San Patricio County News (Sinton, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 28, 1910 Page: 3 of 8
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i'*55£3
j Accidents Will Hap]
There Is Right
Place for
Every Man
CABINET
•oper
Niche
And when they do—they hurt, f
HUNT'S LIGHTNING OIL is the ]
one instantaneous relief and cure
for all wormdsf Hbrnteeay - tores,
cuts, sprains and abrasions of the ,
skin. It forms ai$-'artificial skin ■
cohering,' excludes the air instant* j *
The action is different^ and the
effect as weO. •• .•
By MADISON C. PETERS
. A—W BEAUTIFUL, behavior Is bet-
JL ter than a beautiful form,
it gives a higher pleasure
than statues or pictures, it is the finest of
the fine arts.”—Emerson.
HUNT’S,
LIGHTNING
Cordiality,
Cordiality is a quality which can be
cultivated, and there is no one thing
which makes so much difference in
our friendships as the lack of it.
How we do admire a sincere, cor-
dial friend, one who is always the
same, dependable, and meets us in
the friendly spirit at all times.
Such a friend is always there, when
needed; one knows what to expect
from him and is never disappointed.
We may be what we wish to seem,
by practise and of course in this, as
in all other virtues, growth comes by
exercise.
When* entertaining our friends the
fact that we are welcome and en-
joyed means more to us as guests
than elaborate display or fine cook-
In re - - • 3
■
Always have it In tbe house. Take
It with you when you travel---you %
never can tell when HUNT’S *
LIGHTNING OIL may be most
needed. 25ets and 50cts bottles.
.
For Sale by All Druggists
A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO., Sherman, Tex.
Mr. William A. Hadfom will answer
questions and give advice FREE OF-
COST on all subjects pertaining to the
subject of building for the readers of
this paper. On account of his wide expe-t
rience as Editor, Author and Manufac-
turer, he is, without doubt, the highest
authority on all these subjects. Address
alt Inquiries to William A. Radford, N&
194 Fifth Ave., Chicago, 111., and only en-
close two.-?.cent stamp for reply.
America is a nation of home build-
ers. It has come to the point that a
man’s standing in a community is meas-
ured by his home. It is distasteful, fo
most people to pay rent. The normal
man desires to have a h-ome of hls:
own for his children. And these chil-
dren have a right to a home of theijg
own. It goes without question thafc%’
man’s work is made lighter as -ljfe.
fthi'rtkb during the day that his wife.-
and his children are under their own'
roof. It is true that, all men dre fi&j
able to have a home of their own.
They are tied down by conditions that
prevent their entering upon so wortJ|jr
an enterprise. But the desirfe ; ‘
there,-just-the same.
In nearly every town of any Isfife
the real estate men and property
owners are anxious to offer induce^,
ments to home building, and ini matuM
Instances it is as easy to pay: for 4ft
home as it is to pay rent. Tfcle
meats are arranged so that!; they
ambunt to the same as rent ana •ftp
they include the interest each: mom®
there is no difference, really, .excepfj
that the buyer must pay the;
ance, which is a small matter. ;
When you come to think ot.lt ther'b
is really no excuse for airy ragfe pa$&
ing rent when he can get a home on
these terms. He cannot lose, anything
and trees to enhance its beauty.
These things are requirements thai
should not be lost sight of in selecting
the location. Entrance is had to a
large living room off the front porch.
This room is 12 by 20 feet in size.
To the left is the library, which can
,be used as a parlor if desired. But
the day of the parlor has passed. It
is the vogue now to live all over the
house. No longer do we see the par-
lor which is kept closed and not
profaned except when the minister
calls or sister gets married. In the
center of the house is the bathroom'
and back of this is a bedroom. The
fining room is of good size, ahd it
Will be noticed that ample light is
.provided for. In fact, throughout the
hjpuse there are plenty of windows.
The kitchen is 12 feet square.
If It ought to be mentioned that if any
person selects this design and wants
to build, the best method is to con-,
sult^jeal estate man. if the intending
own character, and the man who tries to do anything else than
that for which nature intended him will be worse than nothing,.
\i I I Many of the world’s most successful men have failed in several
i JLJ pursuits before they finally discovered the bent of their genius.
Goldsmith failed as A physician, but became immortal in
*‘The Deserted Village.*’' Cromwell was a'farmer at forty, and Grant a
. tanner at thirty-eight, although the latter had fitted himself for his great
h life work by militfity education at "West Point.
No man will ever do his best until he fills his proper niche. Many an
ambitious parent forces & boy to become either a doctor, a lawyer or a
preacher, and thus defeated, disappointed and dispirited, the boy who
might have become a successful farmer, a good blacksmith or a merchant
prince. - . J
There are many fathers who think it their divine right to dictate the
boy's calling in life. . JIandel, the great composer, was set aside for the
; • law, and his father, a physician, did all he could to. destroy the boy's fond-
i ness for music. . -ris-v v■:?-]
!j The parents of Bach meanly denied the boy a .c^nd^p he,had
| to copy his music by moonlight ; .... 01
Galileo, discoverer of the pendulum, inventor of both the microscope
i - and the telescope) waa set apart by his parents for a physician, but be
■j would hide his physiology and on the quiet work out the most difficult
It problems in mathematics. (
Lorraine, tbe pai^tec, was apprspticed-by jits parents to *• pastry|fcool^
, while Arkwright's pargn# appwfcti^ hW^ofja feber. ^4S M
John Jacob Aatflrs |athfec intended td make jh butchgr ofeh|| son£
which determination the boy to rcm^liWay from his home in Ger-
many and brought him to America. / . c. ,
There can be no greater mistake on- the part of the parent than to
i; (-aeek to bend the boy’s.design where his genius does not incline. The
i > World does not demand that any man shall be a famous lawyer, a skilful
i jj historian, an eloquent orator, or a merchant prince,
-- - ... but -tbaLjatk:^ Jtobl^purpuHgyHa: high- endeavor find a
I mi' ueeT51 «?.d “• *41. jmusdl maitei
that follows taking a dose of cai
oil, salts or calomel, is about
worst yon oan endvtre-^Gcb
gives .one the creeps, a 1ITon d
ing.
“A dinner of herbs where love is,
is better than a stalled -ox,’’ if love is."
not. ’ " ’
J - • •. /} ■ f *.-• .- ;• - ✓ - - r.- ■ ■' ■; ; C ri T *rr; A” f - -'T r j
Simple entertainment Is becoming
sensibly stylish, the tiling to doj one;
style which most of us are willing to
recognize.
The people who- can entertain their
friends simply and often* not tiring to-
ape those who can .'afford more cpstlyj
entertainment, hrd Jhstly the' popular
people of today. V-T 'i^q-yrq >:.r -
A well arranged table, beautiful iin-
’ of the.first
eSsehtfals; a simple "little Centerpiece
pf some kitar; On which?,to place the
vase or fern dish, give* an air to an
otherwise commonplace fahJe.
j In choosing dishes, the plain, or
ivorr wilored ware fe serviceable ahd
easily replaced if. brpken; them, too,
white ware goes well with any color
scheme. ^ - J =
0” Let; the glass and silver be. rubbed
bright, and glistening, aind this -will
be sufficient preparation pf the enter-,
tainment’of any guest
A gr^rt variety ofrfioOdS. are- not
good form, or ma.ny. .course* ae ,wa*
roriheriy thought a necessity,. Ay few,,
well prepared dishes* daintily served,
will make a feast fit tfc set before the •
.WfHv,. J<5 . nr: -5 '.V
• First appeal to the eye, then it is
fmer does not already own a lot,
d-arrange to have the house built
ythe monthly payments plan. Of
irse, it is prejferabrla to pay; cash #
sgible, but as has been said before,
Jfe- not necessary. • The main re-
tfeinent -at -the; outset -is -the desiro
HE RNdoVED IT.
r/Well, this certainly looks like old
d6s,”° remarked Representative
Mann of IllinoiSj as he oh-
tentions, wiU^iake Kveif ;
plain meal more enjoyable, than a ban-
qnet" 1; iJ- :. - .-
Tfc;:
mi >fl
Sr: B.ln, Agr^abta. , . - - . ;
The art of being agreeable is just'
as easy to acquire as the one of be-
ing disagreeable. There are many
young girls all over this beautiful
- :•: r' - • - 3 •' '
that has a cash value, something
could not have if hei paid ireht.. ^
senie of satisfaction in 'undertaking
an enterprise like this is tremendous,
for the occupant feels that he owns
the place the minute he gets ihto it,;
and the pleasure of making little im-
provements and adding to the attract-
iveness of the place is delightful.
There are thousands and tehs of
thousands of families In the country
living in their own homes today, in-
dependent of landlords, who never
would have possessed anything put
bh f served Mayor John F. Fitzgerald of
Boston In a corridor of the capitdl sur-
rounded by newspaper correspondents.
“Right,” chimed in Representative
Roberts of Massachusetts, as he joined
the group and shook hands, “Still talk;:
ing, Fits?”
When Mayor Fitzgerald was a mem-
ber of the house, in 1894, he was the
youngest member of that body inci-
dentally, he was the .most energetic,
and he had the reputation o» being
able to get more newspaper space
than any other member of congress.!
L. V ' xXja. J?" ;___V.
Otfnsanity
.....'’'fe iT w. Campbell, another auth.rity,
CZSISSSZSCZ33C r '^®ys: “lo^anity q^ther "effects nor disar-
W i % wtages tlwp,brain,3fcructui4lly.*'
Dr. Williwfti H. ThoinpSo'n, phyfldinTd flilfe Rbo^velt hospital, New
York, ha. alluded to the une^^disco-^ thM is not 4 die-
•eeoe of sti^^o .sWt/mScaF io^«t^s4i<H|, microscopicil or
otherwise, c»i^tihoVl3&E:leAst difference 'b&weetf eifher^rain cell orifibeC
. p. dvinjj (hp h-nh, hn,jn of HUM in an silent.
• - V'TBeAytgerlymg -canse that the sjmaptonm indicate ig ignored and; this
principally because it leads to the unpopular subject, namely—demoniacal
"Mf , • 1
the other hand, research in abnormal psychology
-fhtifcea H9at &WB now become leanhl^ t» tim&fitit1-
cases, to a psychic sensitive who exhibits all HlieT;8yinfyt
patient, with the result that the latter is i
When thfcg^je^rof^
tion to the psychical side for
in the treatment and cure o£ ii
fit po ;jfKC8 VjT-
C S, C'Tltzgerald’S vfsit,” said * member
of the house, ‘¥eniin'ds me of the days
when he was a member here. He was
the most remarkably busy, man I have
ever seen in congress He always had
something on. tap that made good
newspaper copy, and when the 4 orre;
t Wck^whftrjia; ptejia*
nicipal jgovernment? ____
Bockter—First provide sm'autO hud
then, create ah office to fill EL |
\ t hlot&r-Natun^tyl: ;^e’a as baldlfc «
. >or^noto-:^;qosfi
Kitchen
i^owov
Be . sweet. Most ot us Hkd pleasant
people around us, and we turn away
from the girl'Who always has a griev--
ance. •? ^i-s • ;- -;-v • j ,-i-: '•; .
- The; .very ;wqrst of this' whole biisi-j door -knqb
nees is that it, .cou]^ have been: eor-J
rected. Mothers often make/chlldren^-
disagreeable, Of- allow their iittde^ ;dis? •}
popitfons tp grow unchecked. They (
dp ..not realiz?.'what-trouble is bedng t"
stored up fSr the child they love. >
Many mothers are too busy tp .atudy (-
Jhfse j^ngs, ^0 . fm- ^h^jc^Mfren
spondents were in a bad Way for news
they always cPuld count upon Fitzger-
r ,ald to - give? them something worth
whiiev . - . t
L ^ ^'The present mayor ' of Boston was
the? greatest huktler T have ever seen.
■f I ^pem’ember, a story .he -tordirngtiP^ce
.about the why he kept his constituents!
has so fai ad^*"
amty,^h |iveh>
oiiik or tfie i%nh
relieved. This has gctually teen
would poont
. |tate institution in the land;:
devote more a ten* :
causes more rapid progress will be made
i'v'vi 1 cj l f-i*Z It;-;*} I
,rx«;2 'iuo io ■.ivrat'iF. ivl.* 1
ft-W^8ture: ofj our
BPifRr??1,S^Pel,l*t'd|>rd,,
to provide screens doors and Vin-‘
dows* of houses and * flats to protect their
■fenahts from -the worst eBeThy~~We h ay e_
the common touse fly
if JMk *-
mpcHind ^ q;;T,
-T'r.TtT "^Tfi
•iv-; TBi
comes life:
DiisiHC Pm
\ZVW0'
%ttehslBii; as^to his ^fiereabOuth.' :Hp
f; tyonWf d.§liVer ‘a corking; good: apehett
in.ti»e affernopm hustle down to; ther
** sthtion &H^'icatch’ihe thfPugb train1 tor.
/; Bbstaa.TJanftt the nCxtA morning - 'he
. would be back, home getting first hfmd
- .??fermatio^ as to how his femarks:<f
Were feceiverf in fds district.'' ' b :teanv of i±
It l “Jumping back and forth ,'batWden ,^ave ,a ^0(
, Washington and Boston-.was; quite ;as ; Bweet' way>
■lil'i iiB:
Library
iz’crxix'cr
a. rrr 1
AMTI’-MO-J ilf W *j .Y
■‘MV'.'l fmii 'VISAI
Unclean
Porch
nctrxov
:,cuf out an
islri filth,
at* feeds
Wy -
and enter
our homes and deposit its germ a.
.••rrr. - ; -. *r >. • gs. n \\Z$- ■+¥ F.WSW- *r- -
It .la scientifically proved that the Com-
mon house fly 13 the cause of more fatal
' disease tliaa any otlier thing we contend
*i with-
The fly naftare is alTilthy thing. The fly is horn in filth,
feeds upon filth and takes naturally to filth. Then he enters our homes
and proinenatfcfe^h^orfour moots, our fruits, our bread; he falls into coffee
-be ge** iat© ■our milk, he gets into our sugar bowl. He leaves the bacteria
a dozep. 9r more diseases on ami in the food we eat: '
9.1 fT° VWye tcateh a lmlf-dozen flies and put them under a micro-
H|# WWL*e the bacilli. To prove them dangeroua lacilli
iajie them* tp some jwqflical laboratory and you will find the truth of my
Floor Plan A every, day.”—Washington Times. ,
for this system"eff monthly payments. - -• '
It is not necessary to have, a large Famous Guide a Suicide,
amount of money In Niany cases. All Adolphe Balmat, one of the most
the real estate man wants is a small famous of the Swiss guides, has enm-
payment down as an evidence of good mltted suicide within sight of Mont
faith, or an earnest that the buyer Blanc, the mountain his ancestor had
means business and will not move in been the first to scale, in 1786, and
a pionth or two. which the old guide himself had
The house we show here is one of climbed nearly seventy times. He was
the type being sold in many localities, no one-mountain man and he knew
Do you not think it would hte happier Monte Rosa, the Matterhorn and the
for you to live in a house like this Jungfrau equally well. But, unwilling
than-pay rent? You will have some- to risk any longer the lives of his c|i-
thing to live for, and it will be the ants or to content himself—he, the
ambitiop of yotir wife and yourself | great Balmat—with beaten tracks, atjd
to get it; paid for as soon as possible, j unable to bear the mention of his
Ahd you have no idea how easy it will name grow scarcer and scarcer, he has
be. This house is arranged with a taken what is known as the coward’s
view to convenience in housekeeping way out. “How dull it is to pause, to
There are no stairs to climb. And make an end, to rust unburnish’d;” ife
ybu will notice that the front porch saved many lives for the one he took,
is included under the roof. The house The bitterness of being superseded is
Is 26 feet witie and 53 feet long. This tasted to the full only by those wtjo
house ought to be built on a wide lot refuse to relax the battle against
that will allows D^tuP.L^r5il,ilPfy4^7-rLond^^niB«.Stand&^ J i
;?i-U Lk" A ;
take their place. '--dill
iPj |rs (
you &is 1
nvt a stimulant but-ft-*;
rebuUder.)
*> L V. PACKARD
Ten days trial show
big results -; that-pohis
to it, :
“There’s . Reaso.
Get toe little book,
Road to WeUTilfe.” tk
Real Southern Biscuits.
Three pints pf flour, two eggs, one-.
fourth teaspoonful of salt, one cupful
of sweet milk, two tablespoonfuls of
sugar, one cake of compTesed: yeast
dissolved in half a .cupful qf. water.
This makes a stiff dough; allow It to
rise four or five hours, then roll out
and cut with two sizes at- cutters.
Place smaller oct larger, uttn. jn
let rise again. Bak6 t%ent'/ mtliiitie*?
mBste.
JKStffStlL
111
1
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McCauley, W. S. San Patricio County News (Sinton, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 28, 1910, newspaper, July 28, 1910; Sinton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth718806/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sinton Public Library.