The Savoy Star. (Savoy, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 48, Ed. 1 Friday, February 25, 1910 Page: 5 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Fannin County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Bonham Public Library.
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» '
FAMOUS DOCTOR’S
PRESCRIPTION.
$2
TEXAS 'NEWS
HAPPENINGS
DREADFUL
CHANGE
k L '
i
i
POR
&YSPEPS*™
^URKHWSTOW^I
BLOOD
POISON
Carod by the Marvel of tl» Century,
B. B. B.—Tested for 30 Years.
Heat*. To prove it we will c^nd yon *
SAMPLE TREATMENT FREE
■aarxEgMsa cHaaag
qoidUj, Blood
SKSta? ®
tions for bom« core,
writing Blood Balm
serihe you trouble end
SAMPLES SENT FREE by
Co., Atlwito, G». . Po-
1 free medical advice given.
Hay’s Hair-Health
New FaUe to Bestore Grey Heir to lte
Natani Color and Beauty. Stop* its falling
out, and positively removes Dandruff, in ®°t •
Dye. Refuse *11 substitute*. |j.od indjoc
Boules by Msil or at Drugiists. ryL L
Send ioc tor large sample Bottle FIltL
Philo Hay Spec. Co.. Newark. N. J.. U. S. A.
Helping the Minister.
A Scotch preacher had In his con-
gregation an old woman who was
deaf. In order to hear the sermon
each Sunday, this old lady would seat
herself at the foot of the pulpit stairs.
One day the sermon was about Jonah,
and the preacher became very rhetor-
ical.
“And when the sailors threw Jonah
overboard.” he said, “a big fish swal-
lowed him up. Was »lt a shark that
got ’lm? Nay. my brethren, it was
ne’er a shark. Was It a swordfish
that got him? Nay—”
“It was a whale.” whispered the
old lady excitedly.
"Hush, Biddle,” said the preacher.
Indignantly. "Would ye tak* th’ word
of God out o’ yer ane meenister’s
mouth?”—Success Magazine.
Why He Was Lonesome.
Tommy, whose varying points of
▼lew are illustrated by the Farm Jour-
nal. had not yet learned the Golden
Buie. Neither have a good many of
his elders.
"I should like. Tommy,” said his fa-
ther, “that you might find some boy
to play with you. Now what’s the
matter with Johnny Jenkins and the
little, Dobbs boy?"
"Pooh! Why, they’re a whole year
younger than I am,” said Tomjny, con-
temptuously. "I couldn't play with
them!”
“Well, there’s Jack Spear and Willie
Harlow. Won't they do?”
“Yes, but they’re a year older'than
1 am.” said Tommy, wistfully, “so the
mean things won’t play with me.”
_ »
SHE QUIT
* But It Was a Hard Pull.
It la hard to believe that coffee will
put a person In such a condition as it
did an Ohio woman. She tells her own
story:
“I did not believe coffee caused my
trouble, and frequently said I liked
It so well I would not, and could not
quit drinking It, but I was a miserable
sufferer from heart trouble and nerv-
ous prostration for four«years.
“I was scarcely able to be around,
. had no energy and did not care for any-
thing. Was emaciated and had a con-
stant pain around my heart until I
thought I could not endure it For
months I never went to bed excepting
to get up in the morning. I felt as
though 1 was liable to^die any time.
“Frequently I had nervous chills and
the least excitement would drive sleep
away, and any little noise would upset
me terribly. I was gradually getting
worse until finally oni time It came
over me and I aaked myself what’s the
use of being sick all the jtime and
buying medicine so.tlJkt I could in-
dulge myself in cbffee?
“So 1 thought I Would see If I could
quit drinking coffee, and got some
Poetum to help me quit I made It
strictly according to direetfons and I
want to tell you, that change was the
greatest step In my life, it was easy
to quit coffee because I bad the Poetum
which I now like better than the old
coffee.
"One by one the old troubles left,
until now I am In splendid health,
nerves steady, heart all right and the
pain all gone. Never have any more
nervous chills, don't take any medicine,
can do all my housework, and have
done i^tffeRdeal beside."
: id Road to Wellville* In
pkgs.' “There’s a Reason."
BnrVsil the above letter? A *«*
see appear a from tlmo to time. They
are genafne, true, fad fall of haasaa
la tercet.
The population of Amarillp, based on
the school census, Is 16,000. This will
be the figure shown in the next city
directory, which will be off the press
in a short time.
Again the record high price on hogs
was moved up at the Ft. Worth stock
yards, when Fox & Hurley of Foss,
Ok., marketed eighty-two head, averag-
ing 233 pounds at $8.75 per 100 pounds.
Prof. Vincent of the Academy of
Medicine at Paris, France, announces
the discovery of an improved method
of vaccination for typhus, consisting
of inoculation with macerated living
typhus germs.
The Figaro announces that President
Falieres, will give a grand fete at the
Elysee Palace on the occasion of for-
mer President Roosevelt’s visit to
Paris.
Cold weather, with rain, sleet and
snow^ was reported from twenty-two
counties in North, Central and Eastern
Texas Thursday, with additional re-
ports from the Panhandle of Texas, de-
scribing practically the same condi
tions.
Application has been made to the
City Council for a permit to erect a
30-story hotel at the southeast corner
of Clark and Madison streets. At pres-
ent the maximum height of buildings
allowed in Chicago is 250 feet, or twen-
ty stories.
Miss Agnes Leslie Elkins, niece of
United States Senator Stephen B. Elk
ins of West Virginia, died at a hotel
in Kansas City as a result t>f a bullet
wound she inflicted upon herself last
Wednesday in attempting suicide.
Three collectors of customs in Tex-
as have been confirmed for additional
terms by the Senate. They were
James J. Haynes of the district of
Corpus Christ!, Francis L. Lee for Gal-
veston and Robert W. Dowe of Sa-
turia.
The committee having in charge the
exercise^ for Arber Day in the public
schools in Dal hart have completed all
arrangements for celebrating the day
with patriotic ceremonies, aftei\ which
the citizens will devote themselves to
planting the 10,000 trees furnished by
the Dalhart Commercial Club.
The first case of pellagra in Denison
and the first in Grayson County in
which a white person is the patient
was discovered by a local physician.
The case is said to be in the incipient
stage. A case at Whitesboro, a color-
ed woman, was discovered some time
ago. She is in the last stages. Both
cases will be taken up by the Gray-
son County Medical Association for
Investigation.
Messengers from the interior report
that Gen. Aurello Estrada has captured
one of the principal government steam-
ers 'bn. Lake Managua, Nicaragua, aft
er the* hottest battle in his campaign
against the capital. In a rain of bul-
lets from troops aboard the ship and
from kand batteries, the revolutionary
leader boarded the vessels with a
strong force, capturing the marines and
taking the boat to the. northeastern
1 edge of t£e lake, where his own forces
are in control.
Mrs. Jones Was in a Serious Con-
* dition Before She Helped Her-
«elf With Cardui, the
Woman’s Tonic.
Dexter, Tex.—“I certainly was In a
serious condition when I wrote you for
advice,” writes Mrs. Calvin Jones, of
Dexter, Tex.
“I suffered a great deal with those
dizzy, fainting spells, but after taking
several bottles of Cardui, relief finally
came.
Cardui prepared my system for the
dreadful change and when it came it
was not half as bad as those dizzy
spells I had before. I now help every
day with-the housework and am get-
ting along fine.
“Cardui Is certainly fine for female
complaints. My neighbors praise it
and so do others.”
Take Cardui when you feel ill In
any way, weak, tired, miserable, or
under the weather.
No matter what the Immediate
cause, it will help to brace you up, give
you new force and vim, help you to
throw off the trouble that troubles you.
” Cardui will not Interfere with any
other medicine you may be taking. It
is a gentle, harmless, non-mineral, non*
poisonous, non-intoxicating tonic, that
every ■woman ought to take when she
Is looking for health, strength, beauty
and vitality.
Jff. B__Writs to« iAdlr*’ Adrliorf
Drpt.. Chattanooga Medicine Co. Chat-
tanooga* Tenn.. for Special Instruction*,
and 84-page hook, “Home Treatment for
Women, ’ neat In plain wrapper, on m-
«0**L__
A CHEERFUL PROSPECT.
THE JOYS OF OTHER DAYS
Writer’s Memory Goes Back to De-
lights of Which the Present Gen-
eration Knows Little.
We cheerfully admit that the fur-
nace and the hard coal base burner
add a whole lot of modern comfort,
but after all they have their draw-
backs. For instance, you can’t very
well pop corn in either a furnace or
a base burner. It took those old-
fashioned stoves, in which we used to
burn a two-foot- length of hickory
wood, for that sort of thing. When
the wood had burned down to glow-
ing coals, we’d open the front door,
rake the coals down in front and pro-
ceed to pop corn. When we get rich
we are going to have one of those old-
fashioned stoves put up in aur room,
with a lot of two-foot seasoned hickory
in the basement, and every now and
then we are going to start a fire irf|
that stove, get a good bed of coals.|
and then pop a dishpan full of corn,
just as a reminder of old days. Of
course, we’ll eat the popcorn, not as
a reminder of old days, but because we
are awfully fond of popcorn.—Yill M.
Maupin, in The Commoner.
Nor On a Half-Dime, Either.
Simon Hardcastie believed with sin
cere faith that any wife who had, or
asked, more than a quarter a year
for her own amusement or enjoyment
was a being too horrible to contem
plate. He came from the village store
for dinner and told what he had
heard.
‘'Miranda, would you believe that
the Lord’s Prayer could be engraved
in a space no larger than a dime?”
“Well, yes, Simon,” she hazarded,
“if1 a dime is as large in the engraver’s
eye as it is in yours, I should think
that he would have no difficulty at
all.”—The Housekeeper.
•Well, young man, what do you
think of my daughter?"
•Rather thin.”
‘That will improve; at her age 1
was like that.”
Standing room was eagerly sought,
unavaillngly by many, who had been
crowded out of the Auditorium Tues-
day, when Hon. James B. Baker, May
or of Waco, called the Brazos Naviga-
tion Jubilee to order. The Auditorium
seats 3,000, and nearly 4,000 were pres-
ent, filling the aisles and every chair,
filling all the boxes and crowding the
spacious stage. It was a grand dem-
onstration of approval of the work of
the United States Government, not
only as to the Brazos, but all other riv-
ers of Texas, and all of the harbors
for which appropriations have been
made. Cheers shook the house when
the chairman read the list of recent
appropriations.
Superintendent of Public Buildings
and Grounds W. C. Day, of Adsttn, has
notified Mrs. Rebecca J. Fisher, presi-
dent of the Daughters of the Republic,
that he is ready to turn over the cus-
tody of the Alamo property in San An-
tonio to that organization.
The Waco City Board of Commis-
sioners awarded contracts for building
fifteen blocks of vitrified brick pave-
ment, the price being $1.72 p^r square
yard for brick laid flat with bitumin-
ous filler, to deaden sound, and $2.05
for brick laid edgewise with cement
filler.
P. L. Richardson. State Expert Print-
er and secretary of the Board of Public
Printing, at Austin, has tendered his
resignation to the members of this
board, the same to take effect March
1. Mr. Richardson has been serving
tbs state in his present capacity during
the last four years.
The $35,000 Country Club to be lo-
cated near Dickinson on 100 acres of
land is assured, with a Galveston mem-
bership of 250. The tentative limit of
membership is fixed at 350. The club
will be known as the Oleander Coun-
fctry Club and the application for a
charter was mailed to Austin.
The Terrell peanut factory is con-
sidering the establishment of a plant at
Texarkana.
With three companies of militia
guarding the courthouse and Jail under
direct.supervision of Adjt. Gen. Frank
B. Dickson of Springfield, Cairo, 111.,
has settled down to a complete (Juiet
after a. strenuouB twenty-four hours
and the authorities believe they have
the situation well In hand. There are
many scattered groups of men about
; the streets and in the vicinity of the
Jail* but no crowd is allowed to congro-
Igate.
KEEP BABY’S SKIN CLEAR
Few parents realize how many es-
timable lives have been embittered
and social and business success pre-
vented by serious skin affections
which so often result from the neglect
of minor eruptions in infancy and
childhood. With but a little care and
the use of the proper emollients, baby’s
skin and hair may be preserved, puri-
fied and beautified, minor eruptions
prevented from becoming chronic and
torturing, disfiguring rashes, itchings,
irritations and chaflngs dispelled.
To this end, nothing Is so pure, so
sweet, so speedily effective as the con
stant use of Cutlcura Soap, assisted,
when necessary, by Cutlcura Ointment.
Send to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp.,
sole proprietors, Boston, for their free
32-page Cutichra Book telling all about
the care and treatment of the skin.
These Knowing Children.
“Come here. Mamie, dear. Look at
(his beautiful Misty girl. Isn’t she
lovely? I don’t think Misty ever drew
a more charming figure!”
"Do you think, papa, that this is
the model that used to sit on
Mr IW^isty s knee?”—Cleveland Plain
Dealer.
Two Bad Cases in England Cured by
Resinol Ointment.
I have been using Resinol Ointment
during the last few weeks for a
varicose ulcer on leg and can bear tes-
timony to its cooling and curative qual-
ities. Have never found anything to
equal it I was recommended by my
sister, Mrs. Cairns Ladykirk, Norham
on Tweed, to try iL She had been
treated 14 months previously without
effect, but was entirely cured by Res-
inol Ointment.
Robert Davidson, Gateshead on Tyne.
Belgium Has No Navy.
Belgium is, perhaps the most pros-
perous state in Europe, as well as the
most thic kly settled The late king’s
reign was at least marked by an enor-
mous advance in wealth and social re-
form. One of the country’s special ad
vantages is that its international neu-
tralization permits it to dispense with
a navy, while the Belgian army is
maintained on a very small and inex-
pensive basis.
- M-
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot react
the seat ot the disease Catarrh to a bihod or consti-
tutional disease, and In order to cur* It you must tak*
internal remedies. Hall s Catarrh Cure Is taken In-
ternally and acu directly upon the blood and mucoui
surface*. Hall s Catarrh Cure Is not s quack medi-
cine. It was prescribed by one of the beat physicians
in tills country tor years and Is a regular prescription.
It I* composed of the best tonics known, combined
with the beat btood partners. acting directly on tbs
mucous surfaces The perfect combination of th*
two Ingredient* Is what produces such wonderfulrw
suit* in curing catarrh. Send tor testimonials, free.
f J. CHENEY * CO- Props.. Toledo. Q.
Sold by Drunrista. price 75c.
Take Hall's Family Fills tor constipation.
A'Thought Reader.
"So you are studying telepathy?”
"Yes,” answered Senator Sorghum;
my objecjt in fife has been to find
what people are thinking and then
say it first. Any reliable system
would simplify my labors immensely.’
—Exchange.
Distemper
In all its forms, among all ages of horses
and dogs, cured and others in the same
stable prevented from haying the disease
with Spohn’s Distemper Cure. Every bot-
tle guaranteed. Over .100,000 bottles sold
last year. $.50 and $1.00. Good druggists,
or send to manufacturers. Agenta wanted.
Write for free book. Spohn Med. Co.,
Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind.
The Variety.
"What kind of stars take best in the
melodramatic circuit?”
“I guess it is the shooting stars.”
For Headache Try Hicks’ Capudlnc.
Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or
Nervoua trouble*, tha aches are speedily
relieved by Capudine. It’s Liquid—plaaa-
ant to take—Effects immediately. 10, X
and 60c at Drug Stores.
If you want to test a man's charac-
ter, watch and see wdiat creates in him
an enthusiasm.—Angela Dickens.
TO CFRE A COLD IN ONE DAY
Tske LAXATIVE HROMO Onlntne Tablet*
Druggists refund motley If it frfta to cute K. W
WUU VK s signature isun each box. 36c
When common sense takes a vaca-
tion it is time to stand from under.
ALLEN’S LCTNO BALSAM
If the old reliable cough remedy Found In erery
Srug store and In_pra«-Ue*lly erery home. For w>e
by all druggists. 25c. 50c and SI 00 bottles.
No man can pass into eternity, for
be is already in it —Farrar.
Despair and Despondency
&r. a
a daily burden of ill-health and pain becauae of d,8°rt^”
derangements of the delicate and important or**M
distinctly feminine. The tortures to b™vely endured c
pletely upset the nerves if long continued.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a positive cure for
weakness and disease of the feminine organism.
IT MAKES WEAK WOHEN STRONO,
SICK WOMEN WELL.
It allays inflammation, heels ulceration mid
It tones and builds up the nerves. It fits for J™*1™
and motherhood. Honest medicine dealers sell iLand
have nothing to urge upon you as ’ just es gooa.
non-secret, non-alcoholic mid ha. a record of forty cur***
As* Youa Neighbors. They probably know of some of its mtmy curea^ ^
If you want a book that tells all about woman . *"*?**’*'
them at home, send 21 one-cent stamps to ^,ercf. x. illustrated
only, and he will send you . fre, copy of hi. great thouimnd-^
Common Sense Medical Adviser-revised, up-to date g3So?N.Y.
In handsome cioth-binding, 3H»mps. Address Dr. R.V. Pifro*, --
It is
For
Rheumatic
Pains
As we get older the blood becomes sluggish, the mus-
cles and joints stiffen and aches and pains take hold
easier. Sloan’s Liuiment cjuickens the blood, limbers
up the muscles and joints and stops any pain or ache
with astonishing promptness.
Proof that it is Best for Rheumatism.
Mrs. Daniel H. Diehl, of Mann's Choice, R.F.D., No. i, Pa., writes:—
»« please send me a bottle of Sloan’s Liniment for rheumatism and stiff joints.
It is the best remedy I ever knew for I can’t do without iL”
Also for Stiff Joint*.
Mr. Milton Wheeler, 2100 Morris Ave.. Birmingham!Ala-, writes:—
“I am glad to say that Sloan’s Liniment has done me nr ore good for sun
joints than anything I have ever tried.”
Sloan's
Liniment
' is the qickest and best remedy for Rheuma-
tism, Sciatica, Toothache, Sprains, Bruises
and Insect Stings.
Price 25c., 50c., and $1.00 at AU Dealers.
Send for Sloan’* Fuse Book on Horae*. Address
DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOSTON, MASS.
DISTEMPER CURE
DISTEMPER, or STRANGLES
you* Cb°oDAeP'may bTauoc’k^d byVuTTri^o^' Buy a bottle of
FRAZIER’S DISTEMPER CURE
from your druggUt and keep it for instant use. Cure* the sick aodgaywig
others in same stable having epizootic. Influenza, ptnk k.
colds, tl bottle holds three 60c bottle*. No result*, your mooey back.
Send for free horse booklet. __ UIDDiuyc lain
BINKLEY MEDICAL CO., DEPT. J 26, NAPPANtt, IWU.
Free to Our Ereaders.
Write Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chica-
go for 4b-page Illustrated Eye Book Free.
Write all about Your Eye Trouble and
they will advise as to the Proper Appli-
cation of the Murine Eye Remedies In
Your Special Case. Your Druggist will
tell you that Murine Relieves Sore Eyes.
Strengthen* Weak Eyes. Doesn’J 8mart.
Soothes Eye Pain, and sells for 50c. Try
It in Your Eyes and in Baby s Eyes for
Scaly Eyelids and Granulation.
„ The Graveled Geometer.
Euclid was boasting of hia abilities.
“But,” cried his wife, “can you find
why our gas bills are just as big as
when they charged a dollar a thousand
cubic feet?”
With a moan he sped into the night.
Important to Mother*.
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA. a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years
The Kind You Have Always Bought
The Unterrified Improver.
First Angel.—What is the rumpus in
the sevenib heaven?
Second Angel.—A moral uplifter has
broken through the roof trying to find
an eighth heaven.
No Space Goes to Waste.
DeWltt,!— Does your Wife follow the
fashions closely?
Jewitt—l should say so; she has one
of those "standing room only” dresses
—Smart Set.
A Certain Cure for Sore.weak & Inflamed Eyes.
MITCHEllS fill SALVE
r '
MAKES THE USE OF DRUGS UNNECESSARY. Price,25 CenDruggist^
Combination Wood and Wire Fence and Corn Cribs
... « r -1 — 1*«a>n
The most practical and economical fence made for yard. Uwn,
garden, orchard or stock. Sold in 75 and 8o-foot roils ana
painted with the celebrated •‘Monitor’’ paint. Easy to erect
and more durable than ordinary fences. Made in heights d
three to si* feet of selected straight grained yellow pma
pickets See your lumber dealer or write
THE HODGE FENCE * LUMBER CO.. UL L*k* CW«, L*.
Don’t Persecute
your Bowels
__________mfmtm/L
—Kb rah—J *7
CARTER’S LITTLE
UVER PP “
Purdr T**et*Ue.
*cndr o* 6<
WfeibowsL
Car. Cm-
Tta set brawl
Small PUL Small Dom. Small Price
GENUINE must bear signature:
Headache
“My father has been a sufferer from sick
headache for the last twenty-five years and
never found any relief until be began
taking your Cascareta. Since bo has
begun taking Cascaiets he bos never bad
the headache. They have entirely cured
him. Cascareta do what you recommend
them to do. I will give you the privilege
of nsing his name.”—E. M. Dickson,
1120 Re&iner St., W. Indianapolis, Ind.
Pleasant Palatable. Potent. Tart* Good.
Do Good. N**er Sicken jWeakeo or Grtpo.
10c. 25c. 50c. Never sold ta bulk. ---
nine tablet stamped CCC.
cur* or roar money back.
Mr*. Wln*low’* Soothing Syrup.
Vr<r children weiftlntj. I hr (fnnj». r«lucr*ln-
h........... xIIhts i*nn cur** windcoUc. JSca bovU*.
It is easy to offend people who have
no use for you.
THtKINGHOE^MPLf
Commonplace though it may appear,
this doing of one s duty embodies the
highest idoal of life.-, Smiles.
Cenpallor arrl iiitgraraj^s many iwrioos
,-aM.k II I« thoroughly ,-u-rnd hy Or Plrrcs *
Tlw i»’
Eire Ucki i« out—e»t» **S werdt vit*
I ever, lick M»*c« ■ bo, 4o t a**’* work
I SlfCt norc thu halt the tu* *oe« It bettet.
! To Introduce it *«icklr. w# #!*• sample*
—t it no money ooet to ijt»n L
1 Write qulok »»* c*> yo“r|
y\ ^ VtNG*WEEDEX CO.. RidmovAVs
di
PI
(ururile fahiilj lizetlre
'lraaant FellW*
The family tree of a bunko man
must be a slippery elm
DEFIANCE STARCH—!
16 none
----------------- ‘lb* p*ck*«*
—other starches only It ounce*—same pries and
**DKFIANCK" 18 SUPERIOR QUALITY.
KNOWN SINCE 1836 asRELI ABLE
PSfSgSsuSii
[ CAPSULES1
Ih PL ANTE N A SOM. 93 HEHRY SI 8R0C» 1 N N _
PATENTSa
proBupiiy n**M»*. *»
W. N. U^ DALLAS. NO. *-1910.
W areas K- Calem**.W*A-
tngloti. D C. book*free.[High-
You Look Prematurely Old
U— “LA CRKOLi” HAIR RMTOW1R* PRIOl. »K)0* rf IU
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Arterberry, T. E. The Savoy Star. (Savoy, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 48, Ed. 1 Friday, February 25, 1910, newspaper, February 25, 1910; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth974348/m1/5/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bonham Public Library.