The Lampasas Daily Leader. (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 3189, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 16, 1912 Page: 3 of 4
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WHERE DOCTORS
FAILED TO HELP OALGO
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta*
ble Compound Restored
Mrs, Green’s Health—
Her Own Statement,
Covington, Mo. —“Your medicine has
done me more good than all the doc-
tor’s medicines. At
everymonthly period
I had to stay in bed
four days because of
hemorrhages, and
my back was so weak
I could hardly walk.
I have £een taking
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com-
pound and now I can
stay up and do my
work. I think it is
$he best medicine on earth for women. ”
—Mrs. Jennie Green, Covington, Mo.
How Mrs. Cline Avoided
Operation.
Brownsville, Ind.—“I can say that
t,ydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
has done me more good than anything
else. One doctor said I must be opera-
ted upon for a serious female trouble
and that nothing could help me but an
operation.
‘‘I had hemorrhages and at times
could not get any medicine to stop them.
I got in such a weak condition that I would
have died if I had not got relief soon.
“Several women who had taken your
Compound, told me to try it and I did
and found it to be the right medicine to
tmiid up the system and overcome
female troubles. .
“I am now in great deal better health
than I ever expected to be, so I think I
ought to thank you for it”—Mrs. O. M.
Cline, S. Main St., Brownsville, Ind. ,
WILDUR P.>JESBIT
Ofe STRANGER
tiv
.....
MUSTANG
sS^^BaSBi^he!
L-l N j
For BURNS and BRUISES.
Mr. W. V. Clifton, Raleigh, N. C., write*'.
“I keep a bottle of Mexican Mustang
Liniment in my house continually for gen- |
era! use. It is the finest thing in the world
for Guts, Bums and Bruises.”
25c. 50c. $1 a bottle at Drug & Gen’l Stores I
FERRY5Y
SlEEDlSnSfi m
jBrarjaw^^^raiscgoodflow-
. JBjBSw ers and vegetables. Good ng
MfW flowers and vegetables come JHagf
wbmb from good seeds. We pro- if
SH duce good seeds—the infer- MSEESI
Hi ence is obvious. For sale p
« everywhere.
S 1912 SEED ANNUAL jEggsW
fSB Free on Request jmmW
D.M. FERRY &
Post Puller,
Used by Farmers, Teamsters, ta Factories,'
Mills, Mines, etc. Weight 24 lbs. Capacity 3
tons. Mo experience necessary. Free instruc-
tion. Write ior special oiler to lire agents.
Send no money. Marne county where you livfc
AUTOMATIC JACK COMPANY
Box 267 Bloomfield, Ind.
THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY.No.|.No.2.No.3«
THERAPION
'ORKAT SUCCESS, CUBES PILES, KIDNEY. BLADDER Dig-
BASES, CHRONIC ULCERS/ SKIN ERUPTIONS—EITHER SEX
address envelope- for FREE booklet to Dr. Le Cle
fiend
ild ED.
CO.. HA VERST'
pe for
COCK R]
to Dr. Le Clerc.
.Do. HAMPSTEAD, LONDON, ENG.
&&pi£(ts remedy:
1
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
in time. Sold by Druggists.
FOR COUGHS AND COLDS
W. N. U., DALLAS, NO. 10-1912.
Texas Directory
barbers!^
st line and best grinder In state.
TURNER
est line anc
CABTAN
CO., Ft. Worth, Tex.
CANDIES for AMERICAN QUEENS
/ Best at any Price.
KING CANDY COMPANY, Fori Worth, Tern
$3.50 Recipe Free,
For Weak Kidneys.
Relieves Urinary ^,nd Kidney
Troubles, Backache, Straining,
Swelling, Etc.
Stops Pain in the Bladder,
Kidneys and Back.
Wouldn’t it be nice within a week or so
to begin to say good-bye forever to the
scalding, dribbling, straining,' or too fre-
quent passage of urine; the forehead and-5
the back-of-the-head aches; the stitches
and pains in the back; the growing-mus-
cle weakness; spots before the eyes; yel-
low skin; sluggish bowels; swollen eye-
lids or ankles; leg cramps; unnatural short
breath; sleeplessness and the despondency/
I have a recipe for these troubles that
you can depend on, and if you want to
make a quick recovery, you ought to
write and get a copy of it. Many a doc-
tor would charge you $3.50 just for writing
this prescription, but I have it and will
be glad to send it to you entirely tree.
Just drop me a line like this: Dr. A. iL.
Robinson, K-2059 Luck Building, Detroit,
Mich., and I will send it by return mail
in a plain envelope. As you will see when
you get it, this recipe contains only pure,
harmless remedies, but it has great heal-
ing and pain-conquering power.
It will quickly show its power once you
use it.^so I think you had better see. what
it is without delay. I will send you a copy
free—you can use it and cure yourself at
home.
HIS THOUGHT.
C. E. HOFFMAN COMPANY
BARBERS’SUPPLIES & FURNITURE
WRITE FOR OUR NEW CATALOGUE
1709 MAIN STREET DALLAS, TEXAS
our wholesale price-list and
terms to agents. Send 25 cents
for three samples religious
mottoes. Sell at sight.
ANDERSON PORTRAIT A
FRAME CO., Dallas, Texas.
THEBEST STOCK
SADDLES:; ^
able prices, write for frea
illustrated catalogue.
JA. H. HESS & CO.
305 Travis SL. Houston. Ten
Fortissimo.
When a certain Baltimore matron
returned home one afternoon not so
lotig ago the first sight her eyes be-
held was a badly damaged youngster
of hers. Little Bobby’s forehead bore
a bump almost the size of a doorknob.
“Heavens!” exclaimed the mother.
“What has happened to Bobby?”
“Nuthin’ much, mum,” explained the
new nurse. “You told me, ;mum, he
might play on the planner if he want-
ed to. Well, mum, wanst while he
was sliding on the top, he slid a bit
too far, mum; an’ that accounts for
the bump ye see, mum.” \
Occasionally we meet a man whose
train of thought reminds us of a row
of flat cars.
Garfield Tea will keep the Whole system in.
perfect condition.
If love is really blind how is it that
love can always find a way?
FREE
I want every person
who is bilious, consti-
pated or has any stom-
ach or liver ailment to
send for a free package
of my Paw-Paw Pills.
I want to prove that
they positively cure In-
digestion, Sour Stom-
ach, Belching, Wind,
Headache, Nervous-
ness, Sleeplessness and
are an infall/blt cure-
for Constipation. To do
this I am willing to give millions of free pack-
ages. I take all the risk. Sold by druggists
fqr 251 cents a vial. For free package address,
Prof. Munyon. 53rd & Jefferson Sts.. Philadelohla. Pa.
tion of any
distillation
Adv. rat
i magazine. Terms: 51
be, $1 per inch flat. Add I .
Distilleries Co., Inc., Weeling, W. Va
ag wa
s: 50c
Iress
mely
cula-
prolits by
year; 6c A copy.
; Wood Wasth
■I U. 8. A.
FOR SALE—-906 AC. IN EASTLAND CO., TEX.;
250 ac. cult, 800 a. tillable; 9 r. dwelling; 8 ten-
ant-houses; outbuildings; orchard, stock, ma-
chinery, etc. MASS, Box 319, Chicago.
FOR SALE—135 A. in THROCKMORTON CO.
Tex., all cult., house,, stock, machinery, etc.
CALVERT, Box 319, Chicago.
m
Ofie wonders who he is or where he
goes— • '
Ton solemn, silent man adown the car,
'Upon his coat lapel a single rose
Nods Idly with the train’s recurrent
jar;
His brows are knit in thought, his lips
are set,
■ His face is serious; once in a while",
jHowever, they their sternness will for-
get
And lift up at the corners In a smile.
He looks out of the window as we ride,
Tet seems to see no beauty of the day—
;The foaming blossoms on the mountain
side,
The violets splashed all along the way.
The dancing sunshine on the meadow-
grass—
None of these have attraction for his
eye;
He gazes at them Idly as we pass,
And now and then he heaves a silent
sigh.
Mayhap another beauty thrills his heart—
A fair young face waits iat his jour-
ney’s end,
A flower-face that holds these blooms
apart.
Ah, who of us may wholly comprehend
The hidden thoughts of those who are
about,
The dreams, the hopes, the wishes and
the fears,
The ceaseless changing of belief and
doubt,
The close-knit kinship claiming smiles
and tears.
It may be that he goes to where there is
A still form In a somber, darkened
room,
That throbbing In the gentle heart of his
There Is an endless litany of gloom—
So do his eyes look blindly at the scene,
Unseeing all the sunshine-silvered trees
With little darting shadows flung be-
tween
That dance in unison with every
breeze.
The train has stopped. He rises to de-
part;
He pauses for a moment with a friend—
Ah, now the Joy or grief that binds his
heart
May come In words that We can com-,
prehend.
He speaks: “I git- off here. I've got a
suit
Ag’lnst that dratted scalawag Jim
Biggs.
He never had no call to go an’ shoot
My huntin’ dog for runnin’ down hi*
pigs!”
THE RETORT COURTEOUS.
Irate Customer (to barber) — You
call this a hair cut? Looks as if you
chewed it off.
Barber—-Well, mister, this is a free
country, and if you don’t like it that
way, why don’t you chow it off youjv
self?
Henson—He said he could never for-
get his alma mater. I wonder what he
meant?
Henpeck —- His mother-in-law, I
guess.
Revised Version.
Senator Bankhead, discussing an elo-
quent speech that had been rather
poorly reported, said:
“The report spoiled the spech. It
was like old Hiram Earwig’s account
of Daniel Webster’s last words. Web-
ster, you know, as he lay dying, ut-
tered the profound and significant
sentence, ‘I still live.’ Well, Hiram
Earwig of Skeeter Beach said to a
visitor from the city:
Yawp, life’s onsartin. Wot wuz it
that thar New Englander said-—Web-
ster, I think? Yawp, it wuz General
Dan Webster. He got off a good thing
Just afore he died. He riz up in bed
an’ says, says he:
“ T ain’t dead yit!’ ”—Baltimore Sun.
The Self-Made Man.
There was Once a Vain Man, who
Insisted upon telling everybody all
about Himself. He would Invariably
add that he was a Self-Made Man.
Once, however, he said that he was
the Architect of hjs own Fortunes.
And another Individual, who said he
was a Building Inspector, condemned
the Fortunes and confiscated them for
Damages.
- Moral—Sometimes it is Just as Well
to let Other People do the Architect
pxg of your Fortune^,
Papa’s Past.
Little Helen’s mamma was discuss
ing the drink question with a visitor
and the child listened gravely to the
conversation. .
‘Papa used to drinkl' . she - volun=T
teered suddenly.
The visitor turned her head to con-
ceal a smile, and mamma frowned
and shook her head at the little one.
“Well, then,” demanded Helen,
“what was it he used to do?”—Lippin-
cott’s Magazine.
lUil
Do You Feel This Way?
|
Do you feel all tired out ? Do you sometimes
think you just can’t work away at your profes-
sion or trade any longer ? Do you have a poor ape-
tite, and lay awake at nights unable to sleep ? Are
your nerves all gone, and your stomach too ? Has am-
bition to forge ahead in the world left you ? If so, you
might as well put a stop to your misery. You can do it if
you will. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery will
make you a different individual. It will set your lazy liver
to work. iLwill set things right in your ctomach, and
your appetite will come back. It will purify your blood*
If there is any tendency in your family toward consumption,
it will keep that dread destroyer away. ^ Even after con-
sumption has almost gained a foothold in the form of a
lingering cough, bronchitis, or bleeding at the lungs, it will bring about a
cure in 98 per cent, of all cases. It is a remedy prepared by Dr. R. V. Pierce,
of Buffalo, N. Y., whose advice is given free to all who wish to write him. Hia
great success has come from his wide experience and varied practice. .
Don’t be wheedled by a penny-grabbing dealer into taking inferior substi-
tutes for Dr. Pierce’s medicines, recommended to^be “just as good.” . Dr.
Pierce's medicines are of known composition. Their every ingredient printed
oa their wrappers. Made from roots without alcohol. Contain no habit-
forming drugs. World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. *
Many who cannot afford 10c cigars are now smoking LEWIS’ Single
Binder straight 5c cigars. You pay 10c for cigars not so good.
You will like LEWIS’ Single Binder. A fresh, hand-made cigar.
Belter tobacco, better made and better tasting than most 10c cigars.
Many prefer cigars.
Modern Methods.
The late A. Tennyson Dickens, dur-
ing an interview in Chicago, condemn-
ed the war in Tripoli vehemently.
“Slavery,” he said, with a bitter
smile, “is now abolished. We no long-
er steal a people and sell them into
bondage. No, no, indeed. We just
steal their country and charge them
so much for governing it that they
have to work twice as
+o pay their taxes.”
hard as slaves
Evidence.
“What makes you think our great
public men don’t work as hard as
they used to?”
“By the photographs,” replied Farm-
er Comtossel. “When I was a young
feller the big men in politics didn’t
take near as much time to git shaved
and have their hair cut.”
The Paxton Toilet Co. of Boston,
Mass., will send a large trial box of
Paxtine Antiseptic, a delightful cleans-
ing and germicidal toilet preparation,
to any woman, free, upon request.
Cheerfulness keeps up a kind of sun-
shine in the soul, and fills it with a
steady and perpetual serenity.—Ad-
dison. -
e From Nature’s Gar
NATURE IS TpE HOME^OF EVERY INGREDIENT OF
GRANDMA’S TEA
GRANDMA’S TEA is a Nature s Remedy; it acts mildly and surely, in
harmony with nature.
GRANDMA’S TEA purifies the blood—pure blood means a rosy complexion.
GRANDMA’S TEA cures constipation and all irregularities of the bowels.
GRANDMA’S TEA is prescribed by doctors in every case where indiges-
tion, weak stomach and a torpid liver are indicated.
AT ALL DRUGGISTS, 25c.
Reduce The Feed Bill-Improve The Animals
Horses and Mules do more work; Cows give more and better Milk and Butter;
Sheep and Goats grow- better fleeces; Hens lay more eggs, and all as well a3
Cattle and Hogs take on more flesh and fat, and develop more rapidly and keep in
better health and condition when fed on
Cottonseed Meal and Cottonseed Hulls,
For Breeding or Kursing Stock, Mares, Cows, Sows or Ewes, it is especially
valuable. Much better than Hay, far cheaper than Corn.: ,
Write for free Booklet containing much valuable information to Feeders and Stock
Raisers to _ ' _ ______
THE BUREAU OF PUBLICITY
Interstate Cottonseed Crushers Association
808 Main Street, Dallas, Texas
SUHRli
The Remedy that revolutionizes and re-
generates the victim of constipation is
Garfield Tea, a herb combination.
A man feels as ill at ease in a dry
goods store as a woman does in a to-
bacco shop.
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PUTNAM ‘FADELESS DYES
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Vernor, J. E. The Lampasas Daily Leader. (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 3189, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 16, 1912, newspaper, March 16, 1912; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth889977/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.