The Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 23, 1909 Page: 8 of 8
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1*VU.7'£K
WtzLLMAA
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. _J ' v K.-rrtM:*
Used Dolt* to Stt Fashion*.
Long before kunipu'i .f wxpap^rt
were started. and fashion platan in
their modern form were thought of,
women derived their knowledge of 'h<*
fashions tit• in i|<>lim dressed In mudfia
costumes. which w >r st nt from one
couuirv to imoilit-r more especially
from Paris which then, an now, #ai
the leading renter of the mode.
For Headache Try
Whether finlli J Villi:
Ni l \ nun trouble* i In
relieved tiy (\-ipintiit**
ant to
uiul 50.
Hicka' Capudira.
, 11 •ill. SI ill: III 11 ur
111 lied Kle Hi" mill*
ii i I 11|11111 p|eu«-
I lilt Kite. Is lllillieiilMIt*ly lo. J
at I'l'ilkf Htiili-n
«*«««««>
* *
* TIME—Year of 1939.
*
* SCENE — Subway station of
J the Chicago and North Pole
* Consolidated lines, located 215
J feet beneith the ethereal sta-
* t on of tiie Port Wayne, Djluth
J and Polar Ac: ial Transportation
* C. rpany.
{ CAST — Airship chauffeurs.
* Sul-*ay motorn-.cn, passengers,
J .'crocabmcn, automatic newt
* boys. poUv bears, Eskimos.
J AireleFS telephone linemen, etc.
* „
*«♦«««*«*«# *.«««****«*****«
V11(> \ H l( I" .ve|| d
i lie phi 'Hot: I'll | ill ie trail!
ri lei "Ti a In on t he i hit
level leaves in live minits
it r the pole. On i > one
~ t < 11 between Medicine
11.ii and An tic <'i,ele oil v
Ksklntos, polar heats and
hunteis In the second story of the
• hlrd car foi ua i r-d. Aw I I
alio a r r d."
<i« e, but I was glad to pet into
the poliii hear section and away
aii oinaiic instniinent tor reuderiuK
P i sons mentHll\ incompetent I had
nad' a copy of the North Pole lYiday
•*' - "ii. with a noise like all the air
I a halloon all at once, ibe A- N.
atari ed.
i ll strange to me. of the >ear 19119.
slept nn awful long time to wake
<0^9 3ALDW/U PMOJPZCT/V& £XP£&/T/OAf
from that
nane
been
night
coming o
IV tiiiin
It was
1 must havi
Mich w tin Ii] «ree| his e\ es
the i-ti\> of Kip Van Winkle
Discovery <n tin-* nortii pole
made within the life'ltues of
to-day Vuyhow thai 1.- what
clan They sa> the mete
w'onld make him
will doubtless l>
111U11 > cit l/ens of
the scientists d"
discovert of the
ii|i here in the year of—yea, the date line on
tin- publication I was scanning said February
1. 199!* It was printed it. white Ink ami the
worn- were all spelled phonetically
Medicine 11 a i." jelled a voice in my ear a
inimit• or two after the train had slatted |
looked quickly around, reiul} to punch the
rud«- brakemau who had given vent io those
i i- pins notes As I did so I bumped my nose
against th well, |i looked like a phonograph
sticking out from the wall of tne
cat Then ft dawned upon uie It
wasn't tli<- hrakeman at all In fact.
looking around 1 could see mi em-
plo\i s ' we reached the chunk of
darktii ss whirl' I took to lie the al-
leged Mi diciue Hat. the conch door
iipeiieti without an\ human assistance,
a man at my side punched a button
ami promptly disappeared tliiougli a
chllle will -It appca'-eil at his feet.
Two minutes lot liquid air re-
f" -hiuents. came the same rasping.
plionou' aphic voice through the in-
strumem tit m> tight I hunted for
the button my disappearing friend had
used to disappear by and in an iii-
I wits looking down Medicine
main st net 1 didn't try to
out 'hut phenomenon I didn-'
' I i vet saw the pole. If it had
seen via the cold, clatntm sub-
pole is simple. It is the conquering of the tie-
tails which must In- sui mounted that require
the thought ami efforts.
Most novel of all plans to plant the American
flag or for that matter any other country's
flag on top of the pole, is that which some
time ago was proposed by Kvelyn Hriggs Maid-
win, who is now working out details of Ills
scheme.
This intrepid explorer alms to float to the
pole and take plenty of time getting there lie
laid out the plan iu detail before the Harvard
ii ii iou tit Cambridge, Mass, some time ago and
while suiiie blase persons were skeptical, otli
els said they liked the plan
I lei it's the way Mr Haiti win would do it:
petlit iou must face
aie known only
to the inuii who
has made such
attempts before
That has been
the great trouble
with polar expe
ditious. it is said
They are too oft
en planned with
the conveniences
of a great city
within icai it of
the hand
Perhaps
most sane
ex pedit ion
a n y o n e
sprung for
has been
w+M
" /-!"• 'V-- ' ** •• '•>*.'/ >• *: V
.'V >!*:'/ •' ' -S
' * •-!• y-, * t* Y' • ' ' *' V * ' *«■ * V '
Th# uvciaiii' vMitnun \* fund of
but her husiiund i* u«il iu ihui clus*.
MORE "
PINKHAM
CURES
Added to the Long List due
to This Famous Remedy.
Ciinnleti, "It is with pleasure
that I iultl my toHtimonial to your
alreiitly lotij? list—honing that it may
induce others to avail themselves of
tliia valuable meiii-
cine, i.yilia K. l'ink-
iiain'H A'cKftablti
CouiiMiutuI. 1 Mlt'
tcreu from terrible
hcadaclH'H, pain in
my back and right
side, v as tired ami
nervous, and ho
weak 1 could hardly
s tii ml. Lydia 1.
l'inkliiini's\ egeta.
bin ('ouipoiitiu it*-
stored me to health
and made me teel like a new person,
and it shall always have mv praise."
- Mrs \V. P. \ At.t vj ink, P02 lJncolu
Avenue, ( aintlcn, .N. .1.
tiiinlin^r. Me " I was a great suf-
ferer I't'oiii ;i ti-nii.Ie tli -easi1. 'I he din -
tor said 1 Would have to jjo to tl-.rt
hospital for an operation, hut I.ydia 1.
I'ink ha in's \ • -tn t;11 le t 'ompoiiud com-
pletely cured tne in three months." —
Mlts. s. A. Wit tjams, 1{. F. i). So. 14,
J5ox :*.! , tiarilincr Me.
Itecar e your case is a dilllcult one,
doctors having done you no good,
do not continue to suffer without
giving r.ydia K. I'inkham's Vegetable
('ompoiniila trial. It surely has cured
itiatiy ciises of female ills, such as in-
flammation, ulceration, (lisnlacements.
Dim .id tumors, irregularities, periodic
pains, backache, that bearing-tlowu
feeling, indigestion, di/ziness, and tier
voiis prostration. It costs but a tritlo
to try it, iinti tiie result is worth mil-
lions to many sulferuig w'orncu.
..Jl
VS'-iSq
slant
1 lit! -
pit/./.l
can
to ie
w .1 i
Net
tin
Wt alh
See if
south I
lilte the
W lien I
yorpclin
ni.i hint
muni
11
very place of husitn s on
treef was labeled "private
litiri itit " I gliinced upward to
looked like rain Par to the
spied what looked strangely
pictures 1 scanned In 19'M
used to read about fount
and his airship As the big bird like
cume elo-ti-i. 1 managed to read the
sign on the side. It read.
HOt'TK NO.
Fort Wayne. Duliuh and I'olar \erial Trans-
ptirtation Company.
'Ilia' was pretty near the straw 1
niinted to took at something ancient. I
coiddit t staml this much Ioiik i It was get-
tine i n my nerve* -tlies«* ale ad o! the minute
roittiivaiices The airship drew nearer. I
could *•' e n roof garden paity of young people
hi'titig among the palms on the dome of the
bu- ttiiii lune Vtotind them were electric heat
els which radla'ed beat cleat to the earth.
('HI ei's*|y one J'OUI'lg lllllll e|ilptlei| the coll-
tents ot his «lass over hit* shoulder In my di-
rection.
I tried to dodge the cloudburst of amber
bewtago. but, iilau. too late. It caught me
squarely iu tiie face and —
I WOKK I'!*'
And .it'll when one comer to think It over,
fousldfring the prognss which the year 191S
st« in the win ot uliship navigation and polar
efforti- that dream is within the realm of pos
■Utilities ot the twentieth century Less than
fiii yeat> ago the man who talked of saying
"howiiy to a friend l.fi' 0 miles away would
be tjt |iortei|. To-day 'he telephone t arries
one's wmds as cleat Iv as if spoken to parties
In the same room.
So If an American should fall asleep in the
year lUU# and awake 9't year hem e, the thitiKs
Matt
IVZTZ L.ATAWS
//V <4 *SA/OW JTCAP.AJ
\ in
\\ a Met
W e mail
tun i : anil jici bans th*
protect which wn* *ver
I he iiio"t
inos; litsiiiii
lining tor tn
ot I 11 lit How
tint '•! \ I to hi
was Attn in hi
llllil tin- pole its Ills i-sneeial
«av lie aimed to toll to tit
the po!
hleagoitti
nn
f that
« as
w ho wna
could
11 rival*
a roiiinl ball wiili mall !11 I. at ea< It
ml ili got a fat as Soii'll Haven,
Mich which i a -11111111• -4 ii ioit i't*
teacli'd Soiii ti Haven In 111 • winter
and lie w a t<i1111• I I to/,en i-n the beach
wind a ml waves ear- ied < 'a fit
ttiiii .'I ' 11■ i am M Ichlgan
hieat e '1 i i bi- indlcat tons
i hat hi^ 'It ,i I: oeciit: ' il hall way
the i ;i k t It till til In round
Ie- la ■ 'ii "ii a 'I a '"ini
CO/ISIODOMJ:.
"in
I hrlstlan
■ ti11111 unat <
r i ffori
ec mill i tin
11 'trial,
\|dor
r man
va
to find
The a -d
him
W filch he .l .t'l III
had sort of d
Washington
llin-iii went win up
CAPT.
J THOfj
ii it >\! mr
OIIS.
I
%
1M01S
M.OOTB I.qo /
'Hive me :i cargo of logs, nnolher of casks
partly filled with emergency supplies and tv
single vessel, spcclticully constructed, am
can* go from Kehrlng Btralt to the pole right
across the Arctic ocean. Si-atter the logs port
able house and casks upon a group of heavy-
ice floes, surrounding the ship, shifting the sup-
plies If necessat y by windlasaeH. motors or
dogs, and we'll succeed. A single crew can
handle the three cargoes Had the .leanm-tic
expedition adopted this plan It would have
won in • upport of my plan Itear Admlial Mel
vilie stated to nie that a small house erected
on the Ice at the beginning of the drift of the
.1 cannotte having blown away before It had
been fastened down, was found two years later
less than two miles from the ship thus proving
that the ship and Ice proeeed Just as a balloon
moves with the atmosphere in which It floats
With portable studios and laboratories, out ar
tlsts and scientists may work with tranquillity
With balloons we will view a wide stretch of
territory and as did the HaldwIn /t-igler t-xpe
dition frequently, dispatch messenger- home
ward With our logs as fuel we'll barbecue the
walrtiv seal and polai bear. With the casks
emptied well form a flotilla filled with dupli-
cu'en of our collections ''
That's the wai. Mr Haldw'ln would do It.
With your feet planted on the home >•< arth-
stone. the domicile eood and warm, plenty to
eat for each m a' and no worries. It looks easy,
doesn't It? Hut the obstacles which any ex
So Mr Weiiniati went way up tun
away from Sweden, and after spending a long
time In the construction of his aerial pole,
finder. In set sail in his airship In a sitou torni
The snow was thick high up in that cold cli-
innte and it got Into the pilot's eye* t onse
qiienlly the expedition Was abandoned for thi!
time.
Next .lune, however, Mi Wcllutan will again
set sail tot the pole with the assurance that
his machine will perform at leas' part if 'lie
Jourm ■ all tactorlly On ethereal subjeets
Wcllinan has become an expert. H" lias also
had re 11 polar experience Mr Welltnan not
long ago declared 'iiat his airship I: for Ills
own purpose of llmling the pole, nioii oflicfetit
than that ot Count /• pp1 Ii11. whbl ran il!
all dm long without dropping to earth for
niort gasoline
('oininodot. i'liat > is todii v s< rut Inlying an
tie regions lot -igns of the location of the pole
lie will in its far north as is poxsildc on hl«
polar hip Theodore Roosevelt1, and dogs and
sledges will take him the rest of the distance
It will tn several yiar- probably, before the
real fruits of this expedition become known to
lie W spa pet readels of America.
Many 11\• * have a-en lost in the tpie-t for
the pole That and the south pole, located
Hotnewheri In 'he Antarctic, ate the only un-
discovered parts of this wide world and the na-
tion which plants Its flag on either of tlu
pole- will be lucky, for then It will own the end
ot tbe earth.
1 low
from
u
a< 11
II
w hlcli
hollow
I to w st r
Is less than
iv e I ei elveil
not ih poh i
ftom day to >
dish sclent is1
lie assertion
i| • SI bet la t )f com s-*
on moving like that
o lie ill' covet ed '' IIsk -Si'i
t east ill t lie llOl t II pole I *
lug hide and seek is said to in
The earth revolvi on |i- .<\1 ■ from west to
ea-t llellce centrifugal tones tend to pull
the teglons if the equaiot outward tints giv-
tnr the temb'ticy to flatten at the poh-. I his
flattening process Is ii'cgulai and a a eoiise«
qileuie the "lop" jlllil bolloni of tin- earth
tend to flit about from place io place
Try this se he I lie wi'l a rulibei ball Soft
rubber Is best: It show the flattening better
than haul rubber I'ush a nail ibioiigh tho
hall, making it att a\i- nnl tln n t|( iri'its to
each end of tin nail Hold the strings in your
light hand ami twirl Hum ovt-i voin head.
DuriiiR the twirling von notlci that the ball
b'-i nines flatlet at i at h end and bub-' lightly
on the sides That's why the poles are >hift*
it.. I'he earth move at a rale of 111 tulles a
minute around l'i axl Ktich day in levolv-
lug it has a journey of 116,000 miles, lis cir-
cumference in aeeomplish It liiovt about -0
111111 - s as fas' as the t'liii ago-New York I H-hour |
special Is It any wonder il t flattening''
The dream above, which trail-planted a citi-
zen of the t'nlted Stales of tin* yen l!<09 to
the year ItW, In- tci turnishes an ordinary ei-
ample of tilings which may tiansplre wlien
pearv, Itahlwin or Wellman tilt* over the north
pole Nobody has yet tiled to discover th#
pole by the subway rout'
some day, and soon afie
of insanity.
The Reft on I Btiikit ami Sell Morn Mnti <$3 00
£«. $3.50 Shoes Than Any Other Manufiicturnr
U WkUM I rflr# t h« v*|f r the benefit of Ihe m'.«t
< ottipUU urcaiiix ti"(i ot ir*in«<1 -«| #tU
■ htMariinkefB in th# «« antry
Th* Uou lb« o«th n for • < h part ot tb* ah«>«.
and ev«TT of the ntak'na !n evtrr ut
luoM *ftor br Ihi t e«l «hiwrti keii \$\ the IkMI auJustty
If I couj'l iho* y m h'l'ff i V V> I. I'ou«t * sh<>e«
f« ro« wottHtSin undorturtd wb) tb^vhold th« #
• h.*i>e. fit iMrtter. anil wear iobfer than aay other mak«
My Mat' l>f Jn ni'nj fhr , S nm he* then
/ r«'We and I • tirti' ny f/un any ath?r%.
•♦boi s f« r l'%«'rv MriMbrr of ihr I'tunlly,
%l en, lloys, \\ oitii'ti, tl (••€*• iind I tillilr**u.
I r 3Ml>* I'T •J|"^ i|e«|li If *ef ytf Sen-
PAIITIHM I s i"1,11 • *nti. n w i. i v.v «#
l/HU I lUlt i ,
Fust Color r«l tl l' ed t illusively CfttaJoff 't«s
V*. L IMilULAS, 107 Spark St.. HrutMoo. Hm .
WR18 LEY'S
Typewriters Rebuilt
f*. Ii I «■
•s 'l rl«'i
I IH'III
I'1 II kll'l
I lw I>1*1
!••• ll/tlf fit 4k I >
' « iimmI Ill- IS
Ml t,i Ills ||I II y
1*1 I 11f-II< t
'ill fur ft'lltii.
Illlll it )♦ !
> pf w r i i •• •
hut somebody
t In * !l coin let
will,
hi IIS
4 [ l
V-
ur>. II|'
HOUSTON rYPKH HITF.K KXCNANOR
Phonr 1917 1010 Prmrir Avrnue, Houilun lrtt
<aa9SX>E2ZEZ3Z3>
K) IMKODICI! ()l
CHOICi: SI I DS
to tlur-e who have tii-ii-r iiM-i| tlii-iii. we will
•■ell'I 12 piickft|(r .a cht)ic« vr|c-tnblr i-r
flower irrdi (or prr >-itl plnntiiiR po*tpmd
tor 2 Sc. Spei lal pi ii es i >11 I ill Ik seed t lll.i i
ki t v ii i It-lii i- Write I 't' lrr«* (inrdrn (•oiHr
Tht Bollwmklr S* d Co.. Ltd., N w Orlraot, L .
KNOWN SINCI its* AS RELIABLE
ueru'^11"*01 MARK )
■Vfcot black
CAPSULES
SUHRKMREMEDYr«.URIIURYaiSCHARGEMK
DRUGGISTS os v MAIL ON RCCEIPTor 50c
H.PLANTENASOM.SSNCNRYSTIROOSLYN MV
0A9KER*S ~~
oi MAlk BALSAM
< l(>«f « am) |pe®ui\ru'f l/ie hah.
I | tin t « ft llll'ir-unt gr- wtli
Nrvor FaI!• to H**fltoro Clnty
IImir to ltd Youthful QolorT
Lnirrs .<■« p e«i's k (mir Fai!itML
M. CANE'S DETECTIVE AGENCY,
Hnualun, Tmh. op r«l« III* lari-nl furrr «•<
romprlonl dtlMlivfi in Ih* Soulh, lhit rrnil.i
wriilrn opinion* in immt nol Itandlvd by lh*m
Km onabl« ralm.
Hill) W Ii lull it? Ilitlili*
iri'iinsl .it lii'inii wiili. .1
ti.iiii I it — i It el iwr' ii ii. > ri
-t lit I 1(1 I'.. II M.
\> utilluy,M. I)., Ai luiitu.iiu., iui N ITr.n ti.
wmaLcva.ffl.
S REARM I NT
I
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Cain, Thomas C. The Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 23, 1909, newspaper, January 23, 1909; Bastrop, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth205777/m1/8/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bastrop Public Library.