The Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 45, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 28, 1905 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 24 x 18 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I
AGED MAN SUES FOR LARGE
SUMS HE GAVE HIS MISTRESS
fa
7
JOHN R
Shi t' lu-n
&■
mm
Mrs. Hannah Elias.
Sketched in court.
CAN FEED MILLIONS MORE.
Earth Capable of Sustaining 5,000.COO.-
000 of Human Beings.
Prof. N. S. Shaler of Harvard, writ-
ing in the International Quarterly. es-
timates thai the world as it in could
feed a population about double what
it has at present. This, however, Ik
not the limit of the earth's capacity,
for there are vast areas of swamp
land, and still vaster areas of arid
land that are capable of reclamation,
the former by draining, after the man-
ner that has been adopted so success-
fully in Holland; the latter by irriga-
tion. In the I niterl States alone he
estimates that not less than 100,000
square miles of marsh and swamp
might be brought under cultivation,
and a considerably larger extent of
now waterless plains. In Europe there
is little, comparatively speaking, to
be done in either direction, but in Asia
and Africa there are vast opportuni-
ties for increasing the area of culti-
vable land. The Nile alone, the pro-
fessor savs, could water ten times as
much territory as it now does. Alto-
gether he estimates that the engineer
could render available new land to
feed a third population as great as the
present popnlctlon "f the globe. This,
in his opinion, Is the limit. Well, sup-
posing that the world with its popula-
tion trebled is supporting some five
thousand millions of human beings
there would still be about a ten-acre
lot for each individual It will be a
very different world, however, from
the world of to-da>.
Englishmen Seeing a Light.
English travelers are coming over
in Increasing numbers every year, and
If the distances were as short or ex-
penses as little as traveling on the
continent we should (jet more of them.
What has contributed as much as any-
thing else toward compelling compli-
ments from tlx- English, who are slow-
to admit good things In other people,
is th" knowledge that the American
men and women can take care of
themselves anywhere and under al-
most any conditions. They like our
Independence, which. as sensible
Americans themselves admit, is often
made to appear unattractive, and they
like our honesty and eourig" Said
an obnrvan' Englishman: "It Is easy
to look down upon the American, but
the K'rio 'rouble Is to get him to
look up to you."—Baltimore Herald.
Miss Florence Kelly May Be New
York's Commissioner of Labor.
There seems to be a good prospect
that the next state commissioner of
labor in New York will be a won.an.
Miss Florence Kelly is being urged for
the place to succeed John Me.Mackin,
whose removal is imminent on ac-
count of his failure to enforce the
chibl labor laws. A number of so-
cieties and philanthropic persons have
sent letters and petitions to Gov. IIIk
gins urging the appointment of Miss
Kelly. She is a daughter of the Pent
sylvanla congressman familiarly
known as "Pig Iron" K"lly. and was
labor commissioner of Illinois under
the administration of Gov. Altgcld. A
report has !:een prepared by the New
York child labor committee showing
that the employment of child labot
was twice as extensive in 1904 as it
had been In the year previous.
Bread Worth Preserving.
Sit Wilfrid I^auson, the noted Eng-
! lifeli temperance r"fortner, tells of a
ma;or in one of the Inland towns, also
a strong prohibitionist, who was in
cited to dinner by a neighboring may
or. It was an especially festive occa
sion and all sorts of drinkables were
at band, but, of eourse. tins visiting
n ayor abated none of his t< etotai
ideas. It happened, however, that tin
host's butler, long in the family serv-
ice, was a good deal of a wag. Fill-
ing a tumbler from a bowl of milk
flinch oil the sideboard hi' set It with-
on warning at the prohibitionist's el
bow. The worthy guest took a long
pull at what he supposed to be his
favorite beverage, set down his tum-
bler and exclaimed with pious fervor;
"Lord, but it was a great cow gave
11 at miik "
Rapid Modern Travel.
Charles I). Boyd left I'nrls on Sat
u.day morning. D« c. 24. at 9:2ft o'clock
fjtsd arrived at Cherbourg at 4 p. m.
At C o'clock In the evening he board-
ed the steamer Philadelphia from the
tender On Saturday afternoon, Dec.
31, after a stormy passage, he reached
New York at 2 o'clock At 5 o'clock
he left Jersey City and at 4 o'clock
Sunday afternoon lie was in Chicago
At 5 o'clock he left that city and was
in Milwaukee at a few minutes after
7 o'clock Sunday evening, making the
long trip In a we. k and a day.
Fortunes in Old String.
Tin re Is money in bandMnK bits of
old string and rope, and there are sev-
eral larg« dealers In these commodi-
ties In London. Thousands of pounds
are made by buying and selling old
fishing nets alone; but this Is a mere
bagatelle to the cash that Is turned
over In handling old cordage not in-
cluding the fitting of a large sailing
vessel costs from $10.mm to fl6,00ft,
and that thlt has to be constantly re
ncwed, It will be seen that an enor-
mous trade must be carried on in the
particular department.
1-IIWllUillPBIL < .
. PLATT.
ill COl'lt
The suit of John K Piatt to recover
from Mrs, Hannah Ellas, an attractive
mulatto, with whom Piatt admits il-
licit relations, the sum of $tiN5,ftt)0,
alleged to have been extorted from
'iiin by her, Is on trial in New York.
The crowd of morbid curiosity seek
ers anxious to get a glimpse of the
colored defendant fought for nditiis
sion to the court room.
The sketches show the complainant
and defendant as they appeared in
court. Mr Piatt, who Is 7tl years of
age, told the story of his dealings
with the Elias woman with the utmost
frankness. The scoring he received
from the eminent lawyers defending
his discarded mistress seemed in no
way to affect his composure.
GUARDS WHiTE HOUSE DOOR.
Arthur Simmons Has Held Important
Position Forty-two Years.
Arthus Simmons, the negro door-
keeper and messenger at the white
bouse, has held that position for forty
two years, serving tinder ten Presidents
and being one of the government's
most faithful employes. He was born
a slave in North Carolina, ran awaj
to Washington at the out break of the
civil war and managed to get an inter-
view with Lincoln, who appointed him
doorkeeper. It was to Simmons that
President Grant offered his famous
threat: "Do you see that n.an?" point
ing to an imp< rtunate and persistent
ofpeeseeker who had bothered Gen
Grant to the point of distraction.
Yes," replied Simmons. "Well, that
man is after your job. The next time
you let him In here I'm going to give
it to him." Needless to say the of-
fice seeker never secured another in-
terview with the President.
URGE WOMAN FOR POSITION
Cranberry Culture.
When the conditions are right cran-
heiry culture Ik a paying business.
The berries being firm, at' good ship-
pers, and there is little IIIIIhood of
loss in transit. Pent bogs are consid-
ered to be In st adaptei'. to this bus!
iicos. The bog must be drain* d to
about IS inches below the surface,
and pure sand must be spread over
it to a depth of several incnea. The
cuttings which should be obtained
from plants tinder cultivation If the
In results are desired are then
si t out. four in a hill, about a fool
apart. Plants yield most abundantly
from the third to the tenth year, ami
will i|i n average Joe Lishels to the
acre When It is known that $2.50
per bushel l., a good av< rage price, the
profit, after the first cost has been
made up. can easily be estimated. The
first cost is really the only expense
| except picking, and Ills varies accord
ing to the local!.... CrunberrJ' culture
might be called a one man Industry
since one man can easily handle a
ten-acre marsh, except during harvest,
when lie secures help from tho adja-
cent ranches or from the Indians.—
Emma Seckle Martshall, in Sunset
Magazine.
Utilizing Manure.
The advantage to land which is said
to come from keeping live stock on It
will I'c largely neutralized if the win-
ter accumulation of manure is not
carefully saved and applied to the
fields that net I it. And it is to call
attention to this fact that, where cir-
cumstance.- will allow hauling out ma
nure directly from the stable to field
Is now urged, it has heretofore beer,
stated that the liquid portion of an
animal's excrement exceeds the solids
in fertilizing value. The records of
the Wisconsin station Indicate that in
cow manure there is 2u lbs. of nitro-
gen excreted dally in the solid portion
and .24 lbs. in the urine. In view of
this, a little thought on the subject:
will convince iinyotn that to thro'., the
manure out of the stable door and
leave it in piles there must be a great
waste, by reason of the leaching away
of 'lie liquids. They enter the ground
in the Immediate vicinity of the pile,
and are practically lost; for the earth
thus saturated and enriched is sel-
dom utilized for crop growing, or Is
carted away and spread as a fertilizer
elsewhere.- Farm, Stock and Home.
Independence of the Farmer.
The farmer should feel proud of his
profession, as it is one of the most
useful and necessary occupations. He
does not sit on tho ragged edge of
doubt as to the permanency of his
position. He studies the laws of na-
ture and derives maintenance from her
bounteous stores. When times are
hard and laborers are clamoring for
work, he has plenty of business to oc-
cupy his time. If the farmer com-
mences with small capital his invest-
ment is sure to increase, for the
earth often rewards the husbandman
an hundredfold. The proper manage-
ment of small undertakings leads to
larger enterprises. The well-tilled
farm produces abundantly, and the
farmer always has a surplus to sell
that makes him Independent even Id
strenuous times. The farmer Is tne
foundation of the commercial prosper-
ity of the country.—Uarntim's Midland
Farmer.
Deep and Shallow Plowing.
Deep or shallow plowing Is a sub-
ject. of perennial discussion and often
fierce controversy; some parties there-
to Insisting thai one style of plowing
is tho proper thing tinder all circum-
stances, and the others claiming the
opposite. As a matter of fact each
side is doubtless right from Its view-
point. and wrong from the viewpoints
of its opponents. Deep or shallow
plowing is good or 111 according to con-
ditions of soil, in mechanical structure,
in the plant food it contains, the crop
to be grown, etc. In short, the hard
and fatt. rules in farming that are
safe to follow at all times are so few
that they cut but litt!• figure in good
farm management.
New Farm Motive Power,
No more significant change is taking
place in American agriculture than the
extent 'o which different kinds of mo-
tive power are taking the place of
men ami animals. The use of the
traction engine and automobile in the
place of the horse on the country
ad, the employment of gasoline,
team, wlt'd and electric power to op-
erate mower-, threshers, plows, feed
flitters, cor.' buskers, and dairy ma-
chinery are Illustrations of epoch-
anking changes that are now golni'
on on hi rv modi rn American farm.
On one ranch In California there Is
n e nun worth of farm machinery op-
• rated b" other power than animal or
man
Cood in Ha'ry Vctch.
Hairy vetch as a cover crop stands
at the very top. It makes the cover
all right even where seed |« used only
at the rate of a peel; to the acre I
ee however, that the Cornell station
people have the same difficulty In get-
ting It to produce seed that I found
In re and reported about a yi ar tiro.
Ore of our Western friends recom-
mended the crop a ten fir-., beginning
to bloom, and promised a second
growth that would tnafni" seed, but 1
have not yet trlei. this For my next
sowing I shall ml. rye with the vetch,
aril expect much ft ,>m the comblna-
tlin Cor Fartut1 and Fireside.
GREAT SUFFERER
LAY HELPLLS8 AND sriJE0flLES3
FOR II01R3 AT A TIME.
Sinking Kprlla, KliiuinnlUm,
All ( uiiai'il by I'mir IIIoimI ( uivd by
l>i . William*' rink Till*.
When Mrs. Williams was asked fur
some details of tho fearful illness from
which she had so loiiy severed, she spoke
us follows:
" Kver since I had nervous proatration,
about thirteen years ago, 1 have hud
periodical spells of complete exhaustion.
Any excitement or unusual activity
would throw mo into a state of lifelcss-
iiess. At the beginning my strength
would como back in u moderate time,
but the period of weakness kept length-
ening until at last 1 would lie helpless
us many us three hours nt a stretch."
" You were undor medical treatment,
of course V'
" Yes, when I became so bad that 1
had to give up my housework, in May of
11)011, 1 was being treated for kidney
trouble, and later tho doctor thought my
difficulties came from change of life, i
was not only weak, but I had dizzy
feelings, palpitation of th" heart, misery
after eating, hot flashes, nervous head-
aches, rheumatic pains in tho back and
hips. The doctor did mo so little good
that I gave up his treatment, and really
feared that my case was incurable."
" What saved you from your state of
hopelessness? "
"lu July of 1003 I had a very bad
spell, and my husband came in one day
with a little book which told of remark-
able cures effected by a remedy for the
blood and the nerv es, Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills. He bought a box for me, and
that was the beginning of my return to
health. My appetite grew keen, iny food
no longer distressed me, my nerves were
quieted, and my strength began to re-
vive "
"I low long did you lake t his remedy?"
" For two mouths only. At the end
nf that, time I had regained my health
nud cheerfulness, and my friends say
that 1 am looking better than 1 have
done for the past fifteen years."
Mrs Lizzie Williams is now living nt
No. Iltl Cedar street. Quiiicv, Illinois.
The pills which she praises so highly,
cure nil diseases that come from itii-
poverishcd blood If your system is all
run down, Or Williams Pink Pills are
the very h -st remedy to take. Any drug-
gist- can supply them.
EVENTS OF EVERYWHERE.
i
It's a wise
know:; Its own
Industrial stock thai
par.
A Rare Cood Thin^.
"Am nsIng A LLKN S I-'OO'l F.ASK. and
can truly siiv 1 would not have been without
It so long, had I know a the relief It would
give my aching feet 1 ' liink it a rare good
thing for auviii'i having ■ re er tired feet.—
Mrs M.itild Il"ltvert Providence, it L"
bold by all Druggists, ~->c. sink iu-Uay.
The favorite pastime of a lynchln
party Is looping the loop.
Insist on Getting It.
Rome grocers say they don't limp
Defiance .Starch. This is Ix. ause they
have a stoi-k on band of other brand
containing only II' oz lu a package
whleh tin y won't In- able to sell lirsi
because pi ttance contains I'i oz. fur
the same money.
Do you want It o*. ineti ad of 12 n*.
for name n mi'' Then buy Defiance
Htarcli. Iti'nulri'8 ro cookin •.
Insomnia Is seldom caused by th.
thingu a man doesn't >:ay.
Two men and a woman, Italian rag
pickers, were burned to death In New
York Friday in a lire which d stmy
i ed a hovel. j
The school at Oak Valley, Nava to
County, has been closed temporarily on
account of gome ptipilB having been ex-
posed to smallpox.
Hud Carrol! a lie ;ro nt Marlln ploy-
ed with a suposodly empty pistol. The
' wound Is n rather seriou* one in the
region of the knees.
President Woodrow Wilson of
Princeton College Is recovering
from a dangerous operation perform
ed at the Presbyterian Hospital in
New York.
Thousands of operatives, at Fall
River, Mass., who have been idle for
nearly six months as a result of the
great textile strike returned '.o work
Thursday.
John Clark, commonly known as Hi
avolo, a trick bicycle rider, while per-
forming an act at Cienfuegos, Cuba.
Sunday, was probably fatally Injured
by his wheel breaking.
CONSTANT ACHING.
Pack aches all the time. Spoils.
your appetite, wearies the body, wor-
ri •. the mind Kidneys causo it ail
and 1 loan's lCinncy
and
■j, ^ '
Pills K'lieve
cure it.
H H. McCarvcr,
of Jul Cherry St.,
Portland, ' >r« . in
spei tor of freight
for the Trans-Con-
tinental Co., says:
"I used 11' an- Kid
jo > Pills lor i a. l<|
ie he and >' her |
symptoms of kid-
ney trouble vv hi h
had annoyed uie
jiji months I th.tik
a cold was respon-
sible for the whole trouble, it seemed
tii settle in my kidneys iioan 's Kid-
ney Pi'ls looted it out. It is several
nion'lis since I used thaui, and up to
date tin re has been no n < urn ace of
the trouble."
I loan's Kidney Pills for t-p.!• ■ by all
dealers. Price .">() cents per box. Fob-
•er Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N V
i
When an unmarried woman dies in
I3rny.il the coffin, hearse and livery of
the coacnman are all scarlet.
15 YEArtS OF TORTURE.
Itching and Painful Sores Covered
Head and Body—Cured in Week
By Cuticura.
"For flfteor yearn my scalp and
forehead was one mas- of scabs, and
my body was covered with sores.
Words cannot express how I suffered
from the Itching and pain. I had giv-
en iif) hope when a friend told me to
get Cutlcuri. Aftei bathing with
Cuticura Snap and applying Curtl-
cura Ointment for three days, my
head was as clear as ever, and to my
surprise anil joy, one cake of nap and
one box of ointment made a complete
cure in one week, (signed) II. D.
Franklin. 717 Washington St., Alle-
gheny, Pa."
Gallallthc, or "milk stone," is being
much used for decorating, and prom-
ises to take the place of marble.
Every housekeeper should know
that If they will buy Defiance Cold
Water Starch for laundry use they
will save not only time, because It
never sticks to the Iron, but because
each package contains l«i oz. one full
pound—while all other Cold Water
Starches are put up In % pound pack-
ages, and the price is tho same. 1CI
cents Then again because Defiance
Starch Is free from all injurious chem-
icals. if your grocer trle.s to sell you
a 12-oz package It is because be has
a stock on hand which he wishes to
dispose of before he puts In Defiance.
He knows that Defiance Starch has
printed on every package in lurge let-
ters and figures "16 ozs " Demand De-
fiance and save much time and money
and the annoyance of the Iron stick-
ing. Defiance never Btlcks.
A good reputation Is like gooit
health; it is not fully fully appreciated
until it. is lost.
Deafness Cannot lie Cured
by 1 I H) *i>j llcatl mh ttifv I'Ht.m I r> * h tli« dU
por n of tin* r r«im- |„,.n y < h nv ti
ctirr (lrafni-ft* ari'l that l« by c HiMtliutl tiai tfmfirra
liPAfiiran U < it !'• -1 I') it ti i nflar.f «1 • omi:H m of 11 «•
Hlil«..uM lining - f lit* | M fin Til < When till a
tiii'P l« llirt f rii y •<, I,av i■ k i i iihltiiif Hint or 111'
P -rf ' i hearing ami v. hen It t* entirely < «i «l.
iicf« In the • • vtj t, | un.ru ihi* liiflAintiiutlun run h*
Mk< :i out nticl tl •) t ih-p'Ht r« i t i It n rti.a! • nil
i' rn, h'-arlni: *'1 he •! Mr - i r.rcter rint ni i-«
out f ten ur« i in • il hy i i. arrh. nhh h 1« M -thln#
but an Inf. r in! r Mill : n • f the nnic nm imrf.ii <
U v v. I i Klii' l Ml* lliUDiri <1 I' Mr* fur ar. y mn«* < t
Ilpitfn* «* (• iaii<" <1 liytj'ii"' th ; « mix t l e cured
by IIan a Caurrh 1 ore i I f. • t-'ir'Ham fier.
F. •) CliJ.NJ i a to., Tuledo, o
£•>!-. hy IV
lakcHn. Family I'I h tor conMlpttlon,
The Arlzonr legislature passed
unanimously a joint resolution protest
in ngaiust statehood and New Mcx
Ico In any form, and preferring Terri-
torial government forever.
W. It. Hearst has captured the
Greater New York Democracy, and
will use 'hat organization, or, rather,
its name, in fighting Tammany In the
municipal campaign next fall.
F. M. Halter was run over by a Tex-
as and Pacific engine in the Western
part of the yard, at Fort Worth, Tues-
day nigh; and his left leg was so bad-
ly mangled that amputation between
In 1 !Ki.'} the Hel-Tl sank near the El-
liott I lands, .vhile carrying to Japan
$ I lf>,On0,OOO In treasure, which was a
portion of China's war indemnity. The
, Swedish Salvage Co has just recov
en d eight chests of gold, and expects
to re \i\ er the remainder.
There are ten degrees of proficiency
In jiu jitsii In Japan, fiw attaining to
even the second. Recently, when an
officer, who had shown great proficien-
cy in the art, died heroically at Port
Arthur, his name was advanced a de
gree In jiu-jitsu, as that was deemed
the highest possible honor to his mem
i ory.
The real Russian never comes to th<
United Strtes. except an oecasi >na'
student of business man. The Czar'f
policy is to encourage ihose racial ele
ments who do not accept the nntlnoa'
religion and customs to leave and keet '
the others at home. There are at least
fifty well defined races in Russia, eact
with a different language
The Italian emigrants come here tc '
work, and the* do work, and their pi>
tentlailiy for Improvement and prog
ress Is remarkable. The objection tc '
this race lies in its adherence to the
Idea that 'bey are colonists of tln>
mother 'and, and while here, subject
to !,.-r authority The "I.a Col.ona'
idea makes the assimilatln of the ltal
Ian very difficult.
A committee has been named for
the cniployin. nt by the House of Illi-
nois of io policemen at t". per diem,
.7 pages at $1.50, 1.1 Janitors at $L', a
superintendent of ventilation at $3.
and J assistants at $2.50. in Texas
ff. a day seems to be a minimum limit
for any service.
A man named Henry Mardus has
been arrested at ilyron, a small vll
lage in Kills County, on a charge of
violating the revenue law In Alabama.
The arre.-a was made by deputy 1' n It -
i ll States marshals.
A happy, smiling, cheery face pays
much of the fare In the journey of life
Mrs. Carrie Nation is iu Shawnee
Ok., and will deliver two lectures at
the opera house Sunday. On February
7 Mrs. Nation will edit an edition ol
the Shawnee Dally News.
A company is being organized nt
Durant, I. T,. for the purpose of estab-
IshliiK a canning factory at that place
it is the Intention to have the plant
erected and ready for the. coming crop
of fruit ami vegetables.
The price of n ws print paper has
gone down I" per cent in six months.
The cost of paper to the publishers of
the United S'ates for the year 11105
ought to be $•;,turn,tinti less than It
would have been had not tho trust
been defeated.
The Japanese capturer the Ilrlthdi
steamer Oakley Iu Tsu^hlnilma straits
Wednesday afternoon The ve tel left
Cardiff Nov. 17, (tarrying 5,1100 tons of ,
coal for Vladivostok. She was
brought to Sasebo.
John Randolph Hull, a veteran of
two wai , and for many yean, a whole
sale produce dealer lu Louisville, Ky ,
and an intimate friend of (icn. I,a
layette and Henry Clay, died at his
home at liayoniio, N J , at an advanc-
ed ago.
it) view of I, iz!n;- pri c r;,' -, yotin •
Mr. Could may b i-xoii . lot ri uori
Ing to firearms.
The fashion editor .ays the oyster
rhndo is a good color for new gown*
We pti siune it i quiet.
Elephant Memory Cood.
Elephants nevir m in to forget tho
/cssotiK they learn .n cii|tlvlty. A
traveler tells of one which had been
trained to tarry haggat'e and which
escaped from i! l.t per and iuii wild.
Eight en months afti ward it was roc*
ognized In a herd of wild elephants.
It seemed at first us savage as any
of the herd, but when its old keeper
boldly seized it by the ear and told
It to lie down it obeyed.
Underground In a Co'd Mine.
Few people realize the i \tent of tho
hnderground workings of a ;;o!d mine.
One mine in the Colorado Cripple
Creek district, Colorado, has over
twenty six miles of development un-
derground, and is adding to this terri-
tory about four mib s a year. It
would require a wi« k of walking, rid-
ing and climbing t > n. j eri even half
of this mine.
In Lapland the crime which Is pun-
ished most seven ly. next to murder
is the marrying of a ^-rl against the
express wish of her pa
lta': have eaten $'-5,0011 worth of
hearer bonds belonging to a Paris
couple Tlie bonds were kept in an
oivl hat box.
HIS EXPERIENCE TEACHES THEM
That DocJd's Kidney Pills will cure
Br;yht'e Disease. Remarkable case
of George J. Barber—Qu.ik recov-
ery after years of suffering.
Kstherville, Iowa. Jan -3d. 'Spe-
cial) The iiporlei.'ce of Mr (Jinrgo
J. Harbor, a well known citizen of this
place, justifies his friends iu making
the announcement to the world
"Hrlght's Disease enn be cured." Mr.
Harbor had kidney trouble and it de-
veloped into Bright'* Disease Ho
treated It with Dodd's Kidney Pills
and to-day he 1* a well man. In an
interview he says
"I can't say too much for Dodd's
Kidney Pills. I had Kidney Di ease
for fifteen years and though I doctor-
ed for It with the be t doctors here
and In Chicago, it developed into
Bright s Disease. Then I started to
use Dodd's Kidney Pills and two boxes
cured me completely. I think Dodd's
Kidney Pills ari* tho best In the
world "
A remedy that, will cure Blight's
Disease will cure any other form of
Kidney Disease. Dodd's Kidney p|||s
never fail to cure Bright'* Disease.
A gallon of water a day Is drunk by
every Japanese who practice as neat
Iv all do, the gymnastics knov.n as
ju-jltsu.
Strike Oil.
Much oil has been discovered In
Texas within the past few years, but
none to equal Hunt's Lightning Oil.
Others gusli for a little while and
•hen go away. It goes on and on for-
ever, i urlng aches, pains, burns,
bruises, cuts and wound* In fact, a
'ore spot Hunt's Lightning nil will
not make happy can't tie found.
One of the best te-i of a sound
man Is that he possessor great we*h,j
and Is not arrogant.
All Up-to-Date Housekeepers
use I>i>fiulie* Cold Water Hlnreh, be-
i :111m- II Is U tter, and 4 oz more of It
for same money.
A French professor Is thu owner of
a collection of !i^n human heads, rep-
resenting every known race of people
► ♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ 4- ♦ -f ♦♦♦ -f -H
TBADE
r'AHK
: THERE IS NOTHING
£ more p«lr.ful than
* Rheumatism j
* and
* Neuralgia
a. but lliore Is nothlrr surer to
X euro than
I St .Jacobs Oil
* i
•>
«>
The old mr" V cjr* III* p«n«-
Inline, prou lit m. 1 unfai.uig.
Prico 25c. and JOc.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Cain, Thomas C. The Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 45, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 28, 1905, newspaper, January 28, 1905; Bastrop, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth205891/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bastrop Public Library.