The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, September 22, 1922 Page: 3 of 8
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THE CANTON HERALD
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For Your Own Good Please Read Them
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Putnam Fade’ess Dyes—dyes or tints as you wish
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AT LEAST GUILTY OF LYING | NOTHING WORSE IN PROSPECT
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These Letters Recommending Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound Will Interest You
“My Linen skirts are awf’ly short
Now I don’t think that’s wrong,
And Mama says that Faultless Starch,
Will make them wear quite long."
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I WANT To GET A LITRE
SURPRISE FOR MV UIFE
AND THAT GOWN IN THE
WINDOW TAKES MM EVE
— HOW MUCH IS IT ? !
Fresh, sweet, white, dainty clothes
for baby, if you use Red Cross Bal)
Blue. Never streaks or injures them.
All good grocers sell it.—Advertise-
ment
agreed to cut our hair like this, as the
store cannot get 11 sashes all the
same color.’ "—London Tit-Bits.
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WHEN THEY ARRESTED GIRLS FOR
WEARING BLOOMERS WITHOUT A SKIRT—
TH ATS
ONLY —
‘HE union of Nature, Science and the Farmer is a part-
nership for life.
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Waited Long for Fortune.
He might have been rich 15 years
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and brushed himself off:
“ •WelL thank goodness, the worst
part of my journey is oven’
"‘Goin’ far?’ said another man.
" ’Hong Kong, China,’ said the first
chap.”
Truly Clergyman Had Refrained From
Blasphemy, but He Had Sinned
in Another Direction.
A FOOD
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NERVOUS AND
HALF-SICK WOMEN
WJHICH ASOUHTS FER. HS MOTERS MOT
BElW A LADIES MO OR. ewAUYNUQVA XHi^
WEEK . SHE’S Got 088 $CRUBBED To
A LGH MULARKo Wow
Self-Preservation.
“I’m sorry to see you are deaf!”
bawled the sympathetic gentleman in
a hotel lobby.
“I’m not deaf,” replied the old gen-
tleman who had an ear trumpet in his
hand.
“Then why do you carry that thing
around?”
“There’s a convention of uplifters
going on here. Whenever one of the
glad-eyed delegates corners me and
starts to talking about the ’cause’ I
hoist this horn and he backs off.”—
3irmingham Age-Herald.
WANTER SHoW
_YERSME‛N
Youthful Fijian Proved Anew That
Necessity Is the Fertile Mother
of Invention.
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Lydia E. Pinkham’s Private Text-Book upon “Ailments
Peculiar to Women” will be sent you free upon request. Write
to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Massachusetts.
Traveler Satisfied He Had Got Over
the Most Uncomfortable Part of
His Journey.
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AND NOW , .
In the golden sheaves of living wheat, and in the wav-
ing, shimmering fields of barley—Nature stores the vital
elements of human power and energy which Science con-
verts into Grape-Nuts—the famous body-building food.
Grape-Nuts with milk or cream is a complete food, which
contains all the nutrition (including the mineral elements)
required for making rich, red blood, and for building sturdy
body tissue, sound bone structure and strong, healthy
nerve cells.
The 20-hour baking process makes Grape-Nuts easy to
digest and develops that delicious, sweet flavor and crisp-
ness that has made this food a favorite the world over.
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" 8M LAUGHIHG AT HIS JoVES,
"There’s a Reason,f
for Grape Nuts
Sold by grocers everywhere!
Made by Pottum Cereal Company, Ine., Battle Creek, Mich.
55Around Town”
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ago, but a Belgian who purchased a
bond in 1903 hadn’t applied for the
list of numbers drawn in state lot-
teries in 1907. A poor man from the
, country happening to be in Antwerp
for the first time for many years, en-
tered the offices of the Caisse Com-
munale to see if the bond which he
had taken out in the loan of 1903 had
won a prize in the yearly lottery.
After waiting impatiently while the
cashier searched the records he was
informed that his number had been
drawn in 1907, and that he was en-
titled to a bonus of 200,000 francs
($40,000 at normal exchange rates).
was the first known white man to
reach both sources of the Brahmaputra
river of India and established their
exact positions in Thibet. His explora-
tion tours in the Himalayas also
yielded a vast store of information. He
later spent a whole year cruising
among and studying the Philippine
islands.
With a single partnei, Mr. Landor
traveled 3,800 miles on a pack sad-
dle through Corea. Later he turned
his attention to Africa spending sev-
eral years there and then again chang-
ing his scene of action to South Amer-
ica where he traveled almost continu-
ously until 1914.
2
255
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Henry Hadn’t Changed.
Mr. Dulverton was feeling rather
pleased with himself.
"So you heard me make my speech
last night, Marla.”
“Yes.” answered his wife. “I was
up in the gallery.’’
“Well, you haven’t told me what you
thought of it,” said Heury, expecting
to be highly praised.
“Oh, it reminded me so much of
your courting me, Henry?”
"Really? How was that?’
“Why Henry, I thought you would
never come to the point.”
Youngstown, Ohio.—“Last fall I
began to feel mean and my back hurt
me and I could hardly do my little bit
of housework. I was played out
when I would just sweep one room
and would have to rest I would have
to put a cushion behind me when I
would sit down and atnighti could not
sleep unless I had something under
my back. I had awful cramps every
month and was just nearly all in.
Finally my husband said to me one
day. ‘Why don’t you try Lydia E.
Pinkham’s medicine?’ and I said, ‘I
am willing to take anything if I could
get well again.’ So I took one bottle
and a second one and felt better and
the neighbors asked me what I was
doing and said, ‘Surely itmust be do-
ing you good all right. ’ I have just
finished my eighth bottle and I can-
not express to you how I feel, the
way I would like to. If you can use
thia letter you are welcome to it and
if any woman does not believe what I
have written to be true, she can write
to me and I will describe my condi-
tion to her as I have to you.”—Mrs.
Elmer Heasley, 141S. Jackson St,
Youngstown, Ohio.
“I was very nervous and run-
down,” writes Mrs. L. E. Wiese of
706 Louisa St, New Orleans, La. “I
-
— MISSUS DUKE,
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On to Him.
“I promised to make a call tonight,”
said her husband as he started off.
“Very well, dear,” said his wife.
• “But don’t call unless you have the
I cards.”
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A clergyman who years ago settled
in Massachusetts once reproved a
workman for swearing while he was
plowing a new field.
“Swear!” said the man. "I guess
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would often sit down and cry, and was
always blue and had no ambition. I
was this way for over a year and had
allowed myself to get into quite a
serious condition. One day I saw your
advertisement in the daily paper and
began to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound at once. I have
improved ever since taking the third
bottle and find it is the best medicine
I have ever taken.”
Benefited by First Bottle
“I was completely run down and
not able to do my housework. I just
dragged myself around and did not
have energy to get up when once I sat
down. I read advertisements of
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound in our paper ‘The Indiana Daily
Times,' and learned all about it. I re-
ceived results from the veryfirst bot-
tle and now I am doing all my own
work, even washing and ironing, and
I never felt better in my life. I tell
all my friends it is due to you. ’ ’—Mrs.
Elizabeth Reinbold, 403 N. Pine
St.,Indianapolis, Indiana.
You should pay heed to the experi-
ences of these women. They know
how they felt before taking the Veg-
etable Compound, and afterwarda,
too. Their words are true.
0 GES -OHANG ABOUT MHESE WERE RADIUM
I t couCERIS * CEL OLE eAPu CRABS iS MAT
n $ A FELLER CA -SHUT ‘EM OFF WWEH MADAI
o, SCREECHERINA $INGS ‛HNRK: WARK! - LARK'.”
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Landor the Explorer.
Henry Savage Landor has
splendid record as an explorer.
•WAL, \ qcevo SOME MORE OF US wouLoH OO
MO geTeRu eoNGRESS ” HAWNED onE
BEMS t TH’ BOSS ONL Go WN’RUSTED IM
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Insist upon having Dr. Peery's "Dead
Shdt" and the druggist will not insist upon
your having something else, A single does
of "Dead Shot” is all you need to rid the
system’ of Worms. A 50 cent bottle saves
you time, money and inconvenience. 372
Pearl St., New York City.—Advertisement.
I
22
("ANH WiFE eAs eonvice WERHUSBAMD -HAY
, SHes Go A SELSE OF HUMOR," 6AHS
W. S. Inglis, the well-known coal op-
erator, told a railroad story at a rail-
road men’s banquet in Scranton.
"There used to be a little line,” he
said, “a branch line about 12 miles
you’d swear!” long, that was notorious for its bumps.
Whereupon the preacher took the general discomfort and dirt.
plow and hurried after it, indignantly I ‘‘A train on this line pulled into
denying the charge. Then, as the town one morning, late half an hour,
field became more impassable, he be- as usual, and a num said as he rose
gan panting:
“I never saw the like! I never saw
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the like!" When he had gone once
round the field he stopped, breathless,
and added:
"There, you see I didn’t find it neces-
sary to swear.”
“No,” said the other, "but you’ve
told more’n 50 lies. You said you
never did see the like, and you saw
it all the time I was plowin’.”
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F’RECKON I’LL HAVE To**,,
PUT YER UNDER ARREST FER \
WEARIN THEM THERE PANTSINPVBLICjt.
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These summer hotels
CERTAINLN DO HOUSE
S0ME SWELL MODISTE
SHOP — WOLLDN’T
FANNM LOOK SPIFFY IN
^AT GOWN -OH Bop
A traveler from Fiji in the old days
reports that at times in the past
when the game was first introduced
there the Fijians used to get waves
of cricket madness, and in some out-
lying villages—where it was not so
readily quelled by law—a match would
be kept up fer weeks, on end. In
cidentally, they wore their pads
■trapped on their naked, bootless legs
with a very ludicrous effect. But evi-
dently the Fijians have no sense of
the ludicrous, for our traveler further,
reports: "Another distinguishing
mark that rather amused me once up-
country was when my house boy.
Esau, came in one day with his hair
cut away from one side of his head,
looking like a somewhat weird part-
Ing,’ for the remainder stood up as
usual like a bass broom with bristles
five inches long. I asked him what on
earth he had been doing and he re-
plied : “Sir, I am now a member of the
Lomaloma “A" team, and we have
imagination.
Tommy, age four, went with his sis-
ter, early in the spring, to pick violets
in the woods near his home. One day.
a few weeks later, he and his mother
accompanied some friends on an auto-
mobile ride. As the car passed along a
road bordered with locust trees in full
hloom. Tommy said: "Mother, I see
violets growin’ on trees.”
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The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, September 22, 1922, newspaper, September 22, 1922; Canton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1515202/m1/3/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Van Zandt County Library.