McAllen Daily Press (McAllen, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 68, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 3, 1925 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Borderlands Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the McAllen Public Library.
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and even on
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enne
Neuralgia- Lumbago
Neuritis
Rheumatism
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the latest modes.
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Feathers.
breeding stock or on the market.
ana .
we change
Incubation of Eggs of
Various Fowls on Farm
=
Ride theInterurban
Hous
These are Interesting, sometimes rath-
e
l
.. a
nearly dry is a good first feed for
EADACHES, biliousness, sleepless
H
8
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Only last year were any perceptible
changes in millinery seen.
Several old
ass
conti- rare made of heavy silk cut din four
favorites were, featured—the
’ •
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Gather eggs twice a day.
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variants
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About the crown is appliqued a pat-
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A nurse Mm a .
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2208 "
MION MAKU
8
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Al
Write to
seen on
of the mols from the-best houses.
’ -
fr
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Te
•H*-
2
J
or Cold s.
Mules & Dogs.
Spohn Mi DICALCo
()
Wts
*
52155
Sl ™
0g..
Influ
enza
on the successful modes of the season.
Flowers have been used with much
restraint—usually - but one handsome
blossom, or a tight nosegay of een-
The greatest skill is shown in hiding
our skill. _ > . .
Chapeau of White Felt That Rolls in
Flattering Line About Face; Coque
z
If a man is a womah hater It's a
cinch that he had the wrong kind of
mother.
Keep the eggs in, a cool fairly dry
place. .. ......... . _________
V Bestfon30Years"
F forDistemper Pink Eye,#
Influenza. Laryngitis.
Cataarhai Fever. Epizootic
[-4f you are —■
7 that direc-
-
*
=8
foreign applicants in England. The
profession is attracting women more
than ever there. 2 ____1__
-
Coughs
Horses.
French Hat of Red Milan, Faced with
Whitfl and Trimmed with a Strap of
Black Leather. t —----
2..
ALL
Creaky,
limber
Kith
tern of thistles and leaves cut from
felt in shades* of green, sketchy, yet
boldly effective.
Many white hats are shown, of felt,
milan, silk and other materials, some
self-trimmed, some having just a band
of ribbon, a strap and buckle of leath-
Cy
for
-—=
mue-N
is one of them." S. S. S. is the great
blood-cleanser, blood-builder, system
m etrengthener, and nerve invigorator.
Cities
I believe that
eountry and
I cousins, in I
y day Wash- j
of the finest -
I world graz- i
me pastures, I
. As a mat- I
00,000 “efty* 4
s, as against 1
s, according
d States De-
l The com-
“city" cows I
n the United^
10,000,000,000 .
r an average .
,260 pounds, j
1 the produc-
not shown.
number of stolen.nests and
tier of crackeand dirty eggs. '
st* st SaMcrUsssM
iron
"d-r* 1 f .ba fcapieH22. "7 njrA ”■ e , ,e Ls
McAllen daily press, Mcallen, texas
Soothing and Healing
Promotes Skin Healfh
Add to Your Purse
'Y^^inSpa re Pi me
Know. the shipping requirements of
express or railroad companies when
you use their services/ . ...........
7g
-9
3
3g
12
—•
■ A
........H
ge
Ei
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
QrGa—BEVNNSh
system undergoes a
. tremendous change.
Everything depends
. on blood-strength.
Blood which is minus
sufficient red-cells
leads to a long list of
troubles. Rheumatism
--t..
ers wore over satiny locks, drawn over
the .ears; and with wide ribbons tied
under the chin, are among the museum
| treasures of now. Just what the gen-
+tleweman who dressed in this fashion
would .have thought of the freakish
justed to them. that the,old-fashioned
hits on which no vacant space was
found seemed somewhat of a horror.
In the peaked crown of the fabric hats,
a reminder; not altogether charming,
of the aborigine contour of head. Some
of the most exaggerated in this shape
Ad
-te
FROM
to Galveston?
Every Hear on the Hour
.Price 30c.
a
than
’Brom_
^Quinine
*, tablets
er, or a simple ornament made of rib:
bon, flowers or feathers done very sim-
ply, Grosgrain ribbon, fluted, plaited
nights, heaviness, are Nature’s
warning that intestinal poisons are
•"BE/
6 Bell-ans
Hot water
Sure Relief
ly.The brim ‘of this chic little cha-.
peaulihafrgwapd rolls softly away
from the. face. Another, shplar in
shape, is of white felt with a narrow
brim band of :whitg ribbon, a large
black poppy covering the square top
of the crown..... . a. .
Needlework Plays a Part.
Needlework distinguishes the newest
models In hats, placing some of them
almost among the fine arts. At least
ducks will hatch in twenty-six to twen-
ty-eight days. Muscovy duck eggs re-
quire from thirty-three to thirty-six
days. Guinea eggs take from twenty-
six to twenty-eight days to hatch. Tur-
key eggs hatch on the twenty-eighth
8. S. S. is sold at all .good
drug stores in two sizes. The
larger star is more economical.
(
• t
■ **9 ---smsda-ih,.
If A
ventiohalized posies of silk or lacquer,
for whiehfthere is new-a perfect
starting feed for ducklings. Bread"
has been presented for many a day. | and milk is also satisfactory. Stale
They are forerunners of the fashions I bread soaked' in milk and squeezed
m
Consider the Nurse
The First and Original
Cold and Grip Tablet
Proven Safe for more than
a Quarter of a Century.
The box bears this signature
peaking of
fellow hold
n it.
I e been in a 1
-.2
43
— "
n doe
f. Ask
ard or
on, the
Grand •
some of the tailored hats,
the turbans of metal stuffs and satin
Aspirin is tbs trade mark ot Bayer Manutacture of Monoacet
For
INELAMED EYES g
E,"tashomrarpegmz"oyter 75
, UA Biver, Troy, M.T. Booklet.
-na-- E-1 — ' ........... ■wan . ----------- ----------j
Iowa Ration No. 11 |
Here is Raton No. 11, recommended
by the Iowa experiment station.* The,
mash is as follows: - Two _ hundred
pounds ground oats, 100 pounds ground
corn, and_100_poundsof60per cent
tankage. This is fed with scratch
DELL-ANS
254 AND 754 PACKAGESEEVERYWHERE
As
Mg.ge
.lo > -
onic
i Strong.
Ric h. 60c
ER)-
[e A
icura
28
tat will- prevail during the coming
spring and summer. The new hats are
modish, but not extreme, as compared
fastening much used when veils were
worn. This pin is still seen in elab-
orate forms, making a conspicuous or-
nament that serves as trimming on
2
w applicatjon "
want to know-s
is...
L or pain-tor-. i
used by rheu-
g and. It soaka j
nd. flesh right -
tone. ' "
up the joint, j
inssops0- th bonnet.. the chignon, but an F ereavery s m
seflm mwrYwk pamental pin evolved from the little of the models from the- be
There are many good rations for tur-
key 'poults but do not use sloppy
mashes. Guineas like bread crumbs
and rolled oats and can soon eat fine
chick feed. They are great foragers
and insect eaters and will soon gather
most of their ration.
■ A
+++-4-++++-++--+--+-+-++-++-+++++-4
Poultry Hints
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are.
not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe
by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for
that are so modish. ,-
In the better shops where Parisian
novelties are featured, many attrac-
tive hat pins are presented. There
are countless designs; straight bars
having britHantty jeweled ends; large
arrows., of gold and onyx encrusted
with brilliants or rhinestones. A bit
of jade in curving line is tipped with
brilliants, and countless other novel-
ties are shown in coral, agate, crystal
and in the different colored compo
Accept only “Bayer” __I
" A74 which contains proven directions.
f )“/7 Handy “Bayer boxes of it tablets -
• Also bottles of 24 and 100——Druggista.
355778218290
E" H**
Ing continues until the-twenty-ninth
or thirtieth* day.
Duck eggs in an incubator require a
temperature of degrees. ’This is
also satisfactory for turkey eggs. The
guineo eggs will hatch at 102 to 103
—
lg
J
27
d
Free Booklet
Bend name and
adressto 8. 8. 8.
Co.; Ill S. 8. 8.
Bid*., . Atlanta,
Gi, for special
booklet on Rheu-
matism & Blood.
Ire to the world end at the same time
ksi.; tetpomdnsirposdipnzatyatq
sputnnrind "ome are Initoreiun Aeida
'-re*
hhen
--ra
-3
-a
*G- - 13
Nr 8
Cutlcura Soap for the Complexion. .
Nothing better than Cutlcura Soap extremes of the last few years is not
daily and Ointment now and then as easily imagined.
needed to make the complexion clear, Hat fashion seems to have been a
scalp clean and hands soft and white, matter of eliminating, of modifying ex-
Add to this the fascinating, fragrant-tremes, only to touch, as is usual, the
Cutlcura Talcum, and you have the extreme opposite. One year hats grow
Cutlcura Toilet Trio.—Advertisement, from the infinitesimal tosthe ample and
-________________ j then to the enormous. With something
Nothing but a hat has such possibill-
ties of beauty or the reverse, of flat-
tery or the - most depressing effect.
Nothing in the illustrations of old-
time styles is funnier, from the yiw-
point of today’s smart styles, than the
hat rested high on an elaborate coif-
: fure, like a boat tossed and left upon
j the rocks. That and the bonnet our
grandmothers or our great-grandmoth-
sitions that imitate almost every jewel,
precious and semi-precious.
Monotony is never endurable. De-
signers have with' much artistry and
quite gradually devised other trim-
mig for the new hats. . Novelty feath-
England’a Woman Lawyera
England now has 41 female barris-
ters or lawyers. Among the recent
candidates called for examination and
admission tu the bar were jin ^American
andaRusstan. No rule exists barring
andbsa I,
PrpvMtive^
Market eggs at leayt, twice a wees.
Delay in marketing means selling
stale and deterforated eggs.
*. - • • * . :
Keep an abundance of clean litter
on the poultry house floor. Clean
floors mean fewer dirty eggs.
Don’t crowd the winter layers
Each hen should have at least three
'square feet of 'floor space, where the
flock is confined in the house, for
maximum egg production.
Provide one nest for every four or
five hens and make the nests of clean
material. Plenty of dean neats re-
flooding your system. If this is allowed
to continue, you may become a victim of
t serious organic disease.
Laxatives and cathartics donotovef- "
come constipation* says a noted author itj^ -
but by their Continued use tend only W
aggravate the condition and often lead to
permanent injury. ,
. Why Physicians Favour Lubrication
• Medical science has found at last in
lubrication a means of overcoming con- .
’ stipation.The gentlelubricant, Nujol, —
diie
• I
. 2
*qr--2*,
craze, day* but it varies, on an egg hatch on
• the twenty-seventh day and the hatch
The -Way Today
"Is it a boy and girl marriage?’’
“Vamp and shelk." — Louisville
Courler-Journal.- •
.,109,18, con-
•••
Remember quality is essential for
best prices. “
inter opportunity thaw
il wman to be of real
it or can get
j cents: ■ * ’ *
en .1 int 1dasn
degrees. Incubators are very-satisfae-
tory for duck eggs. Turkey eggs are
1 seldom hatched in incubators. Neither
> are guineas. __________ __________
A- mixture of equal parts of bread
crumbs and rolled oats. and' a sprin-
1 ? "Ma.Bte
These express more of art and beauty I IIng of about 3 per cent sand is a good
than anything else in millinery that
t r-*22
s*
----------tnbnwwc-c
hiteand
ackages:
ith cold
tions on
h an or-
le for all
er, wall
VM.Will
"Peterson Ointment Co., Inc. I had a
very severe sore on.my leg for years. I.
—am a-teamater. I tried all medicines and
salves, but without success. I tried do-
; tors. but they failed topure me. I couldn't
sleep for many nights from pai. Doctors
said I could not jive for more than two
years. Finally Peterson's Ointment was
recommended to me and by its use the
HATCH CHICKS EARLY
FOR WINTER LAYERS
- Early hatched chicks are the ones
that make the early and consistent
winter layers. However, this does not
mean that earlier than around March
15 is desirable. Neither does it mean
that late April and May matched
chicks are the desirable kinds. The
- problem lx to have the chicks hatched
sufficiently, early to have winter- lay-
ing pullets and yet not have them so
early that they will molt in the late
fall. Again, the quicker-maturing,
smaller breeds like the Anconas may
be safely hatched later than the larger
breeds' like the Wyandottes. Yet, all
In all, it appears to me that in far too
many cases, the hatching of chicks
on farms is .too late and that few are
e they who have their chicks coming off
too early, writes A. C. Hartenbowe in
the Oklahoma Farmer.
Whether to incubate the eggs on the
farm or to buy baby chicks must be
- governed to no small extent by -the
equipment on the farm, by the prices
of eggs when compared with that of
baby chicks, and by the breeding stock
avatlable. In many egses, it w 1U be
a paying proposition to purchasebaby
chicks from reliable breeders to the
end,especiallythat.geed-stock may
- he had to replace the mixed stock now
on the.farm,while-instt other cases,
where the'farmer makes consistent Im-
-provement in his flock of pure bred
9:00 a. m. and 3:00 p. m. .
—==
W. N. U., HOUSTON/ NO.9-1926. ——
• 1 . Hat Ping Are Offered.
. , Like everything else that comes to
stangtor an obvious economy, the un-
trimnedhat cheapened. and fashlon-
. able milliners found a way to redeem
it. That thought the hat pin—not‘the
important utility device that anchored or made into stin voSettes, is consid
A*—
[ almost to the non-existent, point;, and
ngome of the most swagger * hats, par- —-2 —
[ ticularly the sports shape, were literal- long hairs making a shaggy surface.
i ly unadorned. As., a style they have' Aheut *he ernwn 18 annltaned ■ nat-
been so successful, once taste was ad-
eyebrows and sometimes the fine edge _____ . .__. _______
of a mardel or the dip of a curl; and? Onetendenyto thieeccentriea8seentgrals added as the birds develop.
Take r
ECHAMS
for Constipation
■
A designer of millinery who is reck-
oned an authority on style is quoted
as paraphrasing thus: “Let me make
the hats of a season and I care not who
makes the gown." - „ .
The bonnet, observes a fashion writer
in the New York Times, has ben m-
portant since the time when headgear
became a part of woman’s dress. From
the Highlander’s covering, so described,
to the suave and-dashing hatabf Galns-
borough’s creating is a far cry. Many
fearful and wonderful things were
fashioned in that interim. Those were
the days, first and last, when the pic-
ture quality was of supreme .im-
portance, and milliners made hats ac-
cordingto an idea,, however erude-t
seems to us in this day and genera-
tion, and with a definite standard of
taste and style. Convention was rigor-
ous and imposed IImitatlons, but none
that contrasted altogether with the ,
change in fashion that characterizes
poults. When three weeks old they
can be worked over to rolled oats and
wittr the shapes in vogue a yer ago. fine chicks’ scratch feed, and larger -
ers, ribbon bands and rosettes, leather__The eggs from all .b-Ut^-Muacqyx
BtNipd and buckles have been shown
er startlig, while the ornamental pins
have gone somewhat to extremes'" l
The most artistic motif inmillinery
lately introduced is that of needlework.
Petit-point is the very newest fancy,
and applique’ embroidery, stitching are J
d moderately high ‘ crown slightly
roundd,the.tp being entfrely"covered
‘with- a plaque of little flowers in
browns, and yellws, with -a fringe of
bails and moss, rather too suggestive ’ ,
of a thatched roof to be taken serious- +kb*tbbbkbBrk
shaped pieces, joined with needlework
toform a sharp point at the top, and
having no other trimming than a nar-
row band about the bbttom of the
.' crown. ■ ’
In some model ap ornamental pin
or some such trifle is added at one
side. The soft felt and, straw shapes
of. tills sort have a grotesque treat-
* ’
■■ .
People like your ambition If it eta Uk« intoxication popular fancy holds to
enttrelyoutat their fleld" that mode: until Al J8 expressedin
, ' ——j /’|i< np adaptations, and their the swing
ao mm,am. a A ' t9 tesother extreme begins.
" QTAp 4 j Reversals are accepted, usually, by
•»e • F • only a few. The crowd invariably
—u ' [ wafts to see. Then, when once a mode
» eh 18 established, the crowd follows the
MW inH? U Hi 11^ III leader blmhdly, grasping whatever is
— . ; . , said to be the latest, thing, often ob-
—"MY Rheumatism dis all gone. I feel . livious to the requisites of taste and
* a wonderful glory again in the free , becomingness. - '
motion ! used to have when my days interest in the Cloche.
were younger. I This, doubtless, is the way ip which
can thank S.S.S: the cloche came to be. • It was the
for it all! Do not : first concession Imade to. utter sacrifice
close your eyes i ef the beauty made by the arranging of
and think that i the hair in soft waves and curls, or
health, free motion । even in classic Unes. There are per-
and strength are I haps those of Berry Wall’s regime who
gone from you for- couidgtvethe date of the poke bon-
net which the swagger flapper of to-
" L
--of reason when compared with wbjit .
they will ringewhen sold either as
the sailor And other shapes they are original and intriguing, to the
- —__last degree. Nothing shown among
reduced. The advance styles has mere-distinetion
’’than a model? In a pliable narrow braid
cleverly woven with angora wool, th*
:BATSAM.
rufgtqpaHairBallle
pegemFngdaua
whtbomn.x.
Hemoves Ooma, Ca1-
msures oomtor to th*
Sobmailornrag-
KB, rawno81e, JN.
r • aore was entirely healed. Thankfully
I * Peterson say: “I am, proud of the
I- 7 above letter and haye hundreds of,oth- |
I .era that tell of wonderful cures of'
"meqrea PHenpseMHePtaseen,- -g
3-.s-: za.7c,4 *
I pen. The
[for it. 2
Teamsters Life Saved nental, perennial and unlimited in its
_ .chickens by culling, using high-class
. males or keeping a breeding pen, it
would be folly to send away for baby -
chicks. I know there are thousands
of dollars practically thrown away
each year in purchasing baby chicks
for the staple reason that' the equlp-
-mentat-hand for caring for the chicks
" is not suitable, and the result is a
, good per cent of the young chicks
never reach maturity. In other words,
the coSt of those raised is away out
Cabbage Plants
“Frostproof. All lendine varieties. 1,000--
to 400 at $1.26 per 1,000; 5,000-and ove. ..
at 11 00 per 1,000. Pay postage or Mprto
1 charges on arrival. Prices postpaid: 260,
«0e: 600, $110. Nice high-grade plante
Prompt shipment. Safe arrival guaranteed
“How to Care for Plants” sent with orter.
Agents wanted. ' REINHARDT FLaWr
_ COMPANY, RoxW. ASHBURN, GEORGIA.
For Hardware, Mill* ‘
tending to more generous form and
wider ’ brim. Trimming wasiir
——2
Its successor, the cloche is not easily
amounted for ahd, try as one may, it
seems quite impossible to escape from
its unflattering shape.
A few variants have made their way
in the last year a's aft opening wedge
to more lovely things. The uncom-
promtsing- down brim has been rolled
back slightly from the face, disclosing
alltremendousty poputar.-------------—
Introduced In the South. '
The creation of styles, for Palm
Beach and the other fashionable
southern playgrounds made a market
for the very newest ideas in hats.
. »?. -1 ' ■mi' ' ui' ib.rA. h i
college states; that can be recommend-
ed: for farm, conditions. ' . . . ’
World's Best on one side, following the line of a
sod Medicine | permanent wave over the ear.
—eesh«*/.Tsg4amts,32u.”ua
I done in thisnannerisshownion
I in beige-colored felt, soft as suede, has
L
=
penetrates and softens the hard food waste ■
and thus hasten* its passage through and
s, .----- •"2*.. 2*2****ea*a2g2-decKsde
r ~ . - ngrceanmnesa=giHem —
Nujol is used in leadinghospitals and 2
is prescribed by physicians throughout the . ‘
. ■ world, ujol is not a medicine or laxative
. and cannot gripe. Like pure water, it is 4
harmless.- l , ’ • 5-g
Take Nujol regularly and adopt this
. habit of internal cleanliness. For sale by
* f __ a 4..
yd.N ■ - 3 • ■ -' eeemr.
/ - ■ ■ i •_________________
c,a . getliNjedr,
5
rmg-dH
w - a
Roman Hye
and you are
L. N. Y. AdV..
out—quick. •
-----—:h--a
L
r
012
•• I
ever! It lx notea
_ S.S.S. is-waiting day recognized only as a part of the
to help you. Whenyou increasethenum-— unferm -of a benevolent arganization. _
ber of your red-blood-cells, the entire In its sweetest form the poke bonnet.’
as a fashionable chapeau, concealed,
‘ little but the back hair, and greatly
i enhanced the coquetry of a-pretty face.
—---T
I M ' "
. meat, a bow-knot-joseKe_ar bunch.o
flowers finishing the very tip. Thuis
• far this merryi style lacks endorsement /feed -composed of 200 pounds shelled
amohg the really ainartiwomeni and its.
.........■■■Ji amental pin evolved from ths little
1ue .-na --gn
hrera-tee ---------------- —feme
... un---7
--
ForColds,
Ekeee
Grip, a
Appilcantn between the nges of 18
• zay, Higmborrs*tampzztr,a
boerd, uniforms end a monthly canh. .
MIS.R.HOLLI. SffLiltaMkbMU Hosoltal, 602 Lamar.OUSTon, Ttui
Oil Well Suppli
Automobile Tires,
Accessories
F.W.HeitmannCo.. 5
Houston,,fexas«
264 hie ,
g- ■ -
rOEM;
~ • ■ i
: -
p---
-u-He-m-tjderttat
Nujol
k U.I PAT orr.
For Internal Cleanliness
SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN"-
.7 - f
A 733 ’ . ‘ #
New Hats Modish,
But Not Extreme
Colds Headache
Pain • Toothache
' ?F
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McDaniel, C. C. McAllen Daily Press (McAllen, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 68, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 3, 1925, newspaper, March 3, 1925; McAllen, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1504775/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting McAllen Public Library.