The Savoy Star. (Savoy, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, April 5, 1912 Page: 2 of 4
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THE SAVOY STAP
E. ARTERBERRY, Prop.
SAVOY.
TEXAS
Keep out of Mexico.
trouble.
Keep out ol
Big feet may be a joy. but mostly to
the shoemaker, i
llssourl girl demands $20,000 for
China’s republic seems to have
quite aa,-touch trouble as the defuncf
monarchy.
At this time of the year almost any
baseball scribe can bat .300 in the
Hope league.
Accidents will happen. A New York
Judge haa refused to grant a wealthy
»oman a divorce.
MEDIATE EFFECT OF GREAT KID-
NEY REMEDY IS SOON REALIZED.
According to my experience I do not
consider there is anything to equal
Dr. Kilmer s Swamp-Root lor kidney
affection. Twice It relieved me when
[ was completely helpless.
The last time I was traveling in
Texas, when my kidneys became af-
fected. and for ten days I suffered ex-
;ruciating pain, accompanied with se-
vere chills. Several years previous,
having been relieved of a similar at-
tack, I naturally sought relief as be-
fore, from Swamp-Root.
After using four of the large size
bottles, I was completely restored and
went on my way rejoicing and prais-
ing Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root. This
was three years ago, and I have had
no Indication of the return of the af-
fliction. Yours very truly,
J. C. SMITH, JR.,
108 Johnson St. Jackson, Tenn.
State of Tennessee )
County of Madison f
Subscribed and sworn to before me
this 13th day of July, 1909.
P. C. STOVALL,
Notary Publlo
NERVOUS
DESPONDENT
WOMEN
39 KILLED ON TRAIN
BY MEXICAN BANDITS
ATTACK OCCURS FIFTY MILES
SOUTH OF CAPITAL.
Find Relief in Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound
—Their Own Statements
So Testify.
MADERO WILL NOT RESIGN
OPTIMISM A NATURAL TRAIT
Prospector Can Not Help but See
Millions in Lode Which Necessity
Makes Him Sell.
GUARANTEED
TO BE PURE.
One of our beet sellers at this sea-
son of the year Is the seed catalogue,
which ts given away.
* Many a Chicago man awakes from
dreams of baseball to be told to get
out and gbovel snow.
Nobody need be discouraged, except
perhaps the man who planted bis to-
mato seeds In tin cans.
A woman in Virginia bought a $6,000
painting for $8. but usually act col-
lectors buy $8 paintings for $5,000.
Germany, according to a dispatch, la
watching Mexico That country, ac-
cording to rumor, will bear watching.!
The hookworm may have nothing to
do with the fishing fever, but the ef-
fects of both maladies are much alike.
Whenever we hear of a man adver-
tising tor a wife in leap year we are
led to wonder what Is wrong with
him.
Sir Thomas Llpton says he will
make another attempt to win the cup.
You can’t keep a squirrel on the
ground.
L»urr u>
Dr. Kilmer * Co.
BlifiuitMi, 3. T.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For Yon
Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham-
ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will
convince anyone. Ybu will also re-
ceive a booklet of valuable Informa-
tion. telling all about the kidneys and
bladder. When writing, be sure and
mention this paper. Regular flfty-cent
and one-dollar size bottles for sale at
all drug stores.
Facetious Operator.
“I say. mister,” said the cadaverous
man, entering the telegraph office,
“could you trust me for a telegram I
want to send my wife? I’ll pay you
tomorrow.”
‘‘Sorry, sir,” said the operator, “but
we are terribly rushed these days and
there Isn’t a tick in the office that
isn’t working overtime as it is.”—Har-
per's Weekly.
Kr
New York legislators advocate a fine
for waiters who accept tips. Verily,
these are hard days tor malefactors of
great wealth.
I&
Noble trees were sacrificed last year
to make 300,000.000 lead pencils, and
ether forests went to make the paper
the pencils called for.
"American women lead the world,”
semarks a visiting German editor. At
any rate, we are well aware that they
lead American husbands.
A New York theatrical manager ls-
gotng to produce a Chinese play. Now
sr# shall probably have a controversy
over the Chinese players.
In spite of the lengthy, hard winter
ei>*t we have had. the restaurants
have been able to keep spring lamb
on the bills of tare right along.
The son of the gaekwar of Baroda
■ays it Is Impossible to live on $250
a week. Possibly be subsists on a
iiet of humming birds’ eyebrows.
“It ts three times more dangerous
to cross Broadway In New York than
the Atlantic ocean." And four times
more dangerous to keep on up the
street
A cold bath every morning will
prevent colds, according to Doctor Ja-
cobi. Evidently he labors under the
Impression that all men are heroes.
Three cherry pits were found in the
vermiform appendix of an Indiana
man when the doctors opened him.
To be on the safe side make two bites
at a cherry.
“ECZEMA ITCHED SO BADLY.
I COULDN’T STAND IT."
*1 suffered with eczema on my neck
for about six months, beginning by lit-
tle pimples breaking out. I kept
scratching till the blood came. It kept
getting worse, I couldn’t sleep nights
any more. It kept Itching for about a
month, then I went to a doctor and
got some liquid to take. It seemed
as if I w'as going to get better. The
itching stopped for about three days,
but when it started again, was even
worse than before. The eczema itched
so badly I couldn’t stand It any more.
“I went to a doctor and he gave me
some medicine, but didn't do any good.
We have been having Cutlcura Rem-
edies In the house, so I decided to try
them. I had been using Cutlcura
Soap, so I got me a box of Cutlcura
Ointment, and washed off the affected
part with Cutlcura Soap three times a
day, and then put the Cutlcura Oint-
ment on. The first day I put it on. it
relieved me of itching so I could sleep
all that night. It took about a week,
then I could see the scab come off. I
kept the treatment up for three weeks,
and my eczema was cured.
“My brother got his face burned
with gun-powder, and he used Cutlcura
Soap and Ointment. The people all
thought he would have scars, but you
can’t see that he ever had his face
burned. It was simply awful to look
at before the Cutlcura Remedies
(Soap and Ointment) cured it."
(Signed) Miss Elizabeth Gehrki, For-
rest City, Ark., Oct. 16, 1910. Although
Cutlcura Soap and Ointment are sold
by druggists and dealers everywhere,
a sample of each, with 32-page book,
will be mailed free on application to
“Cutlcura,” Dept. L, Boston.
Platea, Pa. —“When I wrote to yon
first I was troubled with female weak-
ness and backache, |
and was so nervous
that I would cry at
the least noise, it
■ill would startle me so.
I began to take Ly-
dia E. Pinkham’s
remedies, and I don’t
have any more cry-
ing spells. I sleep
sound and my ner-
vousness is better.
I will recommend
your medicines to all suffering women.”
-Mrs. Mary Halstead, Platea, Pa.,
Box 98.
Here is the report of another genuine
case, which still further shows that Ly-
dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
may be relied upon.
Walcott, N. Dakota.-”I had inflam-
mation which caused pain in my side,
and my back ached all the time. I was
so blue that I felt like crying if anyone
even spoke to me. I took Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and I
began to gain right away. I continued
its use and now I am a well woman.”
— Mrs. Amelia Dahl, Walcott, N.
President Declares in Statement;
“Whatever Happens, I Shall Be
Found at My Post.”
Dakota.
f
It yon want special advice write to
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (oonfl*
dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will
be opened, read and answered by a
woman and held in strict confidence.
HAD IT TIMED TO A NICETY
But Limit to Existence of Impecunious
Grandee Was Not Set by
God of Love.
Representative Henry of Texas,
continuing bis campaign against in-
ternational marriages, said at a din-
ner In Washington:
“Old Gobsa Golde’s daughter, Lotta
Golde, the heiress, was courted very
strenuously last month at Monte
Carlo by a Spanish grandee.
“Wherever she went—walking on
the terrace, lunching at Clro’s, play*
ing^ in the Casino—fhe grandee, im-
maculate in hia Poole clothes, was at
her elbow.
“The man said to her one evening,
between the acts of Dejanlre, In the
beautiful Salle Gamier:
“ ‘Mees Golde—L/Otta—wizout you I
canDOt exist but one fortnight more!' ”
“ ‘You can only exist another fort-
night, Don Guzman? But tell me,’
cried the beautiful girl—‘tell me how
you can specify a definite time like
that?’
” ‘Helas, Mees Golde,’ said the Span-
iard. ’it is not I. it is my creditors,
who do ze specifying.’ ”
Mexico City, April 1.—From best in-
formation obtainable, thirty-nine peo-
ple were killed in the attack on the
Mexico-Cuernavaca train near Ties
Marias, fifty miles south of the/capi-
tal, Saturday. Of there, 32 were
Federal soldiers who formed an escort.
Several passengers were killed. There
were besides, several passengers
wounded, but from accounts of sur-
vivors it appears that the bandits shot
in cold blood all of the Federal wound-
ed.
The train w*as halted by rocks on the
track. The attackers opened fire from
the rocks on both sides of the train.
At the first volley the engineer, a Mex-
ican, fell dead. Fire was directed
chiefly at the car containing the sol-
diers, who were slaughtered without
a chance to return the fire with any
effect. They are said to have fought
bravely to the last man.
When the Federals were silenced
the bandits entered and robbed the
dead and the living, not sparing the
women passengers, of whom there
were a half dozen, ofoxi.woundedacm
were a half dozen. After the looters
had ridden away a freight train ap-
proached from the rear and later haul-
ed the riddled coaches back to Mex-
ico City.
Two Americans, passengers, were
unhurt The conductor, C. F. I^ossing,
was struck on the head with a gun
and badly injured.
“Whatever happens, I shall be found
at ntv post; I shall not resign. Re-
ports that have published that I in-
tend to leave the Presidency are un-
true."
President Madero made the above
statement to an Associated Press rep-
resentative Sunday in a conversation
wherein he branded as false other
stories of a sensational character
which recently have originated in the
capital.
Mark Twain once defined a mine as
“a hole in the ground owned by a
liar.” The genial humorist was for
once guilty of a harsh judgmenL The
owner of a promising prospect, who is
willing to sell It only because he lacks
the capital requisite for its develop-
ment, is not necessarily a liar. He is
only an optimist. He does not mean
to deceive anybody. He believes in
the value of his property and de-
scribes it as he sees it. “Is that cop-
per lode permanent?” said the repre-
sentative of an eastern syndicate to
the grizzled prospector who was try-
ing to sell his claim. “Permanent?”
was the reply; “w'ell I should smile.
If you had Niagara for a water power,
and the state of Arizona for a dump-
ing ground, and hell for a smelter, you
couldn’t work that ledge out In a mil-
lion years."
:|
Sue"*
COLD
ft
Baking Economy.
By the use of perfect baking powder
the housewife can derive as much econ-
omy as from any other article used In
baking and cooking. In selecting a bak-
ing powder, therefore, care should be ex-
ercised to purchase one that retains Its
original strength and always remains the
same, thus making the food sweet and
wholesome and producing sufficient leav-
ening gas to make the baking light.
Very little of this leavening gas is pro-
duced by the cheap baking powders, mak-
ing It necessary to use double the quan-
tity ordinarily required to secure good re-
sults.
You cannot experiment every time you
make a cake or biscuits, or test the
strength of your baking powder to find
out how much of it you should use: yet
with most baking powders you should do
this, for they are put together so care-
lessly they are never uniform, the quality
and strength varying with each can pur-
chased. . . -
Calumet Baking Powder is made of
chemically pure ingredients of tested
strength. Experienced chemists put it up.
The proportions of the different materials
remain always the same. Sealed in air-
tight cans Calumet Baking Powder does
not alter In strength and is not affected
by atmospheric changes.
In using Calumet you are bound to have
uniform bread, cake or biscuits, as Calu-
met does not contain any cheap, useless
or adulterating ingredients so commonly
used to increase the weight. Further, It
produces pure, wholesome food and Is a
baking powder of rare merit; therefore is
recommended by leading physicians and
Free Color
Plans
for any rooms you
want to decorate
You can have the pret-
tiest walls in your town,
at the least cost. Our
expert designers will
plan the work for yon
FREE.
Get This Book
20 Pretty Rooms
—wt will mail jm » COPT Fwa
k tell* bow » hare the be* deco-
ratio* at least Co*. U fell at aw
color (chcASs aed «bowi data
•f the exquisite Aiabasdae Data
famous far their soft. icfcao*
A
* i
It complies with all the pure
food laws, both STATE and NATIONAL.
chemists.
AlabanHne
The Beautiful WaB Tint
The goods are moderate in price, and any
lady purchasing Calumet from her gro-
cer. if not satisfied with It can return it
nd have her money refunded.
An Objection.
“He gave you some sound advice."
“That’s what he did. I would have
(iked it better without so much
sound.”
‘FIDDLING BOB” TAYLOR IS DEAD.
Such Is Life.
Dugan—Oha my, oh, my! Isn’t Casey
put’n on g-rafid airs wid his new auty-
raobile? An’ over In the ould counthry
1 dare say be went barefutted.
Ryan—Faith, not be his own ac-
counts. He says he had a turnout
over there thot atthracted great at-
tlntion.
Dugan—Av coorse; an eviction al-
ways does.
Unable to
Withstand Operation for
Gallstones.
Bleedin* or Protruding Pile* in 6 u> U dark. Sec.
For people to live happily together
the real secret is that they should not
live too much together.—Sir Arthur
Helps.
b mors is rogue Is modern homes
thaa wall paper or paint and
far leas. All kaisomiae color
harsh and erode betide Abbasdnel
tints. Absolutely sanitary, coca far-
thest does not chip, peel or rob off.
Easy to use—Tu* mix with cold
water and put o*. Directions oa
each package. Full 5-lb. package.
White Ski kcfularTints 5Sc.
Alabastine Company
Si faMfrllt lot 0r»* tapifc.
Sea tart Ob. fctk S. 1*5 Mer
sirs. Wtnnlow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, soften* the gums, reduces Inflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 26c a bottle.
Many a bra^e man has
Derve in a dentist's chair.
lost his
To restore a normal action to I.lver, Kid-
neys, Stomach anti Bowels, take Garfield
Tea, the ould herb laxative. All druggists.
An English astronomer arises to re-
nark that Mars la not inhabited. That
momentous affair having been settled,
ijstos turn once more to the contem-
plation of baseball.
A Hungarian physician claims that
tw is able to graft hair od bald beads.
It la hoped that he may now turn his
attention to the business of grafting
life into wasted tissues.
BC-
A court In New York granted one
y»«n $12,000 for the loss of a leg and
another $1,000 for the loss of a wife.
If ft bad been a California jury It
might have been different
Some of the charity that begins at
home isn't up to the standard.
Build Up
The System
SHE QUIT COFFEE
And Much Good Came From It.
It is hard to believe that coffee will
put a person In such a condition as it
did a woman of Apple Creek, O. She
tells her own story:
"I did not believe coffee caused my
trouble, and frequently said I liked
it so well I would not quit drinking it,
even if it took my life, but I was a
miserable sufferer from heart trouble
and nervous prostration for four years.
“I was scarcely able to go around at
all. Had no er^rgy, and did not care
for anything. Was emaciated and had
a constant pain around my heart until
I thought I could not endure it. I
Washington: Robert I>ove Tayloi,
United States Senator from Tennes-
see, “Fiddling Bob" to all the South,
died here, unable to withstand the
shock of an operation for gallstones,
performed last Thursday.
“Fiddling Bob” Taylor, so known
because he played his way into the
hearts of his audiences, carrying his
violin wherever he campaigned, was
61 years old. He was born at Hap-
py Valley, in East Tennessee, but
spent most of his life at Nashville
practicing law. He belonged to an
office-holding family. His father was
a Congressman and Commissioner ol
Indian Affairs, and an uncle was in
the Confederate Senate. Once pen
sion agent at Knoxville, thrice Gover-
nor of Tennessee—from 1S87 to 18'Jl
and 1897 to 1899—Senator Taylor forg
ed his way to the National House ol
Representatives from the same district
that previously had seut his father to
Congress and later his brother, Alfred
A. Taylor, whom he subsequently de-
feated for Governor.
Senator Taylor is survived by his
widow, a son, David Taylor, and thre»
married daughters in Tennsee.
The commanding intellect
have the command and be
Schiller.
should
king.—
For Constipation, Biliousness. Liver and
Kidney Troubles, take Garfield Tea.
- |
What ought not to be done, do not ]
even think of doing—Epictetus.
MEXICAN
MUSTANG
LINIMENT
FOR LAME SHOULDER.
Joeeph D. Crittenden, Onric. Ala-, write*:
“After eight month*’ illness with lam* I
j shoulder and *ide I tried Mustang Lini-
I tnent and was entirely cured after using
only one bottle. My teacher, Prof. A. A.
Lee, has adopted a rule that Mustang Un- i
itnent be kept in the school room m ca
accident.” .
25c.50c.»lnWttl*ntD»wgAG«*1 Stores I
P
LEWIS’ Single Binder straight 5c cigar.
You pay 10c for cigars not so good.
JOHN L, THOMPSON SONS SCO.
Quirk! J Rli*Msn
irritation
by dost, ska or
wind K -klet free
Troy, K. f
Theory alone never
anything worth while.
accomplished
---SWEXT POTATO FLA
extra Vigorous, thrifty and Bari;
Writs today. Bass Pecan Co-
» LA NTS-
r. Special prlDM.
LumberVou, Miss
■a
W, N. U., DALLAS, NO. 14-1912.
If the blood is poor and filled with the
poisons from diseased kidneys or inac-
tive liver, the heart is not only starved
but poisoned as well. There are many
conditions due to impure blood—such
as dropsy, fainting spells, nervous debil-
ity or the many scrofulous conditions,
ulcers, “fever sores,” white swellings,
etc. All can be overcome and cured by
Gotham is rejoicing because only
Ofteen persons were killed In one
month by the trolley cars. Of course,
fifteen out of that Immense popula-
tion of millions is a very gratifying
ahowlnng except to the fifteen.
By means of glass cages French
scientists have found It possible to
raise chickens without allowing them
even to come in contact with a mi-
crobe. but the fowls must have found
the sterilized life awfully dull
--
Is the stomach
weak ?
Are the bowels
clogged ?
Is the blood
impoverished ?
TRY
THE
BITTERS.
Hostetter’s
Stomach Bitters
will tone, strengthen and invig-
orate the entire system and
make you well again.
A school for chauffeurs has been es-
tablished in a Western college It is
to be hoped that It will teach proper
deportment for the occasions on
which the carburetor refuses to work
when it is twenty miles to the nearest
garage
JUDGE RAMSEY OPENS CAMPAIGN
Candidate for Governor of Texas
Makes Address to 5000 at Gonzales.
Gonzales, Tex.—Under loweriug
felV*a8°though I was liable to die any clouds and with a drizzling ram blow-
‘ ing in his face. Judge William F. Raru-
f ARE
Tuffs Pills
The- first dose often astonishes the Invalid,
giving elasticity of mind, buoyancy of body,
GOOD DIGESTION,
regular bowel* and solid flesh. Price, 2S ct*
A 23-story hotel, containing 1.000
gueat chambers, is to be erected over
th« new Grand Central station. In New t rH( newfrinch rimidy.ko.i,ko j.m.
York. Even at that it will not be big
enough to accommodate all those who
dartre to take the next train back
home aa soon as they arrive.
THERAPION
I Cued in Freu h
__________ _ | Hospltwl. with
, ir *v crass, curbs Kinslr. blagdrr rusi'Ariita.
flLM. CHROMIC CLCkRR. HUM SRrTTIOMS-tlTHBR ■‘*1
GbI .1 Ir-M -bt-W*. tor fR«K knklrt u DR. 14 CUSC
t&D. CO . BSVKRSTOCK ED.. HSR PST BSD, LOR DO* RJMA
time.
“Frequently I had nervous chills and
the least excitement would drive sleep
away, and any little noise would up
set me terribly. I was gradually get-
ting worse until finally one day, it
came over me, and I asked myBelf
what is the use of being sick all the
time and" buying medicine so that I
can Indulge myself in coffee?
“So I thought I would see If I could
quit drinking coffee, and got som«
Postum to help me quit. I made It
strictly according to directions, and
I want to tell you that change was the
greatest step In my life. It was easy
to quit coffee because I had the
Postum which I like better than I
liked the old coffee One by one the
old troubles left, until now I am In
splendid health, nerves steady, heart
all right, arid the pain all gone Never
have any more nervous chills, don’t
j take any medicine, can do all my
housework, and have done a great
deal besides.
“My sister In-law, who visited me
this summer had been an invalid for
some time, much as I was. I got her
to qui’ coffee and drink Postum. -She
gained five pounds In three wpeks,
and l never saw such a c hange in any-
one's health.”
“There’s a reason "
Ever rend tbe above letterf A sen
one appear* from time
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
This supplies pure blood—by aiding digestion, increasing assimilation
and imparting tone to the whole circulatory system. It’s a heart tonic
and a great deal more, having an alterative action on the liver and
kidneys,<it helps to eliminate the poisons from the blood.
To enrich the blood and increase the red blood corpuscles, thereby
feeding the nerves on rich red blood and doing away with nervous irri-
tability, take Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and do not permit
a dishonest dealer to insult your Intelligence with the “just as good
kind.” The “Discovery” has 40 years of cures behind It and contains
no alcohol or narcotics. Ingredients plainly printed on wrapper. .
Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser is sent free on receipt of
stamps to pay expense of wrapping and mailing only. Send 31 one-cent
stamps for the French cloth-bound book. Address: Dr. R.V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y,
are trAnlDS,
Istersst.
to time. They
true, isd full ol hamsa
sey formally opened his campaign Sat-
urday for Governor in this historic old
Texas city, a center of' Southern aris-
tocracy which has furnished the State
j and the South notable soldiers and
statesmen, but the handicap of the
weather was more than offset by the
magnificent and responsive audience,
which bared itself to the drizzling mist
| w ithout the semblance of a covering.
It was estimated that 5,b00 people, a
S large percentage men, surrounded the
! speaker s stand and never stinted with
j applause. A majority of them wore
j Ramsey badges,.and thrusts at the sa
| loou and liquor interests evoked cheers
j and hand-clapping and the jibes intend
I <-d for the present Executive met with
applause anl laughter.
CAMPA MARCHING TO PARREL.
Rebel General, with 800 Men, to Guard j
Against Surprises.
.liniinez, Mexico Gen. ( anipa and
|omj men t>egan the march to Parre,
Saturday, proceeding on foot, better tc
repel surprise attacks from the Fed-
eral, Pam ho Villa, w ho is supposed
to be near there. The search for Gen
Trucy Aubert, who seems to have sue
cessfully excuted his retreat, remain*
without rssult.
CarbolaledYaseJjne
The best dressing you can find for wounds, bites
of insects, abrasions, etc.
The Carbolic Acid helps to prevent Infection: the
"Vaseline” cleanses and soothes.
Especially valuable where there are children.
For aaie everywhere la baady glass bottlea. Be sure you get
" Vaseline. ”
Our various "Vaseline" prepmraUons make up a eomp'et# medicine
rhevttha: should t>e in nrry Louie. Wrlta for free booklet telling all
about tbetn. Address L>ept. K
Chesebrough Manufacturing Company
17 Slate Street (Consolidated)
New York
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Arterberry, T. E. The Savoy Star. (Savoy, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, April 5, 1912, newspaper, April 5, 1912; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth913420/m1/2/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bonham Public Library.