The Omaha Breeze. (Omaha, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 23, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 17, 1912 Page: 2 of 4
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£f?e (Dmafya Breeze.
Published Weekly By
W- O Williams.
AND
ENTEHKD AT THK
—Omaha Postoffice as—
8KCOND-CLASS MAIL MATTER
Subscription 50 CENTS Per
AnnumjstIn ADVANCE.
15 Cents 3 months, 30 Cents
six MONTHS.
APR. 17, 1912
Governor Colquitt gets quite a
little BeDt+uieut as well as patri-
otism into his Mothers* Day pro
clamatioo, and there is no one to
be more highly reverenced than
mother.
Fort Worth is becoming about
as notorious for sensational court
trials as Mr. Roosevelt is for run-
ning for president, but in the mat
ter of the Fort Worth trials, Tex-
as pays the freight.
Candidates are beginning to
stir around some, but so far the
county campaign promises to be
a little dull. However we ore
prepared to tit the candidates out
with nice cards cheap
Politics seems to be rather qni
et locally and not much doiug, but
the game of politics is rather pe-
culiar, and some of the biggest
schemes yet are worked rather on
the quiet or in an off hand way.
Some mighty big chunks are turn-
ed over and the average eye fails
to see the chunks move.
„There has been so much cold,
cloudy weather the past winter
and this spring that when the sun
comes out for a few bouts some
people seem to think spring has
come sure enough; shift off their
winter garb and high away to the
creeks and rivers to—get soaking
wet and cold.
Some of the biggest things hap
peniug those days that were ever
heard of, yet there is no need for
excessive alarm. People used to
didn’t hear of the big things as
they happeued like they do now,
and lots of the past has been for
gotten long, long ago.
Contrasting the Progression
Only by coutrastining the Texas
of twenty five years ago can one
get a viewpoint from which to
study the progress that has been
made and to forecast the future.
Marvelous things have been
achieved Still more marvelous
achievements are to be made.
Much has been done, but there
are limitless resources to be de
veloped; limitless opportunities to
be utilized.
Fact is Texas is so large and
great in resources that new por
tions will be developed even more
than 25 years hence, yet this por-
tion has made rapid development’
the past 25years, aud the zenith
is not near in sight even here. 1
Three Registered fiorses
AND ONE
MAMMOTH JACK.
Will Hake the Season of 1912
At fly Barn in Omaha, Tex.
CflPLlNGER, No. 404, a Black 16^ Hands High, Weighing 1400
PRINT PflTCHEN, No. 39272, a Rich Sorrel Trotter, 16 Hands
High, Weighing 1225. _ .
BRYAN CUIPPHR, No. 27291, a beautiful Mahogony Bay, 15 o 4
Hands High, weiging 1010 pounds and the finest five gaited
Saddle Horse in East Texas.
BIG JONN, a famous aMramoth Jack 15^ hands high, weighing 9oO
pounds _
Yours for uni-
formity.
Yours for great-
est leavening
power.
Yours for never
failing results.
Yours for purity.
Yours for economy.
Yours for every-
thing that goes to
make up a strictly
high grade, ever-
dependable baking
powder.
That is Calumet. Try
it once and note the im-
provement in your bak-
ing. See how much more
economical over the high-
priced trust brands, how
much better than the cheap
and big-can kinds.
Calumet is highest in quality
—moderate in cost.
Received Highest Award-
World’s Pure Food
Exposition.
TERMS.
CAPLINGER $12.50 to insure live foal.
BRYAN CLIPPER $12.50 to insure live foal.
PRINT PATCHEN $10.00 to insure 1 ive foal.
BIG JOHN $10.00 to insure live foal.
\
If mare is traded, transfered or moved from the
county the season becomes due at once.
Will uot be responsible for any accident which might occur,
but will use all precautions to prevent such.
As I have employed the best of help in the person
of R. S. * ‘Bob' ' Davis, I solicit your patronage.
T. E. BATSON.
Little Interest in Election.
The county school trustee elec-
tion, which was held in Morris
county last Saturday for the pur
pose of electing county school trus
tees, was given very little consid-
eration and only a small number
voted. Twenty votes were polled
in Daingerfield, which, no doubt,
is a pretty fair estimate on the
number of votes polled at the dif
fererit precincts over the county.
The returns of the election will be
canvassed next week by the Com-
missioners’ Court, as is required
by law. Not until then can the
number of votes cast over the
county be ascertained.—Daiuger
field News.
Not knowing the law, and hav
f
ing no explicit notice given, the
peop'e of Omaha Independent dis
trict held no election and it would
seem the commissioners would be
in an awkward atitude so far as
the county trustees are concerned
as the expression over the county
has beeu very indifferent The
Breeze is frank to assert that there
is too much iu the schools of the
coQuty to be treated so slightly.
At Last They’ve Found a Cure
for Liver Trouble.
A CURE THAT CURES: a liver
remedy which not only cleanses
and purities that organ, but ener-
gises and vitalizes it without irri-
tating—
SIMMON’S
Liver Purifier
In Yellow Tin Boxes Only
And the best cure for constipation
known.
Tell your druggist you want it:
say “SIMMON’S” arid *tick to it
He’s got it. If he hasn’t he’ll get
it for you. And it’s the one rem-
edy to get to get rid of Liver
Trouble.
At All Druggists, Everywhere, 25c & $1
A B Richards Medicine
Co Sherman Texas
Danger in Scheming.
“Many schemes go wrong that
should go wrong. Your little
scheme won’t work unless it recog
nizes the rights of others in the
big scheme of life/’
’Nough said; you’re right, and a
schetiae that is all for the good of
only one, one way, will fall Hat
sooner or later. The sooner the
better for all-
Booming and Abounding.
The hillsides are ooziug mois-
ture, the small grain is humping
aud the cattle are waxing fat on
the plains. This promises to be a
year of bounty.—Fort Worth Rec-
ord.
Yea and the people are buyiug
and hauling out more feed stuff
and things than was ever known
before.
Case Again Continued.
The Oliver murder case that
FELT BAD
ALL THE TIE
Shellhorn Lady Suffered a Great
Deal, But Is All Right Now.
Shellhorn, Ala.—In a letter from this
place, Mrs. Carrie May says: "A short
time ago, I commenced to have weak
spells and headaches. I felt bad all
the time, and soon grew so bad I
couldn’t stay up. I thought I would die.
At last my husband got me a bottle
of Cardui, and it helped me; so he got
some more. After I had taken the
second bottle, I was entirely well.
I wish every lady, suffering from
womanly trouble, would try Cardui.
It is the best medicine I know of. It
did me more good than anything I ever
used.”
Cardui is a woman’s tonic—a
strengthening medicine for women,
made from ingredients that act spe-
cifically on the womanly organs, and
thus help to build up the womanly con-
stitution to glowing good health.
As a remedy for womb’s ills, it has^
a successful record of over 50 years.
Your druggist sells it. Please try it.
N. B.— Write to: I.adles’ Advisory Dept., Chatta-
nooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.,for Special
Instructions, and 64-page book, ‘‘Home Treatment
tor Women,” sent in slain wrapper, on request.
was sent to Sherman from Frank-
lin county was called Monday of
last week and again continued.
So the witnesses from Mt Yernou
will have to make another trip,
unless the defendant should die
before the next term of coqrt__
Winnsboro Free Press.
This is a case wherein a negro
is charged with murdering a white
man, and if diffed and pipped'over
much more, will become as noto
rious as the case in Dallas that
has stood so many mistrials.
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The Omaha Breeze. (Omaha, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 23, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 17, 1912, newspaper, April 17, 1912; Omaha, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth559679/m1/2/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Atlanta Public Library.