The Lampasas Daily Leader. (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 269, Ed. 1 Monday, January 17, 1916 Page: 2 of 4
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THE LAMPASAS DAILY LEADER
Save the Trade-Mark
Signature From * ^
Skinners
Macaroni and
Spaghetti Products
and get a complete set of Oneida Community
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1 Macaroni 4 Cat Macaroni 7 Soup Ring■
2 Spaghetti 5 Cut Spaghetti 8 Alphabeto*
3 Egg Noodle* 6 Elbows 9 Vermicelli
These delicious foods can be prepared 58
different ways to take the place of high-priced
meat dishes. An economical, hearty food,
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Skinner’s Macaroni Products are made from the
finest durum wheat, in the largest and cleanest
macaroni factory in America.
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grocers sell Skinner’s 0 ct
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4 Nun*..
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No Need to Worry.
She was a very recent bride and
endeavoring to keep house in the ap-
proved hygienic manner. Entering a
strange bakery one day, she saw a
huge cat put his pawB on the low
show windows and vault lightly in
among the cakes.
"Oh, look!" she exclaimed to the
stout lady in charge. "Your cat!”
“Dat is all right,” soothingly replied
the wide lady, with a wider smile.
"Dat is Henery. He will not eat any-
thing; he chust schniffs ’em.”—Har-
per’s Magazine.
Indianapolis, Ind., has a population
of 265,578, according to the latest
census estimates.
Aluminum alloy pistons in motor-car
engines wear excellently with the
usual lubrication.
This is a recent discovery of Dr.
Pierce, who is head of the Invalids'
Hotel and Surgical Institute at Buffalo,
N. Y. Experiments at Dr. Pierce’s
Hospital for several years proved that
there is no other eliminator of uric
acid that can be compared to it. For
those easily recognized symptoms of
inflammation—as backache, scalding
urine and frequent urination, as well
as sediment in the urine, or if uric
acid in the blood has caused rheuma-
tism, it is simply wonderful how sure-
ly "Anuric” acts. The best of results are
always obtained in cases of acute
rheumatism in the joints, in gravel
and gout, and invariably the pains and
stiffness which so frequently and per-
sistently accompany the disease rap-
idly disappear.
Go to your nearest drug store and
Over 5,000,000 people are employed
In the world’s mines.
LADIES!
—Take CAPUDINE—
For Aches, Pains and Nervousness.
IT IS NOT A NARCOTIC OR DOPE—
Given quick relief—Try It.—Adr.
Josef Hofman, the pianist, earns
$2,500 an hour.
PROMPT RELIEF
can be found in cases of Colds, Coughs,
LaGrippe and Headaches by using
Laxative Quinidine Tablets. Does not
affect the head or stomach. Buy your
winter’s supply now. Price 25c.—Adr.
Ther are 1,400,000 cattle in Cey-
lon.
simply ask for a 50-cent package of
"Anuric” manufactured by Dr. Pierce,
or even write Dr. Pierce for a large
trial package (10c). If you suspect
kidney or bladder trouble, send him a
sample of your water and describe
symptoms. Dr. Pierce’s chemist will
examine it, then Dr. Pierce will report
to you without fee or charge.
NOTE. — "Anufic" is thirty-seven
times more active than lithia in elimi-
nating uric acid, and is a harmless but
reliable chemical compound that may
be safely givfti to children, but should
be used only by grown-ups who actu-
ally wish to restore their kidneys to
perfect health, by conscientiously
using one box—or more in extreme
case3—as “Anuric” (thanks to Dr.
Pierce’s achievement) is by far the
most perfect kidney and bladder cor-
rector obtainable.
KNOW HOW TO PLEASE
QUALITY THAT MAKES FOR POP
ULARITY IN SOCIETY.
eortunate Arc Those Who Have tht
Happy Habit of Doing Instinc-
tively the Right Thing at
the Right Time.
They were talking about personality
nnd the conversation somehow drifted,
not unnaturally, since there were no
men present, hi personality In the
sterner sex and now it manifested
itself in different ways and under dif-
ferent circumstances.
One man was delightful to have as
a guest at a party. He made himself
agreeable to all and somehow man-
aged to lift the burden of an entertain-
ment completely off the shoulders of a
hostess. As soon as tie entered he in-
troduced a pleasurable sense of festiv-
ity that communicated itself to other
guests. Another man did not shine
especially at parties, perhaps, hut he
was ideal for a solitude of two. He
always made any woman he was call-
ing upon feel that to fin'd her at home
and alone gave him complete satisfac-
tion.
And then one woman casually re-
marked that the most difficult social
role for a man to fill successfully wa3
that of escort. Not as escort to a con-
cert or lecture or the theater, but to
a social entertainment such as a re-
ception or dance.
“I know one man,” she said, “who is
wholly delightful as an escort, and the
other day I endeavored to analyze just
wherein the charm lay. I once heard
it said of him, by another man, that
he was a man who always did and
said the right thing at the right time,
and this seems to be true of him In
the capacity of escort. He always
seems to do the obviously correct thing
Instinctively.
“I have never stepped outside my
door with him,” she went on, “without
experiencing a complete sense of
guardianship until my return. It Is
not that his actions Indicate any spe-
cial consciousness of what he is doing.
On the contrary, he is engagingly nat-
ural and free from any assumption of
directing things—but while with him
a woman whom he is escorting enjoys
a pleasant sense of being his first con-
sideration. He never for an instant
allows her to experience that feeling
of being unattended under which 1
have seen many women and girls suf-
fer and have occasionally suffered my-
self.
“I have known the most well-mean-
ing men to completely neglect some
girl whom they were escorting when
they met some persona) friends with
whom she was perhaps unacquainted.
If the man whom 1 have in mind meets
his . own friends he immediately intro-
duces them, and if he occasionally
drifts away be drifts back again with-
out any apparent reason except doing
what he wants to do. Some very nice
men can be exceedingly leaden amid
a large gathering of people who are
comparatively strangers to them. They
do not seem to have the social instinct
that makes them responsive to stran-
gers. and this is a virtue which a good
escort either- has or affects to possess.
There are few tilings more disconcert-
ing to a woman than to take a man
anywhere and not feel he has enjoyed
himself quite as much as she has.
“Indeed, the same qualities thal
make ‘the born hostess’ seem to be es-
sential to make the instinctive escort
and these are gracious personality plu
social training.”—Baltimore Sun.
Lots of Excitement.
A Philadelphia woman who has had
trouble in filling her rooming hous«
once had an applicant who objected to
the lack of interesting surroundings
“Oh. plenty of excitement,” said this
wideawake landlady; “from the fsonl
window here you will have such a fin«
view of people missing the suburbs/
trains!”
Japan Turns to Sheep Raising.
During the past two or three years
Japan has sent some of its experl
stock growers to America to learn how
to raise sheep, and it Is understood
that sheep raising will be extensively
engaged in over there.
Weighs a Fly’s Wing.
The weighing machine used in the
laboratory of the bureau of standards
lu Washington is said to be the most
accurate in the world. It will weigh
the wing of a fly.—Chicago Journal.
New South African Fruit.
New South Africa is now sending to
London a remarkable fruit, a species
of orange, similar to a large tanger-
ine, very sweet, with an agreeabl«
flavor.
Man’s Heart Heavier Than Woman’a
The average man's heart weight
from ten to twelve ounces; the aver-
age woman’s from eight to ten.
City Built on Islands.
Venice has 60,000 residents, and the
town is built on seventy or eighty
Islets.
GRANDMA USED SAGE TEA
TO DARKEN HER GRAY HAIR
She Made Up a Mixture of Sage Tea
and Sulphur to Bring Back Color,
Gloss, Thickness.
Almost everyone knows that Sage
Tea and Sulphur, properly compound-
ed, brings back the natural color and
lustre to the hair when faded, streaked
or gray; also ends dandruff, itching
scalp and stops falling hair. Years
ago the only way to get this mixture
was to make it at home, which is
mussy and troublesome. Nowadays,
by asking at any store for “Wyeth’s
Bage and Sulphur Hair Remedy," you
will get a large bottle of the famous
old recipe for about 50 cents.
Don’t stay gray! Try it! No one
can possibly tell that you darkened
your hair, as it does It so naturally
and evenly. You dampen a sponge or
soft brush with it and draw this
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time, by morning the gray
hair disappears, and after another ap-
plication or two, your hair becomes
beautifully dark, thick and glossy.—
Adv.
GREATEST OF GERM KILLERS
Nothing Has Yet Been Devised That
Can Do the Work That Is Done
by the Sun.
The old sun is the best germ killer
of them all. You remember how they
used to—and do yet—expose the
bright dairy pans and cans to the
sun’s rays. But a few appreciate ex-
actly the work done by the sun in
this regard. Probably only those
who are acquainted with tests which
have actually been made realize how
quickly sunshine kills disease germs
exposed to it.
This is the test scientists used to
prove that the sun kills germs: A
mass of tuberculosis material, which
was proved to contain uncountable
numbers of virulent tubercle bacilli,
was obtained from a tuberculous cow
and spread in thin smooth translucent
layers on sheets of glass, pieces of
wood and strips of muslin. Rome were
placed outdoors where the sun could
Bhine on them, and an equal number
were placed in a dark room.
After 30 minutes’ exposure in the
sun no living tubercle bacilli could be
found; every test that could be made
proved that they were all dead.
The specimen kept in a dark room
proved to contain fully virulent, living
tubercle bacilli after 30 days. The
contrast is remarkable, tubercle ba-
cilli of the same kind, on the same
kind of material, dying In a smaller
number of minutes in the sunshine
than t.he number of dayc they re-
mained alive in a dark room.
Foresight.
"Twenty years ago I could have
bought that corner lot over there for
five hundred dollars. It’s worth twen-
ty-five thousand today.”
“Too bad you didn’t buy it.”
“Not at all. I bought one on the
next corner instead, and I was offered
fifty thousand tot it. yesterday."
LACK OF MONEY-
Was a Godsend in This Cass.
It is not always that a lack of money
is a benefit.
A lady in Ark. owes her health to
the fact that she could not pay In
advance the fee demanded by a spe-
cialist to treat her for stomach trou-
ble. In telling of her case she says:
“I had been treated by four different
physicians during 10 years of stomach
trouble. Lately I called on another
who told me he" could not cure me;
that I had neuralgia of the stomach.
Then I went to a specialist who told
me I had catarrh of the stomach an.d
said he could cure me in four months,
but would have to have *his money
down. I could not raise the neces-
sary sum and in my extremity I was
led to quit coffee and try Postum.
“The results have been magical. I
now sleep well at night, something I
had not done for a long time; the pain
in my stomach is gone and I am a
different woman.
“Every time I had tried to stop cof-
fee I suffered from severe headaches,
so ‘I continued to drink it, although I
had reason to believe it was injurious
to me. But when I had Postum to
shift to it was different.
“To my surprise I did not miss cof-
fee when I began to drink Postum.
"Coffee had been steadily and surely
killing-'me and I didn’t fully realize
what was doing it until I quit and
changed to Postum.” Name given by
Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Postum comes in two forms:
Postum Cereal—the original form—
must be well boiled. 15c and 25c pack-
ages.
Instant Postum—a soluble powder—
dissolves quickly in a cup of hot wa-
ter, and, with cream and sugar, makes
a delicious beverage instantly. 30c
and 50c tins.
Both kinds are equally delicious
and cost about the same per cup.
"There’s a Reason” for Postum.
—sold by Grocers.
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Rheumatism!
How is rheumatism recognized ? Some have said—
Rheumatism is a dull pain.
Rheumatism is a sharp pain.
Rheumatism is sore muscles.
Rheumatism is stiff joints.
Rheumatism is a shifting pain.
All have declared—Rheumatism is Pain,
Sloan's Liniment applied :—
The blood begins to flow freely—the body’s
warmth is renewed—the congestion disap*
pears—the pain is gone
Sloan's
Liniment
KILLS PAIN ^GUARANTEED)
Rheumatism and allied pains yield to the penetrat-
ing qualities of this warming liniment.
ft
ft
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BftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftB
ANURIC!
The Newest Discovery in Chemistry
Europe can ever get back to
verge of war” she will probably maka
a sensible and persistent effort not to
be pressed across it.
We shall take it unkindly of the dis-
tant future if it harbors the assump-
tion that the people of the twentieth
century read all the current poetry
and enjoyed it.
If the department of agriculture
would invent some kind of forage cro^
that would feed the touring car,
well as the horse, farmers might be
willing to buy the seeds.
Foreign impressions that America is
wedded to the dollar are being borne
out by the way in which it is coming
back to its own true love.
A Columbia professor says that gar
dening is just as good exercise as play;
ing golf. Evidently he does all his
golf playing with the niblick.
It is none of our business, but it
seems to us that it would be a very
prosy sort, of courtship if the prospec-
tive mother-in-law had to be around
all the time.
Oh, Very Well!
Biggs—What is your idea of the lon-
gevity of the ancients?
Diggs—Well, I think being an an-
cient must have been a healthful oc-
cupation.
TAKE SALTS TO FLUSH
KIDNEYS IF BACK HURTS
Says Too Much Meat Forms Uric Acid
Which Clogs the Kidneys and
irritates the Bladder.
Most folks forget that the kidneys,
like the bowels, get sluggish and clog-
ged and need a flushing occasionally,
else we have backache and dull misery
in the kidney region, severe head-
aches, rheumatic twinges, torpid liver,
acid stomach, sleeplessness and all
sorts of bladder disorders.
You simply must keep your kidneys
active and clean, and the moment you
feel an ache or pain in the kidney
region, get about four ounces of Jad
Salts from any good drug store here,
take a tablespoonful in a glass of
water before breakfast for a few days
and your kidneys will then act fine.
This famous salts is made from th«
acid of grapes and lemon juice, com-
bined with lithia, and is harmless tc
flush clogged kidneys and stimulate
them to normal activity. It also neu-
tralizes the acids in the urine so it
no longer Irritates, thus ending blad-
der disorders.
Jad Salts is harmless; inexpensive;
makes a delightful effervescent lithia-
water drink which everybody should
take now and then to keep their kid-
neys clean, thus avoiding serious com-
plications.
A well-known local druggist says h«
’{pells lots of Jad Salts to folks who be-
lieve in overcoming kidney trouble
while it is only trouble.—Adv.
Ironclad Rule.
“I tell you the advance has met with
a check!” bawled the war correspond-
ent. “You can bank cu it.”
"I bank 011 nothing of the kind,” said
the censor. “All checks must he cer-
tified.”—Louisville Courier-Journal.
For frostbites use Hanford’s Bal«
Bam. Adv.
His Point of View.
“Do you thing human beings ought
to be chloroformed when they reach
tjie age of sixty?” asked the student of
deep problems.
'“Certainly not,” answeted the misan-
thropic person. “By the time people
are sixty years old they have done
about all the devilment they can do
and a few years more or le3B don’t
make any difference.”
A frenzied financier—oue who can
borrow money from a bill collector.
It’s Foolish to Suffer
You may be brave enough to
stand backache, or headache, or
dizziness. But if, in addition, ur-
ination is disordered, look out!
If you don’t try to fix your sick
kidneys, you may fall into the
clutches of kidney trouble before:
you know it. But if you live more
carefully and help your kidneys
with Doan’s Kidney Pills, you can
stop the pains you have and avoid
future danger as well.
A Texas Case
Dr. V. C. Canon,, re-
tired physician, W.
California Ave., Plain-
view, Tex., Says: “I
suffered from lumbago
and other signs of
kidney bomplaint. I
also had trouble with
my bladder and sharp
twinges shot through
my loins when I
stooped or arose from
a chair. Doan’s Kid-
ney Pills relieved me.
They are the best
medicine I ever got
hold of.”
Get Dnn’i at Any Store, 50c a Baa
DOAN’S “piYLY
FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y.
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Vernor, J. E. The Lampasas Daily Leader. (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 269, Ed. 1 Monday, January 17, 1916, newspaper, January 17, 1916; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth906722/m1/2/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.