The Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 24, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 27, 1904 Page: 4 of 8
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EVENTS CF EVERYWHERE.
ALL OVER TEXAS.
•i :.«• c
'li crop
Whole'
\ • -i r> ; ft ,,f i] <• <,it
is ratli.r depressing, taken as
The
m w Hon ill*
Cn!l* ; w ill op. 11 III. til •
I i : > I nil dii Si 'ttcmbrr !!•
in
Chrl Han
l . Hill Ul
Pasturage Not E*v-UQh fcr Fat:«nino
S.ieep.
Th* attenip: hi; - a r "I many tii;i<
■ oon made of |;i\ ii.k sheep nothing
hut puiurace when t y re h« li ■
prepared for market li tills is ever
isncoesslul It is under exceptional con
dltions, The well-finished sluvp hu^
In have something more tlian half
*'ry grass on which to build up juicy
This im the more the c:i?o av
this fattening has to lio done in the
fnll of the year «hin pa'lures are
pot of their best. At the South Da
kota station an experiment was mad«
to determine to what extent the sheep
would improve on pasturage In the
'all of the> year. The time of pastur
ing was from September to Noveui
ber 2 Sixty ewes were used In the
experiment, and these were divided
into lots of ten ewes each Kacli lot
was allowed to run or. two acres of
native prairie grass, but it was In un-
usually good condition, us it had not
been pastured for the entire season,
nor had it been cut fur hay. Of the
six lots only one whs fed entirely on
this native pasturage. Tbo other lots
had some Kind of gialn In addition
The trial would indicate what we
have suid above that it Is unudvlsable '
Work will soon commence on a I
A ell) ball l.i vil M.low
!)o buildii; will be up to date in cv bur1.
< i V i1' ail.
I'iui
i bi!
Marlin was
l pitifully
TBUK TE.MI'EKANCK.
METHODS THAT ASSURE SUCCESS
APPROVED BY THE CHURCH.
Vile Saloons That Threaten Society
to Be Wiped Out—The Poor Man
to Be Given a Re'.tcr Chance.
il Hn.v
\ n:ov e is <iii t\ *
I n nehh < ! hi
propcriy imin r.s hi\
vor cf it.
io pave
tiaiiK1 v
almo t
'.he main
illc. The
.ill in fa
f a pr.iml-
ill,
Ale x Ara< hint*. the son
in til Italian busln«'si man «>' I>*n; n
diowred in ibi- lit'il IIIver Friday
morning
1 )a _
Port Wort)
tlfllt to
f 1
Judge It
til-! ellVl! • ;
Jlcial ! i -ti
H r, iv Inn
. n i.'i::
illlll llll
ug capitalist of
An/ma develop-
I' lit Worth part it.
for
, Porter was sworn In at
.liiili • ■ of tin Kighlh .In-
vice Jilil"i II. C. Con
It Is ^iv• ii out that the I). Ila
gtnuuds ale to be htautilioil w
artificial lake In the ;«*r of th
race track.
The New York tV'tral flailr<>;«11 i
arranging tu trolley De nil Its branebc
Immediately an.I th<
eourse of time.
The l-orcna High School has let
the contract for the building of a two
story brick school hoiisi, the price be
lute about I Ann.
It is thought that Judge Parker will
make h st ii in |> nf many of the most im
pi.riant Western ciiles In the int« r«• > t
of his camnuigu
The "Joint" must no'
Tho vlli dlii'i i.ut .ble aloon, with
Its allurements to youth, its poison
ins concoctions, it infamous ilanee
kails thai destroy our daughters' ami
M ns' lx ul ii :• n ml s .ills, can no Ioniser
be tolerated in a civilized rommunity.
Wlieri is the man who lise- the hard
ii oou lo land up ami defend tlio ex
iMenee of these Immoral, leprous
pots that eat away the nry life of
tie nation? Let blin hide his lead in
<irraei' and shame.
The wiping out of these groggerles
i e< assured, and the tin tlioil to be em
Twelve-y* ar-tild Dora Ryrd. of Ard ployed to ucoompllHh it lias been tried
tii« ■' •. I T. who attempted to light a succi ssfully lit other localities, as will
fire by u.-iiH coal oil w;'H s> seriously lie si en by the following report from
ntiii s '''Ui in ' burned ihat site died from the injuries New \ork city:
j sustained Rishop Henry C, Pott. r. the cele
, orated Kplseopalinti Divine, delivered
Hurt Morgan. a young man about principal address on \uvust 2<1, In
twenty feven years nf age. was found N«-w Vork City, at the formal openlnt'
dead In bed at his home at Sunset of "The Subway Tavern," a model sa
lie Is supposed lo have died from ioon, which was established by a mini-
heart trouble. ' uerof leaders in the reform movement
Fair
1 Ii an
link
Tom Maylicld nf Knnls, a braUeman
for the line ton and Ti .as Ceivtral,
.it om of his liu. 'I badly luasiu d
while (Miipllut; car
to attempt to futten sleep without .lue Jefferson, the unat actor IP'S
grain. The lot that had no grain not dangerously ill at hi. honn near liu/-
only did not lp< rease in weight, but
lost over five pounds each in weight.
the loss for the ten being r.2 pounds.
'll the other lots made s.iiistar.tlal
nralns. This trial was only another
proof that It does net pay to try to get
something for nothing. This pasture
1t may be noted, was much better
than is the average pasture on our
farms, as the sheep wire really put
onto a pasture where they could eat
In two months the pasturaee mat li
generally available d;;;-lim six.
in that city.
Prince Orloff DyliedofT contributed The purpose nf the promoters of the
ttoo.omi. and Artist Ktippin. wiio has (rterprlse is to serve pure Ihjiiors and
elevntlon of the saloon to the high
stnr.dar.d of the social club, the recog-
nition of the right of tho poor mat
ii I i>. nls "club" and intellectual ex-
ehanr;', where the enviroutnei.t shall
I o| an elevating rather than of a
ce-frtnllng character this it- the true
refni ta mo\eineiit. as n en. u'./ed by
the modern siM inlogl.^l. tin logian and
studi at of humanity ; this is true tern-
II iiiiic . practical and lair to all, as
eriuii iiited by tile pulpit, ou the ros-
11 ii ii. nil! in tin press.
How to re irh these hi'*ii ideals;
how tn in ei mpP Ii the in i rnient of
eiki.- t ng iMtiiiitIons, i tin i|in' tlon
iMi y site i re reformer should stop
aril consider.
Prohibition means a bottle ot
v. I.i-I.n at hoi. i instead nt a glu i of
leer taken socially at the saloon club,
it means sots instead o| sociable be
inns. The state- that till the Ki eley
Curei are the stales that attempt to
WASH BLUE
Cn.«U o C€nt5 and t-quaU ao cents
w orth ui tiny other kind of bluing.
Won't Spill or Break
Can't Spot Clothes
DIR&CTIONb FOB U6EI
Wi$Ie=5tlc*S
oreund iti the Water*
At (Ul w<*o (iriccr*.
>C'
lie win >.n tie; w;ih us strength-
ens our n rves and sharpens our
tlnll V>ur ani.tr,ni. -t is our In iper
zards Hay. He i-< -tiffering from a
complication of diseases
It is given out that Congri ssiuan
Randall, nf the Sliermr.a I)i.-1rict. will
take the stump In the (r 11 for tho
Demncratic National ticket.
(•rent efforts are ta in" put forth to
make the Prohibit Ion rally at Waco on
August 2.1 and iM one of the largest
uii clings ever held in ibat city.
just sold a picture to the Russian
government fur 150,000. donates
uuo to tin.' war fund
Yield of Barley.
The Department of Agriculture
gives the following as the yield of maklng life mis.
barley in the United Stutes last year: ! hllI lf)PB
Maine
New Hampshire
Vermont
New Yorl
Pennsylvania
Mary land ...
Virginia ....
Texas
Tennessee
Kentucky ...
Ohio
Michigan
Indiana
2.11.1 tio 1
31.700 :
nw..<s:1
2.i>10.78(i I
182,05ii
39,Si90 j
t.-i i
121.' 24 '
29,252 j
18,361
The eltl '.ens < f tin Cache, O. T .
coram unity have organized for the
i suppression of cattle stealing, and are
ij'e for maverick
hunters.
Herman Hi"ks. ar.etl eighty-seven,
who had lived (,n the same farm, three
miles from Ann Arbor. Mich., for the
piisl seventy nice > ir ■ died u fevs
dins since.
The Panama Canal 'o:um!ssion has
Made ri'ijuisitiun for a larg" amount
fi8ti,U77 j dynamite, w hich ialica.es iliat ac-
:i45,520 '.ive work will snou comm ncon tin
243.;M4 canal proper.
The Rank of Mai one will begin
'Hisine1 s in its new brick building on
September I Three brick houses urn
seing rapidly cnmpli.t*d and will bo
occupied as soon as romplet* I.
I While in swimming in the grade
1 raising canal. J".:ne.-. Frost, the fourth
steward • n the steamshiji Vucatan. a
llrllisli M - .i I. was •irowr.ed The home
i of the decease 1 ii at Accriton. Kai;
land.
Kvati Huberts, a negro, was shot and
killed at Hoynton, I. T.. Friday morn
lug while as leep. Anothi r negro en
j lured the room and fired two bullets
1 into Robert:, breast Th. a;, t made
his escape.
At the Frlsci I>ri>1 i ai r.iss the Col-
orado River ul \> im hi II, a young man
from Itasca. Texas, was walking across
when In- t.ll a distunce of sixty feet • rns w her
and received injuries which will very
likely prove fatal.
food at low prices under the best pos-
sible moral conditions In iil.t address
I'ishop I'n'ter said the keynnte of true
reform 1 ad been struck by the estab-
lishment of a social gathering place
of a high moral standard, where men
and women could secure refreshment
amid surrounding of the highest re-
i peclubfllty.
"The i lYort to bar the saloon," said
Bishop I'ntter, "i one nf the most
comic and tragic failures of history
The Ir.auguraiinn of a ri snrt like this
is in many ivi peetB the gn*atest social
moMnient that New Yuri; has ever
known. The Republic is not to be
raved by theories, or l>,\ electing this
man or that man. but l>\ recognition
o en at ideals.
"I belong to a dozen clubs,' he
said, where I may gn wlun the day
u
oclal even-
o
Illinois C53.05C j
Wisconsin 13,393,976 Miss Clara liourland. the HVyear-old
Minnesota 27.7S3.170 daughter of Hon. \V. F Uourlaud of
i?iWa 11,2114.923 ; Dixon, Ky., was killed by lightning
Kansas' 4 3S" S45 ■ w'*''e nvcr a telephone during
Tebraska ........ !!!!.!.'!,' 1.7012C2 a ht'avy ihundreHtorm.
South Dakota 10.G5ti.43S , , . ~,
North Dakota 12 4i',8.3S4 ( °L ^graham of ( hleago,
Montana 73° 886 v>',° °nJo>'8 the distinction of having
Wyoming 2a 09l written more than 1,000 novels, died
Colorado 724 521 a few days since at Reauvolr, Miss.,
New Mexico
Arizona ...
Utah
Nevada ...
Idaho
Washington
Oregon ....
California .
Oklahoma .
Jlliig.
who was accidentally shot by City
Marshal Montgomery at Crowdcr City
I, T., Sunday, will lik< ly die. The
bullet passed through the skull, caw*
irii; part ot the brain to oo/.e out.
Emily l>'V.is, a negro woman of En
uls, died Friday at the ago of 10S
years. She used to belong to tho
family of Mrs Frank Templeton, and
was the house servant uf Mrs. Turn
pleton's mother.
I
i
|
I
1
O
at the age of 00 years.
20,282
655,107
314,288
247.'J44
1,440,706
6,168,267
2,048,4731 , , _ .
30 878 °4" Completed by September 1, 190a.
4 io.r. 18
The contractor will be ai Gaiiie
vllle next month from Dallas 1111.1 be-
gin wnrk ou the new $M),00o post of-
fice building. Th. bull.'.lug must be
Total
The average yield was 2fi.i bushels ting busy-
Projectors of .10 Kansas City, Okla-
.131 8t!1391 bnma and Houston Railway :iro 'get-
is done, to dine or for
ing. l'ut what In come' nf my friend,
the ir.an who lives In two rooms with
a family nf Ave small children? lie
I I'ning 111 the saloon.
"Ir Great Ilritain I.ord Orey'K So-
ciety has estalilisliei! saloons or tav
men and women may
rather, where alcoholic drinks are
nerved, but also tea, cnfTee, mill; and
chocolate. This strike,- ni" ,.? a gift
Hamilton, of ladianola, I. T, of genius
"We propose to enlist the sympathy
ef sane and practical no 11 to remedy
ti e evils of the low saloon, We are
p,'epi.red to endure the utmost cyni-
cism anil scepticism, but approach our 1 prop*
tnsk in the utmost scriousne • "
Rishop Potter concluded by wishing
every success to the movement. The
fr rn:al opening ended by thu singing
of the doxology.
In commenting on Itishop Potter's
unusual course in si eakiug as a'novc,
Hishop Spalding, the great prelate of
the Roman Catholic Church, located
At Herford, twenty miles north ol at Peoria, 111., said, in part:
El Paso two cowboys employed at ' A this new salnni! t< 'ids in miti
Newman's ranch engaged In a ti^lit fete the nM evils. It may be aceeptod
with pistols, and one of 'hem. lieu a fortunate compromise measure.
"I should welcome any innovation
that would tend to minimize the gross-
er manifestations of the drink evil.
Surely nothing can be gained through
BISHOP SPALDING.
Of the Roman Catliclic Church, Who
Endorres Qishop Potter's Ideas on
the Temperance Question.
prohibit rather than to regulate drink
ji1g places.
Reside the big soda fountain In the
Subway Tmnn, referred to above.
I.ang6 the following sign
11
ANNOUNCEMENT.
Beer served nt this fount,
flood smla wall r and pnod
beer are equally harmless
il taken temperately. We
si rvt the purest beei uml
sanitary soda
o
Lewis, was killed His a aliant was
a Mexican
1
In th s truthful announcement there
ts a suggestion Inr the reformation of
objectionable saloons Pure liquors
regulation, the support and
t-i'tronngc of the imsi element, rather
than the prejudiced condemnation of
the unthinking, II well meaning, who
class all saloons in a category of crime
and evil.
The salnon, properly regulated and
ci ndecied, recognizing and living up
to the Ian, becomes a pine, and. In
fact, the only place where the work
lug man may find that congenial neia
b.llty that is so 1 sentlal to all but
the hermit and recluse. It is the poor
man's club. Make it a proper as well
: s n popular place, and the temper-
ance question is ol veil Inr till time.
Surveyors are making
kper acre. Montana had the large t per
iicre yield, 40.2 bushels, and Missouri,
smallest, 18.3 bushels.
estimates and all indications point to
the early cnmmencement of the line,
which ns surveyed, is about eighty
miles shorter from Kansas City to Gal-
veston than any existing line.
Sweet Clover foe Mulch.
We believe that swee t clover might '
be used profitably as a mulch in our; Heavy forest fin's are raging in the
gardens and among our small fiuiti. nills close around Ronlta, some twenty-
Thls plant Is now growing abundantly f Miss()l)ln Tlu. flrt,8
In all parts of Illinois nearly and In
some counties the roadsides are al Parted four daya ago and have spread
most solid with it. and It rises to a with rapidity over a vast territory,
height of five and six feet. At this causing incalculable loss.
t,heJ°,\r' Wh"n U 'Bl,,?8lrC,,l Work has commenced on the Odd
to protect the bare ground between
the rows of fruit bearing canes from ' Ft',loWB' u'n",1«' al (,k
the hot sun. the sweet clover might Charles Neary of Milwaukee, and
.be mown and *0 used. The plant rots Louis ! ng of Oakland, have been
quickly, but this will b< no objection matched for a twenty round fight to
iq It. as It is rich In nitrogen, which ,ake plaC(, a, Seattle September 27, at
root tubercles have gathered from
^e air. The bacteria that works on
roots are the same that work on
lie roots of alfalfa, and It is therefore
great improver of the soli. In ad
litton, it is very easy to cut. as its
stem is soft anil Juicy. It will pack
holidiy and the wind will not l>e able
Jo blow It away The application nt
juleh Is desirable In numerous places
>n the farm and we know of nothing
[that should give better results thaD
this.
The Modern Hcg.
The modern hog is the product of daughter
[hundreds of swine generation! ol
lection and I igh feeding. Much has
} i i ll 1 : eil :' I'
ind in the ability ot the hoes to malci
rthe most out ol the feed they recetvi
While this has been gained, something
If as been lost, and that something in
'it mlna. The problem i i:ow pre-., nt
130 pounds.
It Is understood from an authoritative
source that the new Birmingham iron
works will resume operations in the
nour future These works rcpn-^nt
an investment of three million dollars
with two practically new furnaces.
Saturday night at Lavada in the
northeast corner of Franklin County
W. II. Thomas was killed. It is staled
he was attempting to elope with
Jeorge W Martin's sixteen-year-old
Martin was released 011
Thf C H. Sen olkopf Saddlery l.'om
pany of Dallas, one of the largest sad-
dlery and shoe Hidings dealers in the
flitted Slates is arranging for tho
er.-eMou in Dallas of another factory
1 building to be si\ stories nnd base
nient In hi'it'it, and looxlLJ fuet lo|
. size.
' It was reported that Tom Randolph,
ateiy a Sn. rtnati banker, who went to
dt. Louis to engage in banking, was
n an automobile ace.dent at S^. Louis
Fair grounds, but be telegraphs Texa.v
I friendo the report is not true.
Waller Crumb, a typewriter rc
• palrer of Galve-ston, lis years of age,
lied from an overdose of morphii
\ niotner and widow survive him.
An enormous increase in the cotton
crop is reported from tbo Slumlord
, country
The old music hall of Die Dallas Fair
grounds, which was constructed im
IS'.uJ in tin then remarkable period of
flft-en days was torn down last week lt.sinc. rlty, and in my mind it Is vis-
In the spine of six days, and by the |,,nurv to """ proh I bi 11. .1, can
man who built It.
BISHOP HENRY C. POTTER.
Whose Ideas For the Wiping Out of
Vile and Law Breaking Saloons Has
Aroused National Interest.
be established in our great cities. I.et
11s b. char sighted idealists, for only
It is reported that two of the parties lo tin t c.t' til shall our Icb al i and de
bond after an examining trial.
There is talk of an elcctric railroad
being built from New HraunfcM
down the Guadalupe rlvi r by ihe way
of 8egttln and la>esville to Gonzales
The money to pay for the survey of
who robbed the International train
near Keeehl some weeks ago, have
been captured In lA'nn County.
Hiiisljoro is having a merry row
o\er the removal of one of the public
school buildings of that city.
The Southern Pacific li oiling its
rou'ltd ftnm Yuma to KI Paso, a dls-
ta.ice of 2S2 miles. Thai part of tho
track alre-tdy treated furnishes much
comlnrt to travciera in lis freedom
ing itself how to so feed and select l',w proposed route has been made up. f. o . ist
oreedit.e hiilmals as t" restore the eM
itamlna tl.at was In the hog when It
Darned over the mountains nrd
through the wood ard dug It fo...|
from the ground or gathered It from
The 81 eel trade which has been
backward for tome time i.s looking up.
Every union w.irkii.i;tn.in and worn
in In the country, about tbne million,
the growing herbage The breeder of iccorclng to lead. , nf ni >'d lalior
|ie modem bog has found that lie
rudiielii)- an r.nln.al t«.o w al It I t
jd thai this must he remedied. Hut
Int th ■ an and v III In- curt d Is cct
adern hog, with all of his
prqiinr«ri^,'*,'lllV i.e.-n [-
Is to bo asked to contrij it. to tin sup-
port of the packing house sinke,
The troops to go from Texas to thn
Maiia.-.aas maneuvers will be carriud
by the Southern i'oriflc and the Texas
without the 'o. R vf the deslrn' le alJ(j pacific roads There was a meet-
les that have been Iia,^,,d *l!h passenger agents to bid on
irtgtt course of feeding haO been
, on the proposition
The li: t relini .11 nf the Cnnfe.lerate
veterans of 1I10 association composed
of the camps of .Ituies, Haskell, Kent.
Fisher and Stonewall Countlen, a;
Staii'ford, < nded Friday nle.ht, with a
ciuiipflrQ. at winch ;inds of ve 1
at and it Ir families were pre i nt.
The Southern i'acllic is In'.ailing
t semaphore j\-.teiu on Us entire line.
I'he signal*, are to be out nille apart,
and an engineer passing a signal can
tell If another traiu lb on that block
or section ot one mile.
votlou to them prevail.
"Of primary Importance to the re
former." said lib hop Spalding, are
the evils of the dance hall when main-
tained in connection with the saloon
ni.tl the enforcement of the ordinance
r"*nnllng the closing hour. It is the
late (losing that strikes at tlu heart
1 f II11 family life."
In th" practical theories of the«>
two en :it thlaki i s. representative
men It their r speetlve ehurches, one
I'rot 'tant and the other Itoniau Cath
olle the tru« solutloi r ti e Temper-
1.in .- question bec'.'n. . apparent, Tho
Americans Lose Ensjli*h Trade.
Frederick .1. Martin, a l^oiuloner
now tiavelltig In the I'nlted Slates,
says that American in.itle idioe.-. are
not neiriy so much In \. no now-
adays In his country ns formerly.
Footgear frnm this side of the At-
lantic enjoyed great popularity for a
time, but manufacturers o\.r then-
took the neater and more graceful
lasts found In this country. Before
Ion* they were able to put upon the
market shoes as good-looking as those
made lure, of belter leather and for
less money.
Tinkering Steel is the Family Tait.
Snniuel Maxim, a brother of the
Maxliu of rapid-firing gun fume, has
made a tli . ov. rv in a process for
produce s-t.-fi wliii 1 ha reiuark ,l>le
qualitb Mt Maxim is a fanner who
lives in Maine. For mime time he
has In en experimenting with various
met hod fnr mnklng blades which will
vie with the Danittsciis bla.lt nf ini-
morlal f.une.
After reading some old Hindu hooks
he constructed a forge on the In-
dian plan, and from thin produced
an Ingot, which he forged Into 11
rough drill. Thl drill bored an Iron
file as easily as it it had been a piece
of wood. Tried with a scale of metals
gradually Increasing In hardness, this
drill penetrated them nil, not stop-
ping at the best stee| obtainable. In
ease this steel should prove to be
like that of the nnclents It wilt open
up a vast field of possibilities .
Dielman's Little Joke.
Frederick Dlelman, president of tho
National Academy of Design of New
York, has a reputation for his lino
sense of humor ns well as for his
achievements In art The other day
he lectured before the students of the
city college, where he holds the chair
of esthetics, and was trying to impn sh
( upon them the prevalence of the curve
in animal form.
"Now, gentlemen," raid President
Diclmnn. "can anybody mention even
one instance of the straight line in the
animal kingdom?" Perfect alienee
reigned for a few moments, it was
1 v blent that the students were In deep
cogitation, when at last one of the in
In the rear raised his hand.
"A dog's tail, sir." he said.
' Ah." replied I'resldent Dlelman.
without h> itation: "I sea you arc
ri duced to im cxtr- mlty."— Denver Ro-
publican.
Kilkenny Ca-t|e. Ireland, is one of
the o. li : ha! lations in tho world.
Many of tin root aie the same its
they were n0<i >intfi auo
Reasons Three, and There Are Others.
' Why I consider Cheatham's l^aia-
tlv.' Tablets the be t remedy for
Chills, llilit iisii. -,s an I Malaria First,
they cure, second, never any bad re-
siilt ; third, easy to carry, pleasant tu
take.
"I carry them always. I take thern
often Tliev made me well. Tbey
keep me Mill
('HAS E ROGKRS,
Price 2.'.c Hartshorns, 1. T.
Joy in nut's work Is the consum-
mate too. w 1M10.it which the work
nuiv lie done in.let 1 but vvltho'il
which the work a 1 always be dors
slowly, clumsily and without Its tli>
est perfection.
VARIOUS WAYS OF WORKING.
All Men Can Not Follow S.ttv# Meth-
ods In Their Labor.
We ar« rut all built alike; what Is
ore niRn's pleas ire ir, another man's
pain It is impos Sle for a one-horse
jinwer en .tu to do tho ivork of s tsa
horse | .v er 1 ng!:,e.
I have a cei: ,j who s.iv-t his best
work ' done when he lias to do a
day's work I11 a couple of hours 1
tMnk ini best work Is done when I
have a mnntl' in w.'iich to do a couple
of Imurs work.
Priu lit • U sTurlutely necessary.
Eonie never l.av • be. n obliged to ais
eiui.pli.h 1 u«:Un:'.e amount of work
each day. If you ure forced Into a
narro-.. jiath you sre 111 • ly to accom-
pINh more definite r< . 111s than you
are if ynii stroll on the boulevard.
A manag. r of a Jobbing house lays
he can do four times the work now
than when he commenced dictating.
Thin is due to practice and to lltnlfa-
tiotu' in time. He has improved In-
voluntarily because hU work forced
him ahead. I.arl M I'ratt
ROSE HAS MANY COLORS.
Peculiar Flower the Production of
Eastern Gardeners.
T he Chinese .Inoanese and Siamese
are peculiarly skillful at botanical
feats One of th -ir wonderful achieve-
ments Is known as the changeable
rose " The bloom Ii white In the
shad" and r«*d In the sunlight After
right or In 11 dark room this curiosity
of the rnsu fan. ly Is a pure waxy white
blossom When transferred to the
open air tin tr..nsio!nintlon Immedi-
ately sti p. In. fie ti. ,. i f thtj entlrs
change of the flower from white to
red depending on tl.e degree of sun-
light and warmth. F rat the petals
take on a kind of «mhed or faded blue
color, and rapidly change to a faint
blush of pink The pink gradually
dee pet s In hue until you find tha*
your lily-white rote of an hour before
Is as red as tee reddest peony that
ever bloomed
AS EASY
Needs Only a Little Thinking.
Tho food of childhood often decides
whether one Is in prow up well nour-
ished and healthy or weak and alck-
ly from Improper food
It's In t as easy to bo one as th#
other provided we ge' a proper starL
A wise physician like the Denver
Doctor who knew about food, can ac-
complish wonders provided tho pa-
tient Is willing to help and will eat
only proper food
Speaking of this case the Mother
said her little four year old boy was
suffering from a peculiar derangement
of the stomach. Ilv r and kidneys and
his feet bccarue so swollen he couldn't
take a step. "We called a Doctor who
said at once wo must he very careful
as to bis diet as improper food was
the only cause of I is sickness. Sugar
especially, he forbid.
"So the Dr made up a diet and the
principal food he prescribed was
Grape Nuts and the isiy. who was v ry
fond of sweet 1 hings took the Grap«v
Nuts readily without riding any
sugar (Dr. explained that tho sweet
In Grape Nuts Is not at all like cane
or beet sugar but Is the natural sweet
01 th. rrains )
We saw big Improvement Inside a
few days and now drupe Nuta are al-
raisl his only fiMn! ami he Is once
more a healthy, happy, rosy-cheeked
youngster v. lib every prospect to
King Edward Tires Out Subjerta.
King Kdwartl attended a recc'it
fin t tit.n at the mansion of a titled "p Into 41 strong healthy man
• ubject and rema.'ned Handing until ^s'",n" given by I'ostum Co., Rattle
many of the other guests w. re Iniost ''r°"k, Mich.
exhntrdi'I, fnr of course they could ^"'l0 KW,,ot of Grape Nuta In the Nli-
mit take seats until his niaj. sty had ''tre woct Known m |\, t Sm .r, not
done . fl; t || is nntlc. able thai ,r,l •" the 11 Vi-r like ordinary
the king, lilo bis f ather, Is practical- fim'llr but pre dl;;. st. I, Feed the
ly tireless He can l.t-ep constantly youngsters n handful of Grape Nuta
.11 the move from morning llll night w'!en Nature demands sweet ami
and Is novei in a hurry to sit down l'r'"hpts tie m to call for sugar,
and rest. He gets through a great There's a reason.
amount of routine work, loo, and "l0 little bonk "The Road to
seains to like IL
Wollvillu" Id each pkg.
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Cain, Thomas C. The Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 24, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 27, 1904, newspaper, August 27, 1904; Bastrop, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth205870/m1/4/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bastrop Public Library.