days of Charles IX. no
lady could have worn this fur, for
black was decreed by the klhg to be
the badge of the common people, and
the court followers were restricted to
the colors. -
“Muffs have gone through more
styles than it would seem possible to
Invent for such a simple article of
convenience. It has been long and
narrow, like a sheaf, and again largo
a*< round. At the beginning of last
** century the test of else was'to try
the muff in a flour barrel. If It went
la without much trouble, then that
muff was too small to be really fash-
ionable. At the present day almost
anything is proper, but those ofaM**-
mous cylinders would cerl
much attention. Ono of
curious styles was that of Louis XIV.,
called the ‘chiens mauchona*, because
they were made to convey little dogs
In.
"The muff when flrat introduced
was the exclusive property of tho no-
in the old days it was a regular part
of woman’s dress, and war----* J ■
all weather. As late as 1
and a straw bonnet were
■ —aim, ■
ms aaaawMSsSRnesMsesMMmslWsaasM
den thought struck her. "Hi
any uncalled for lettersF' ah<
“Oh, yea; yes. indeed!’’ a
postmaster, pompously; “bt
.1.1 ot -.m your..- 1
..... U..U du...™,
me surrounoing parte. '
foroto u you’had'sera
before I began taking
.m’s Vegetable
Compound, and had noticed the
Dunken eyes, sallow complexion, and "
general emaciated condition, and com-
pared that person with me aS I am to-
day’, robust, hearty and well, you
would not Wonder that I feet thankful
to you and your wonderful medicine,
whieh restored dk> to new life and
health in five months, and saved me
from an awful operation."— Miss Inxira
Hapqood, 1039 Sandwich St Windsor,’ >
Ont.—<4000 fw/Wt If eriflittl of abo^lottor
provlng,gtnulMn»ao cannot boproduetd. i
Ovaritis or inflammation of the
ovaries or fallopian tubes which adjoin
the ovaries may result from sudden
stopping of the monthly flow, from
inflammation of the womb, and many
other causes. The slightest indication
of trouble with the ovaries, indicated
by dull throbbing pain in the side, ac-
companied by heat and shooting pains,
should: claim year instant attention.
It will not cure itself, and a hospital
operation, with all its terrors, may
easily result from neglect.
If the average man had 1
live over again he would
make more mistakes than ever.
—----------
Teosinte and Billion Dollar Grass. ’ ’
The two greatest fodder plants on
earth, one good for 14 tons hay and the
other 80 tons green fodder per acre.
Grows everywhere, so does Victoria
Rape, yielding BO.Oon lbs. sheep and
swine food per acre.
Its? BIND lOo IS STAMPS TO THS
John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse,
Wte., and receive tn return their big
catalog and lots of farm seed samplea
(W. N. U.)
iV'*
Mila. Duval, until recently head of
>e French department of Smith col-
<e. spent one summer in a tiny noun
•y. town In Now England. She was
much worried as the days passed
letter from France.
the
very 1
, because fae did not receive
Meted letter from JFrance
morning and every evening she
Inniilro nf tho nAatmaatai* If
She was
f _ ___.
* -
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Keeling, J. E. The Grapevine Sun. (Grapevine, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 15, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 9, 1904, newspaper, April 9, 1904; Grapevine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1277901/m1/2/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Tarrant County Archives.