Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 60, Ed. 1 Friday, February 4, 1921 Page: 19 of 20
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GALVESTON
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and it had gone back down
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close to the hunter
the canyon very
SOLDIEN WAS LOST IN PARIS.
THOSE STRANGE TIPS.
Cleveland Plain Dealer).
(From the
girl who
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READ!
JEWELER.
Phone 1275
2328 Market Street
Auto Owners, Attention!
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perhaps has a blow-
it to us.
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w-ith whom you wish to
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young woman
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Of course
spend the rest of your days.
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Gregory Auto Supply Co.
PHONE 900
- **em
worn out or
out? Bring
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LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT
MYTH, SAYS PREACHER
The Best Heading for
that Rainy Day.
The City National Bank
Galveston’s Most Progressive Banking Institution.
108-2 for255
156A11 Dealers
5
***-228. 4*5235 333
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4
Master Outlaw Is Killed in
South Dakota.
gawr fl 4
This Renewed
My Strength
“Lyko was my health’s salva-
tion. I was all run down, had no
‘pep’ and was slipping back in
business, but this wonderful tonic
soon made me well and strong. It
will make a new man of you also. ’ ’
LONG WOLF HUNT
FINALLY ENDED
Takes Time For Truo AL
fection to Mature.
It’s a
A
)
A good Smoke
k Surest thing
you know
SAFETY FIRST! Accept only an "unbroken package” of
genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” which contains proper direc-
tions for Headache, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheu-
matism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and pain generally. Strictly American!
Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents—Larger packages.
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicscid
E * 92
Pharmacopoeia. I consider Syrup Pepsin today
in the serious 82nd year of my age, as I did in
1892, the best remedy a family can have in the
house for the safe relief of constipation and its
accompanying ills, such as headaches, bilious-
ness, flatulence, indigestion, loss of appetite
and sleep, bad breath, dyspepsia, colds and
fevers.
Millions of families are now never without Dr.
Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, and I believe if you
will once start using it you will also always have
a bottle handy for emergencies.
Have you a tire that is slightly
65"
$5
it all day. ----------
a canyon and, knowing that the wolf
would be taking a sleep after its big
feed. Williams tied his horse and
------— I
Bring Your Shoes Here
9 to be repaired in our machine-
MOZART
IV THEN I started to practice medicine, back in 1875,
NN/ there were no pills or tablets or salt waters for
’ " the relief of constipation, and no artificial
remedies made from coal tar.
The prescription for constipation that I used early in
my practice, and which I put in drug stores in 1892 un-
der the name of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, is a liquid
remedy, and I have never had reason to change it. I
intended it for women, children and elderly people, and
these need just such a mild, safe, gentle bowel stim-
ulant as Syrup Pepsin.
I am gratified to say that under successful management my
prescription has proven its worth and is now the largest selling
liquid laxative in the world. The fact that over eight million
bottles were sold by druggists last year proves that it has won
the confidence of mothers whose chief interest is the health
of their children.
Founder of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, the largest
selling liquid laxative in the world, long past
Biblical old age, but hale and hearty—Still
sees patients daily—Wonderful achieve-
ment of a “country doctor.”
started in. Just then two horsemen
came up, riding at breakneck speed and
calling to Williams that they had found I
a yearling steer killed by the wolf, i
Williams motioned them to go back
but •they did not understand what he
meant and he was forced to return
and escaped.
CAUGHT IN A TRAP.
Early in September the wolf stepped
on a trap and was caught slightly by
one foot. Apparently the trap had tip-
ped so that it caught only one side of
the foot and the wolf was able to pul
loose. He left some hair in the trap.
This happened again in the early days
Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on
tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed
by physicians for 21 years and proved safe by millions.
Waitress Gets Tickets To Dance, Sub-
Lives to See the Prescription
He Wrote in 1892 the Worlds
Most Popular Laxative Remedy
It is particularly pleasing to me to know that
the biggest half of those eight million bottles were
bought by mothers for themselves and the chil-
dren, though Syrup Pepsin is just as valuable for
grownups. The price of a bottle holding 50 aver-
age treatments is sixty cents; such a bottle will
last a family several months.
I have never made a secret of what is in Dr.
Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. It is a compound of
Eoyptian Senna and other simple laxative herbs
with pepsin and pleasant-tasting aromatics
These ingredients are endorsed in the U. b.
022p5f
"Tlidey Jagant Mavand
- Southwest Cigar Co.,Dallas,Texas.
( Wholesale Distributors)_______
Toleda—“Don’t choose a
, । 411 21st Street
"eanmmammaaazmree
the Master Cigar
Our vul-
can put
of October.
Williams finally got the wolf—Oct.
This*led up to the mouth of 11. Here is his own account of it:
this led up i .....He stepped into a trap in the morn-
ing and it got a good grip on him. He
ran with it about 150 yards when the
hook caught on a tree, but that did not
seem to stop him at all. He broke the
on with it
months ago to work for Izzie Kapitzik?
Well, I met her yesterday.
“But what I wanted to tell you was
this; One day, about a month ago a
guy eats at her tabi© and when he goes
out he leaves a tip under his nakpin,
natural like. Well, when Lizzie lifted
the napkin whatteryer think she
found? A 1-cht piece so old it should
have been retired on a pension before
Lincoln freed the slaves. It was dated
1795, or somethin’ like that.
“Lizzie was real peeved abotu it, too,
and was goin’ ter throw it away, but
one of the chefs told her to try to sell
it to a stamp and coin collector. How
much do you think Lizzie got fer it.
Ten dollars! .
©But ain’t the men the funny things.
They eat and* in most cases leave a
tip about one-tenth of what, they paid
fer their . meal. Sometimes they
haven’t got th© change to leave a tip
and thn they leave a transfer or a
coupla subway tickets, I know a girl
got two tickets to a swell dance onct as
1 a tin. Well, there’s another customer
that’s hungry, so I better get back on
th’ job.”
&
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7 £589
•9 Ges
15 E203
cattle and wounding several more.
Williams found some of these cattle,
took the trail of the wolf and followed
be good for fifteen years longer. He
broke some of them off on the trap,
but aside from that they were in good
condition. He is an old wolf with a fur
that is almost white.”
Zmmemmemamezseearccm-E-
wolf had bedded down to sleep. The
noise made by the horsemen had given
to meet them. Thus he lost the best
chance he ever had of getting the wolf
with a rifle. When he returned to the
trail he found’, the place where the
where my hotel was, so I approached
a woman, showed her what I had writ-
ten in my book, and tried to learn from
her where the place was. She laughed
and said something in French, which,
of course I did not understand, and
passed on. A numebr of times I did the
same thing, and everyone I stopped
laughed, and passed on until a man
said in English, “What is it you want?”
Delighted to find that I- had dis-
covered one person who spoke English,
I said, “That is the name of the street
way Fare and a Cent Worth $10.
(From the New York Sun.)
“Well of all the nerve,” gasped Win-
nie the waitress, as she stood gaping
I after the departing diner.. Then she
i looked down at the nickle she had
I picked up from the table. “Some piker,
• ain’t he Mae?” she quizzed a co-work-
I “Oh I dunno,” was the noncommittal
I reply. “He ain’t as bad as some guys
swivelof the trap and ran on with it I seen. I had onenoneethaelecan
on his front foot. I trailed him three penny wrapped in tinfoil ter me.
mies enanzotsecnshet ucpimnand sot i ‛
PeSissntna.cuncourdmn. enant Ke l anaaproimam"s"ontonsnconereind ..
average male wolf, weighed ninety- “1 heardasoodonerthewrter Lizzie,
eight pounds, and measured just six 1 she remarke • .
feet from tip to tip. His teeth would what used to work here, but left six
where I am staying, and J am lost.”
Will you please direct me?”
“You haven’t written down a street
name,” said the man, “but ‘post no
bills.’ ”
Written Directions Were a Trifle Mis-
leading.
(From the Los Angeles Times).
During the war, while I was on leave
[ of absence in Paris, relates a returned
I soldier, I decided to take a walk alone.
N I decided to copy down the name of the
street in which I was staying, so I
wrote down, some words printed on
the sidewalk.
When I was ready to return I found
that I could not locate the street
46
6g
23
canizing department
talks fashions, movies and dances all
the time, or you’ll be looking at fash-
ion plates and tripping rhe fox trot
all your life.”
This is the advice given to eligible
young men by the Rev. Albert Moins,
pastor of First Baptist church, at a
meeting of Toledo ministers. Contin-
uing, he said:
“Don’t forget to court your wife
after she becomes , the ‘old woman.’ It
would be a'good idea for- every girl
to have a record made of the endear-
ing words spoken during the court-
ship by her sweetheart. After she s
married ten years, she might remind
him of their courtship days by play-
ing it on the family phonograph.
“The man who fails as a sweetheart
has failed in the greatest thing in his
career. Nothing can make up his loss.
His life is empty.
“Many men play with love so much
that they fritter away all strength of
character. They never get above a
flirtation.
“The successful marriage is based
on three things, physical, mental and
spiritual attraction.’ Contrary to the
popular belief, I don’t think there is
only one one woman for every man
and that if he doesn’t find her be-
tween Tolado and South Africa he
must continue looking. Courtship is
not silly. It isn’t mush and milk and
all spooning. Courtship has nothing
to do with these things, but they are
sometimes worked in.
“A man who has never courted is a
deaf man in the land of music.
“Flirtations, accidents and ambitions
have led men to marriage.
“Folks talk of love at first sight.
There is no such thing. True love
doesn’t base itself on ignorance.
“Courtship is a combination like
strawberries and cream and ought to
be taken slowly in order to enjoy the
flavor. Too many young people get
married without really knowing each
other. The days between the meet-
ing and the engagement are the sift-
ing days, when a young man and
woman try to understand each other.
“Early courtships and early mar-
riages are good. Young people who
marry young are more likely to re-
main faithful than those who marry
late in life.
“Court early and court late, you
men. And when your wife becomes
the ‘old lady’ or the ‘old woman, that s
the time she’d appreciate more fully
a few words of endearment from you.
“You are mightly careful of her be-
fore your marriage. You help her ten-
derly off and on cars. Remember that
ten years after you’re married. Do a
little courting now. A wife never will
grow tired if her husband shows the
right affection.
“If young people on their engage-
ment day would get the great idea, the
tremendous thought that they will
have to spend every day of their lives
together, there wouldn’t be thousands
of divorces each year. If either real-
izes they are making a mistake, then
it’s better to break the heart of one
than' to ruin two lives.
“There is no set rule in selecting the
(From a bulletin of the United States
department of agriculture).
The Custer wolf is dead!
It was the-master criminal of the ani-
mal world. For nine years, it had lived
as an outlaw—the cruelest, the most
sagacious, the most successful animal
outlaw that the range country had ever
known Its cruelty was surpassed only
by its cunning. It killed with the re-
finement of animal ferocity
TOOK HEAVY TOLL.
The telephones throughout the region
.around Custer, S. D., hummed when
the word went out that a hunter had
killed the criminal wolf. That word
ended a nine years’ reign of dread dur-
ing which the stockmen around Custer
had paid tribute to the wolf to the eXi
tent of $25,000 worth of livestock. And
mere money loss was not the whole of
the horrible toll it took. When it
killed for food, it took only the choicest
animals, but sometimes it killed in
atrocious ways for the mere sake of
killing. Often it wounded cattle, break-
ing their legs, biting off their tails,
mutilating them terribly.
Four years ago its mate was kil d.
It never took another and many people
supposed that it devoted itself to re-
venge for her death. Later on, it a
tached to itself two coyotes, no ao
equals, but servants. Nevei .permitted
them to come near it, and they could
fee? from its kills only after it had
finished. They traveled far ou: on its
flanks, giving it warning.of.ambush
or approaching danger and adding
the atmosphere of mystery that sur
r°UndEVERY EFFORT FAILED. .
After a bounty, reaching $500, failed
to bring in the old criminals scalp,
after private trappers and sportsmen
hunters had given up the quest: after
poisons and dogs had failed—the stoek-
men tried a round-up. Having, as they
bought, located the wolf a large num-
ber of riders started in a great cir-
cle and closed up. This, like all other
devices, was unsuccessful. Some of the
stockmen decided to send for a gov-
ernment hunter. Therefore the depart-
ment of agriculture sent to Custer H.
P. Williams, one of its best hunters,
with instructions to stay after th©
wolf until it was taken.
Twice in May, 1920, the wolf stepped
on the jaws of traps and on the night
of July 3, it rolled into or lay down on
one and had a lot of its hair pulled out.
This gave it such a scare that it left
the country for a while. No sign could
be found of it near Custer, until th©
night of Aug. 1, when it made its pres-
ence known by killing several head of
20% DISCOUNT An IVORY
COME IN AND SEE OUR WONDERFUL BARGAINS
H. NEVIELOKKI
2
DR. W. B. CALDWELL TODAY
Born Shelbyville, Mo., March 27,1839
Began the manufacture of his famous
prescription in 1892
equipped shop. Our wonder-
ful machines and efficient
workmen turn out work that
dan be equaled by no shoe re-
pair shop in this city.
We call for and deliver or do
the work while you wait.
“ «((
7
F
8ga ku
MSt. (‛ #)
there is an old saying about opposites
marrying; blue eyes and brown eyes;
blonds and brunettes; tall and short
folk, but I wouldn’t give a fig for
those rules.
“Here are a few rules to be gov-
erned by when you look for a wife:
• “Don’t marry an artificial girl; it
all wears off.
“See what kind of a daughter a girl
is. If she’s good to her parents, shell
make a good wife.
“Don’t marry an extravagant girl,
but rather pick out a girl with self-
control and sweetness.”
Aspirin
“Bayer” on Genuine
•-AA-AAsd
{ STOP! LOOK!
Mi 3
many more miles of service into
it. No job is'too large or small
for us to handle.. We use Good-
year Repair Materials exclusive-
ly and every job is fully guar-
anteed when it leaves this shop.
O
IT Send me your name and address and I will send you a free trial bottle of my Syrup Pepsin.
1 K 1 Address me Dr W. B. Caldwell, 513 Washington Street, Monticello, Illinois. Everybody now
FREE and then needs a laxative, and it is well to know the best. Write me today.
AGENTS GOODYEAR TIRES
509 TREMONT ST. TIRES CHANGED FREE
The Great Gensral Tonic
puts new vigor into tired, listless,
debilitated people. It relieves
________ habitual constipation
by regulating the
slenz bowels, aids diges-
E-eeg tion, increases the ap-
Sugg petite and tones up
8328 the general system so
22224 that the bodily func-
tions become normal
again and-then
Mtobtsa new strength and
vitality return.
It is Pure
Lyko gives you the
laxative tonic proper-
ties of selected drugs
compounded under the
supervision of expert
chemists and is always
tested as to its thera-
peutic value before
leavingour laboratories.
Ask Your Druggist
Get a bottle of Lyko today if you feel
the need of a good laxative tonic. It comes
in original packages only.
Sole Manufacturers
LYKO MEDICINE COMPANY
New York - Kansas City
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 60, Ed. 1 Friday, February 4, 1921, newspaper, February 4, 1921; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1579639/m1/19/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.