The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 10, 1906 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Borderlands Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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UNITED STATES SENATOR
FROM SOUTH CAROLINA
PRAISES PE-RU-NA.
Ex-Senator M C. Butler. [n
ll5HH5HSH5HSHSE5E5SSHSSS5Sd
Dyspepsia Is Often Caused By Catarrh
of the Stomach—Peruna Relieves Ca-
tarrh of the Stomach and Is Therefore a
Remedy For Dyspepsia.
Hon. M. C. Butler, Ex-U. S. Sen- ♦
ator from South Carolina for two ?
terms, in a letter from Washington, I
D. C., writes to the Peruna Medicine f
Co., as follows : t
•• l can recommend Peruna tor 1
dyspepsia and stomach trouble. I j
have been using your medicine for T
a short period and I feel very much .
relieved. It Is Indeed a wonderful t
medicine, besides a good tonic. ” t
^ATARRH of the stomach is the cor-
V> rect name for most cases of dyspep-
sia. In order to cure catarrh of the
stomach the catarrh must be eradicated.
Only an internal catarrh remedy,
such as Peruna. is available.
Peruna exactly meets the indications.
Revised Formula.
“For a number of years requests
have come to me from a multitude of
grateful friends, urging that Peruna
be given a slight laxative quality. I
have been experimenting with a laxa-
tive addition for quite a length of
time, and now feel gratified to an-
nounce to the friends of Peruna that
I have incorporated such a quality in
the medicine which, in my opinion,
can only enhance its well-known bene-
ficial character.
“S. B. Habtman, M. D.”
His Pull.
Lariat Lem, of Gory Gulch, who
had been elected to the legislature,
had attended his first session a-nd re-
turned to his admiring constituents.
"You don't seem to have had any
trouble In catching the speaker’s eye,
Lem,” said one of them.
"You bet I didn’t!” answered the
rising statesman, setting down his
glass. "He kDowed blamed well that
if I failed to catch his eye I’d catch
his nose the fust time I saw him on
the street.”—Chicago Tribune.
Turkish Postage Stamps.
The Turkish government offers a
bargain to stamp collectors through
its minister at Vienna. Rather more
than a million Thessalian stamps are
to be withdrawn from circulation. 1 hey
are of all categories and colors—red,
blue, green, etc.—and an open offer is
made to sell the lot for $8,000.
Jack Has Arrived.
Jack Walters, of South Georgia, has
made his arrival and didn’t bring but
seven dogs; said he didn’t have room
for his family, but that they would
come later. You bet Jack will make
one more industrious and good neigh-
bor.—Lavonia (Ga.) Times.
The gTeat question is not whether
you have failed but whether you are
content with failure.—Ram’s Horn.
When you buy
WET
WEATHER r/_
CLOTHING
you want ' - 7
complete
protection,
and long
service.
These and many
other good points
are combined In
TOWERS
riSM BRAND
OILED CLOTHING
You can’t afford /
to biy any other /
jtowi* co tocnvu
Big Interest OnYour Money
All profits paid In dividends. Others have
made one hundred per cent in same business.
Sure income tor life—and valuable legacy for
family. Real estate deeded to Philadelphia
sruat company tor protection of investors.
Beautifully illustrated booklet and paper free.
Write at once. I. L. and D. Co.. Dept A, 728
Drexel Building, Philadelphia. Pa.
W. N. U. HOUSTON—NO. 19, 1906.
Whan Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper.
SANDSTORM AT SEA.
EVENTFUL VOYAGE OF A SHIP
FROM CALCUTTA.
Encounters Most Singular Conditions
in the Red Sea—Decks Two
Inches Deep with Pow-
dery Grit.
New York.—The log of the Ger-
man steamship Schonfels, from Cal-
j cutta, which docked at South Brook-
lyn the other day, tells a story of
storm experiences of a more varied
character than is often encountered
by China traders of modern times in
a single voyage.
With the exception of the time the
steamship was in the Suez canal it
had only one day of good weather
from the time it entered the Red
sea, the succession of disturbances
it encountered ranging from a sand-
storm in - the Red sea to a hurricane
as it neared this coast and winding
up with the strong westerly blow
which compelled Capt. Denker to an-
chor off Liberty island before he could
safely dock on the exposed Brooklyn
side of the bay.
The Schonfels left Calcutta Janu-
ary 29, toucned at Colombo Febru-
ary 5 for 24 hours, reached Suez the
18th and Algiers the 26th.
February 16, while in the Red sea,
the ship ran into a sandstorm which
lasted for two days, covering the
decks several inches deep with a
fine, powdery grit and keeping the
officers and men who had to be on
deck continually sneezing and cough-
ing.
“We first noticed the sandstorm
early on February 16,” said Chief Of-
ficer Diedrich Kloppenburg. "Ahead
of us the air was dense with a thick,
yellowish mist, which at first we
thought to be smoke-laden fog. When
we ran into it every man on deck was
set to choking and sneezing. It was
like running through a light smoke.
You could discern objects in every
direction for a considerable distance,
but everything had a yellowish tinge.
“We had to keep all cabin ports
closed and every time one passed in
or out of a door a cloud of the fine,
yellow sand sifted in and covered
everything. There was little wind at
the time and the sea was compara-
tively smooth, but the air was com-
pletely surcharged with the fine grit.
Evidently there had been a severe
sandstorm just before we reached
that point and we ran into the after-
math.
"After leaving Port Said we had
continuous rough weather, with one
storm after another, which kept our
decks awash and the ship laboring
heavily all the way through the Medi-
terranean. A peculiarity about these
storms was that one would be bitter-
ly cold, with biting, freezing wind,
and perhaps the next would be like a
summer gale, high wind, but as not
as though coming from a blast fur-
nace.
“After leaving the Mediterranean
we had about 36 hours good weather
and then the Storm King got after
us again. He came at us from the
westward, the northwest and the
southwest, one blow after another.
The ship was rolling and laboring
heavily In these successive storms,
with high, dangerous seas continually
breaking on board, until we were
nearing this coast on March 14, when
the wind died down for a few hours.
But before midnight It broke out
again from the eastward and by the
16th was blowing a gale. We made
the Delaware breakwater in that gale
and were safe in shelter during the
worst of it, in which this coast was
dotted with distressed and stranded
vessels.
"Tne 34 Lascars in our crew of 63
had no clothing but their customary
native garments of cotton and the
first thing Wi.en we docked they sent
a messenger ashore for heavy flan-
nels before they would come on deck
to clean up ship. We are fortunate
that, with all the terrible weather
we came through, not a man was
hurt and no damage was done on
board which “Chips,” the ship’s car-
penter, could not repair almost as
soon as it occurred.”
germaivTune is fastest.
Average Better Time Than Competing
Transatlantic Mail
Steamers.
Berlin.—The superior speed of the
German transatlantic mail steamers
is shown in the official report on mail
services between Great Britain and
the United States for the year ending
June 30, 1905.
The North German , Lloyd steamers
Kaiser Wilhelm II., Kronprinz Wil-
helm and Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse
made nine, ten and eleven trips, re-
spectively, by which time the mails
between New York and London av-
eraged 149.5, 150.9 and 152.5 hours.
The fastest time was 144.1 hours.
The Deutschland made eight mail
deliveries, its average time being 150.6
hours. Its quickest delivery was 147.2
hours. The Cunard line steamers are
a day longer. The Campania, which
made the best time, averaged 167.4
hours. Its best time was 163.4 hours.
The White Star line steamer Oceanic
tied the Cunard line’s fastest time, but
the other White Star steamers are far
slower. The Philadelphia was the
fasfcst of the American line, and aver-
aged 177.6 hours.
No Paradise for Women.
So far as legal rights are con-
cerned, Texas is not the married
woman’s paradise. A married
woman has no property of her own.
If she earns anything her husband
can collect and spend it. He can
squander her inheritance or gamble
away her estate. Not long since, re-
ports the St. Louis Post-Dispatch,
a woman whose drunken husband had
deserted her bought a sewing machine
on the Installment plan and proceed-
ed to make a living for herself and
several small children. The hus-
band discovered the fact and the
terms of the bargain and, the day
before the agent was to call for the
second payment, went to the bank
where the wife had deposited her lit-
tle savings for this purpose, wrote a
check and drew every dollar as her
I "manager.”
AN EVERY-DAY STRUGGLE.
Men and Women of Every Occupation
Suffer Miseries from Kidney
Complaint.
J. C. Lightner. 703 So. Cedar St..
Abilene, Kansas, is one of the thou-
sands who suffer
from kidney trou-
bles brought on by
daily work. “I first
noticed It eight or
ten years age,” said
Mr. Lightner. "The
dull pain in the
back fairly made
me sick. It was
hard to get up or
down, hard to
straighten, hard to do any work that
brought a strain on the back. I had
frequent attacks of gravel and the
urine was passed too often and with
pain. When I used Doan’s Kidney
Pills, however, all traces of the trou-
ble disappeared and have not return-
ed. I am certainly grateful.”
Sold by all dealers. 59 teats a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
First $1,000,000 Policy.
The first $1,000,000 policy ever issued
was taken out in 1897 by George Van-
derbilt, at the age of 35, in the Mutual.
It was a 20-payment life, 20-year dis-
tribution policy, that is, he is to pay a
yearly premium of $35,000 for 20 years.
At the end of that time ha will receive
a paid-up policy of $1,000,000 and a
cash dividend. If the policy had been
taken out 20 years ago, at the same age,
he would have paid by this time the
sum of $700,000 In premiums, which at
four per cent, compound interest would
amount to nearly $1,085,000.—World’s
Work.
Torture of Women.
It was a terrible torture that Mrs.
Gertie McFarland, of King's Mountain,
N. C., describes, as follows: "I suf-
fered dreadful periodical pain, and be-
came so weak I was given up to die,
when my husband got me Wine of
Cardui. The first dose gave relief, and
with 3 bottles I am up doing my work.
I cannot say enough in praise of Car-
dui." A wonderful remedy for wom-
en’s Ills. At druggists; $1.00.
The Great Ambition.
This ambition not to be satisfied with
little things is characteristic of men
of great fiber, and it had a great deal
to do in shaping Beecher’s career. If
he had had an ordinary ambition, he
never would have been the power in
the world that he was—he never would
have become one of the first preach-
ers in the world. A steady stream
cannot rise higher than its fountain-
head.—Success Magazine.
Instantaneous Action.
"I was almost distracted by a ter-
rible itching which defied all treat-
ment until I obtained a box of Hunt’s
Cure. The first application afforded
instant and absolute relief. The one
box effected a complete cure.
"It is simply wonderful in its in-
stantaneous action.”
Geo. Gilliland,
Manitou, O. T.
Dog-Shearing Motor.
On the banks of the Seine recently
considerable surprise was caused by a
perambulating motor for shearing dogs.
The engine is two and one-half horse-
power and can shear six dogs an hour.
There is little doubt that before long
this means of clipping will be generally
adopted.
Girl’s Invention.
A 15-year-old girl, of Brussels, has
Invented a portable turn-table for re-
versing the direction of motor cars.
The apparatus Is fixed on the chassis,
which has a driving-wheel at each end
and Is worked by an electric motor. It
has been patented.
McKinley’s Optimism.
President McKinley once said:
"Always peril, and always after them
safety always darkness and clouds,
but always shining through them the
light and the sunshine; always cost
and sacrifice, but always after them
the fruition of liberty, education and
civilization "
Need No Rocking.
In Alaska the papoose is placed in
a kind of waving cradle, into which
it is securely tied, the whole being
fastened to a young sapling fir planted
in the ground in a slanting direction;
it moves up and down at the slightest
provocation. In summer the baby is
left for hours together outside.
Got His Dates Mixed.
At a christening in the wilds of Mis-
souri, while the minister was recording
the event, he happened to say:
“Let me see—isn't this the 27th?”
“I should say not,” retorted the Indig-
nant mother, "it’s only the ninth.”—
Chicago Daily News.
REPAIRING BRAIN
A Certain Way by Food.
Every minister, lawyer, journalist,
physician, author or business man is
forced under pressure of modern con-
ditions to the active and sometimes
overactive use of the brain.
Analysis of the excreta thrown out
by the pores shows that brain work
breaks down the phosphate of potash,
separating it from its heavier compan-
ion, albumen, and plain common sense
teaches that this elemental principle
must be introduced into the body anew
each day, if we would replace the loss
and rebuild the brain tissue.
We know tnat the phosphate of
potash, as presented in certain field
grains, has an affinity for albumen and
that is the only way gray matter in the
brain can be built. It will not answer
to take the crude phosphate of potash
of the drug shop, for nature rejects it.
The elemental mineral must be pre-
sented through food directly from na-
ture's laboratory.
These facts have been made use of
In the manufacture of Grape-Nuts, and
any brain worker can prove the value
of the proper selection of food by mak-
ing free use of Grape-Nuts for ten days
or two weeks. Sold by grocers every-
where (and is immense quantities).
Manufactured by the Postum Co., Bat-
tle Creek, Mich.
Largest Electric Plant.
Chicago is to have the largest elec-
tric light and power station in the
world. It will be a steam turbine
plant, and all the boilers are to be
equipped with automatic stokers, so
that no manual handling of the coal
will be necessary. There will be an
electrical kitchen where substantial
meals will be cooked by electricity for
the employes. There will be a refrig-
erating apparatus, an ice plant, a num-
ber of bedrooms, as well as locker
rooms, baths and other conveniences.
Dog in Snake.
A New South Wales farmer went out
the other day and tied his small dog
to a fence. On his return he found
a large carpet snake attached to the
end of the leash and no signs of the
dog.
Busy Bill.
For the fourth time "Swiftwater”
Dill Gates has established an entente
cordiale with fortune in the Klondike.
It is said his clean-up for this season
v.’ill be $500,000.
A Strange Story.
Mrs. Isaac W. Austin, of Chestnut
Ridge, N. C., tells a strange story oi
great suffering. “I was in bad con-
dition for months, but got no relief.
My periods had stopped, all but the
pain. After taking part of a bottle ot
Wine of Cardui, nature worked prop-
erly and without pain. ' I advise all
suffering women to use Cardui." A
pure specific remedy for women’s ills.
$1.00, at druggists.
Getting It Down Fine.
The two hundred and fiftieth part of
an inch is a millimeter. The two mil-
lionth part of a millimeter is what Dr.
P. E. Shaw, of England, is measuring.
The unaided eye cannot perceive much
less than one-tenth of a millimeter.
With the help of a microscope the eye
can see as little as 1-5,000 millimeter.
The measuring medium used for en-
gineering gauges will detect differences
of 1-8,000 millimeter. By using inter-
ference bands of light we can perceive
movement of 1-109,000 millimeter.—
Scientific American.
Stand Head.
There is something about Hunt’s
Lightning Oil that no other liniment
possesses. Others may be good, but
it is surely the best. It does all you
recommend it for, and more. For
sprains, bruises, cuts, burns, aches and
pains it has no equal on earth. It
stands head on my medicine shelf.
Very truly yours,
T. J. Brownlow,
Livingston, Tenn.
California’s Salt.
A great California industry is the
manufacture of salt from sea water.
In Alameda county 100,000 tons were
produced last year. Only a few years
ago the state imported all its salt.
Now it produces enough for its own
use—which is enormous, owing to the
fisheries and packing houses—and ex-
ports large quantities as well.
Townsmen and Countrymen.
That the townsman is shorter lived
than the countryman is incohtroverti-
ble. Dr. Tatham calculated that in
the rural districts of England the av-
erage expectation of life at birth is
51.48 year3 for males and 54.04 for
females, whereas in Manchester it is
only 28.78 for males and 32.67 for
females, which means that each male
has to sacrifice 10.48 years, or 39 per
cent, of his life, and each female 9.82
years, or 34 per cent, of her life for
the privilege of being born in an
urban area.—Popular Science Monthly.
ECZEMA AFFLICTS FAMILY.
Father and Five Children Suffered for
Two Years with Terrible Eczema
—Wonderful Cure by Cuticura.
“My husband and five children were
all afflicted with eczema. They had it
two years. We used all the home rem-
edies we could hear of, without any
relief, and then went fo a physician
and got medicine two different times,
and it got worse. It affected us all
over except head and hands. We saw
Cuticura Remedies advertised and
concluded to try them. So I sent for
$1.00 worth, consisting of one cake of
Cuticura Soap, one box of Ointment,
and one vial of Pills, and we commen-
ced to use them. I do not know how
to express my joy in finding a cure,
for two of -my children wore so bad
that they have the brown scars on
their bodies where they were sore.
Mrs. Maggie B. Hill, Stevens, Mason
Co., W. Va„ June 12, 1905.”
Business Basis.
The count’s wife had asked for di-
vorce.
“Am I to understand,” he asked,
“that the arrangement I supposed was
a sale was merely a lease?”
This proved to be about the idea.—
Philadelphia Ledger.
He Is Numerous.
The man who unexpectedly gets two
dollars and celebrates by spending five
dollars lives in your neighborhood; also
In your neighbor’s neighborhood.
kt lucre i* at icjuuuuu uiciu.ru uim-hc
Las t>eeu able to cure hi all lid t»iagei
Catarrh Haifa Catarrh (Jn-e Is the
cure now known to the medical fraterr
beta# a constitutional disc
onal disease, requii
tonal treatment, liall'a Catarrh Cun
ernally. actluK directly upon the bioo<
surfaces of the system, thereby d<
foundation of the disease, and givlnj
strenzth by building up the constltutl
lng nature in doing its work. The prt
so much faith in Its curat.ve powers t
One Hundred Dollars for any case t
cure. Send for list of testimonials.
Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toll
Sold by all Druggists. 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constlpa
The man who boasts of making many
enemies wonders why he has so few
friends.
Try Garfield Tea! It purifies the blood,
cleanses the system, brings good health.
Humanity is the equity of the heart.
—Confucius.
Emioest Doctors Praise its Ingredients.
We refer to that boon to weak, nervous,
suffering women known as Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription.
Dr. John Fyfe one of the Editorial Staff
of The Eclectic Medical Review says
of Unicorn root (Helonins Dioica) which
is one of the chief ingredients of the “Fa-
vorite Prescription”:
• A remedy which invariably acts as a uter- |
ine invigorator • • • mal;es for normal ao-
tivitV Of thf **
~ >1*
i
id
to women it is seldom that a ease
J— —*------*----indicuti
ment
purposes
aenuaintt
He continues
hich
s than
td. I
o woi
ich di
remi
The f
indications tor Helonias (l
aching in the back,
atonic (weak) conditioi
entire reproductive system.’
■in HelODias we have a medica-
re repr
ielonlas
more fully answers the ab
n any other drug with which /
In the treatment ot diseases pe-
bove
am
seen which does not present soi
for this remedial agent.” Dr.
,ys: "The following are among
dications for Helonias (Un
me indication
Fyfe further !
the leading
Pain
icorn root).
ith leucorrhoea;
the reproductive
rgans ot women, mental depression and ir-
ritability. associated with chronic diseases of
the reproductive organs of women, constant
sation of heat in the region of the kid-
ue to a weak-
wit
of the reproductive
1 depression and lr-
pei
abnormal cond
and
he regio:
■norrhagia (flooding1, du
idition of the r
ressed
ig from or acc
ition of the di
eys:
ned condition of the reproductive system;
nenorrhoea (suppressed or absent monthly
riods), arising from or accompanying an
panying
condition of the digestive organs
•mic (thin blood) habit; dragging
s in the extreme lower pari of the
a;
aensati
abdomen.”
If more or less of tho above symptoms
are present, no invalid woman can do
better than take Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription, one of the leading ingredi-
ents of which is Unicorn root, or Helonias,
and the medical properties of which it
most faithfully represents.
Of Golden Seal root, another prominent
ingredient of “Favorite Prescription,”
Prof. Finley Ellingwood. M. D., of Ben-
nett Medical College, Chicago, says:
“It is an important remedy in disorders of
the womb. In all catarrhal conditions * * •
and general enfeeblement, it is useful.”
Prof. John M. Scudder, M. D., late of
Cincinnati, says of Golden Seal root:
“In relation to its general effects on the
system, there it no medicine in ute about which
there it tuch general unanimity of opinion. It
is unirertally regarded as the tonic useful in
all debilitated states.”
Prof. Bartholow, M. D., of Jefferson
Medical College, says of Gold T.'i Seal:
“Valuable in uterine hemorrhage, menor-
rhagia (flooding) and congestive dysmenor-
rhoea (painful menstruation}.”
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription faith-
fully represents all the above named in- i
greclients and cures the diseases for which
they are recommended.
How About Defeat?
Art has its charms for the illiterate.
A copy of "The Winged Victory” was
placed last summer in the library of
the University of Rochester. A work-
man assisting in the operation sur-
veyed the headless and armless statue
with interest. “An' what may ye call
that fellow?” he asked. “That’s the
statue of ‘Victory’,” said the librarian.
‘Victory’ is it?” said the man: begorra,
I’d like to see the other fellow, thin.”
Does Not Irritate.
"I have found Simmons Liver Puri-
fier the mildest and most pleasant in
action, and yet the surest remedy for
constipation, torpid liver and all kin-
dred troubles, I have ever used, it
does not irritate or gripe.
Yours truly,
„ S. P. Cleary,
Jackson, Tenn.
Put up in tin boxes only, Price 25c.
THREEFACTS
For Sick Women
To Consider
Statues with Top-Hats.
Some of the London newspapers are
irguing over the number of statues
vith “top hats” there are in existence.
3ne is a statue of the late President
Cruger that never reached Pretoria
ind lies in a yard at Durban. Mrs.
?ruger stipulated that the top of the
lat should be left open so as to hold
•ainwater for the birds.
Doomed to Torment.
Mr. P. C. Keever, Aberdeen, Miss.,
writes:
"For years I suffered from a form
of eczema which made life a burden.
I thought I was doomed to perpetual
torment here below, but your Hunt’s
Cure rescued me. One box did the
work and the trouble has never re-
turned. Many, many thanks.”
Hunt's Cure is guaranteed.
Prefer the Money.
“Richley's children are all quarreling
over his estate.”
"Why? To see who’ll get his valu-
able art collection?”
“No; to see who won’t get it.”—De-
troit Free Press.
Speaking of Women.
“One peculiarity about the feminine
sex seems to be the impossibility of
discussing it with moderation; critics
are either violently antagonistic or
falsely complimentary,” says Lady
Violet Greville, in the London Graphic.
Ambulance for Dogs.
The Bristol (Eng.) home for lost and
starving dogs has provided an ambu-
lance on cycle wheels for the convey-
ance of injured dogs to the institu-
tion.
An Interesting Letter.
Mary Bagguley, of 117 Peach St.,
Syracuse, N. Y., writes to tell of the
terrible suffering of her sister, who,
for the past 24 years, had been Tor-
mented with side ache from female
trouble, keeping her weak and ailing.
"She took W’ine of Cardui and is now
well. Cardui has been a Godsend to
us both,” she writes. For all wool-
en’s troubles, Cardui is a safe, efficient,
reliable remedy. At druggists; SI.00.
Our Export Trade.
The United States export trade in
South America is but a dollar annually
for each of the inhabitants of that
continent.
Use American Machinery.
Artificial ice is being manufactured in
Athens with machinery shipped to
Greece from western Pennsylvania,
Copper Consumption.
It takes 40,000 tons of copper a month
to satisfy home and foreign demands.
Struck by Lightning.
Mrs. Nancy Cleary, of Brewers, N.
C., suffered as if struck by lightning.
She says: "I was almost paralyzeu
from my waist down, and my bacK
hurt me constantly, from female trou-
bles. I had headache, seemed always
tired, and felt as if I was dying. I took
Wine of Cardui, which cured me, and
now I feel like a new person.” Cardui
relieves periodic-'! pain, and makes
sick women well. $1.10 at drug stores.
Giving Too Much.
When the heart runs away with the
head there is sure to follow a feeling
of resentment toward the world in
general.
In a Pinch, Use ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE.
A powder. It cures painful, smart-
ing, nervous feet and ingrowing nails.
It’s the grearest comfort discovery of
the age. Makes now shoes easy. A
certain cure for sweating feet. Sold
by all druggists, 25c. Trial package,
FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le
Roy, N. Y.
Women especially are <to be talked to
as below men and above children.—
Chesterfield.
Fraud is the ready minister of injus-
tice.—Burke.
First.—-That almost every operation
in our hospitals performed upon women
becomes necessary through neglect of
such symptoms as backache, irregular
and painful periods, displacements
of the female organs, pain in the side,
burning sensation in the stomach,
bearing-down pains, nervousness, dix-
ziness and sleeplessness.
Second.—The medicine that holds
the record for the largest number of
absolute cures of female ills is Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
It regulates, strengthens and cures
diseases of the female organism as
nothing else can.
For thirty years it has been helping
women to be strong, curing backache,
nervousness, kidney troubles, inflam-
mation of the female organs, weak-
ness and displacements, regulating
the periods perfectly and overcoming
their pains. It has also proved itself
invaluable in preparing women for
childbirth and the change of life.
Third.—The great volume of unso-
licited and grateful testimonials on file
at the Pinkhatn Laboratory at Lynn,
Mass., many of which are from time to
time published by permission, give ab-
solute evidence of the value of Lydia
E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound and
Mrs. Pinkham’s advice.
Mrs.Pinkham's Standing Invitation
to Women.—Women suffering from any
form of female weakness are invited to
promptly communicate with Mrs. Pink-
ham, at Lynn, Mass. All letters are
received, opened, read and answered
by women only. From symptoms given,
your trouble may he located and the
quickest and surest way of recovery
advised. Mrs. Pinkham is daughter-
in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for
twenty-five years under her direction
and since her decease she has been ad-
vising sick women free of charge. Out of
the vast volume of experience in treat-
ing female ills Mrs. Pinkham probably
has the very knowledge that will help
your case. Surely, any woman, rich or
poor, is very foolish if she does not take
advantage of this generous offer of
assistance '
fklTiTO IIITitiri]
iiniui)'i'(i,.i.t.i.i.im»tinai
1 i■ ■ i ■ i11 _
iiiuiiimiu"uii'Iiii iMiiiMiiHttniitiri'iiii'iiii ninititiitiNt'
AYfcgelable Preparalionfor As -
similating the Food andReguIa-
ting the Stomachs and Bowels of
Infants/( hildkln
Promotes Digestion.Cheerfuh
ness and Rest .Contains neither
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral.
Not Narc otic .
(ASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
/hope of’ Old Rr SAMUEL PITCHER
PomfJan SeetL"
dtx.Senna *
Rochelle ScUt-
Anue teed *
HSngSead-
Ctanhed Suoar
M(yi» ruemr.
Aperfecl Remedy forConstipa-
Tlon, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish-
ness and Loss of Sleep.
Facsimile Signature of
NEWYORK.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
BcCANE’S DETECTIVE AGENCY,
Houston, Texas, operates the largest iorc-e 1
ol competent detectives in the South. I
they tender written opinions in case- not
lundled oy them Reasonable tales.
Eo's You Need'nt Care.
It must be fine to be so rich that you
don’t have to think about keeping up
appearances..
Srnrl to Garfield Tea Co.. Brooklyn, N.
Y., for free package of Garfield Tea, the
herb cure for constipation and liver trouble.
That Delightful Aid to Health
r
There is hardly anything as hard as I
being as nice to your wife’s relatives
as you expect them to be to you.
When a woman doesn't mind tobac-
co smoke in the house it is a sign she
isn’t telling the truth.
Mrs. \ViiiHioiv’s .soothing; Syrup.
For children teething. noftens the (rum*, reduces
flaxmratlon. allays pain, cares wind *25c u hot
In-
tile-
It makes a woman awful nervous
about the baby to read that there is
an epidemic of something in India.
Garfield Tea cures sick-headache, bilious
attacks, liver trouble and constipation.
Christianity commands us to pass by
injuries; policy to let them pass by us.
—Franklin.
Showers of blessing never follow
stolent thunder.
Our own heart, and not other men’s
opinions, forms our true honor.—Cole-
ridge.
tin
Toilet Antiseptic
Whitens the teeth — purifies
mouth and breath — cures nasal
catarrh, sore throat, sore eyes,
and by direct application cures
all inflamed; ulcerated and
catarrhal conditions caused by
feminine ills.
Paxtine possesses extraordinary
cleansing, healing and germi-
cidal qualities unlike anything
else. At all druggists. 50 cents
LARGE TRIAL PACKAGE FREE
The R. Paxton Co., Boston, Mass.
KODAKS AND SUPPLIES
Send us your Developing and
Finishing.
HOUSTON OPTICAL CO.,
SOS MAIM STREET.
.L. Douglas
‘S^&^^SHOESS
IV. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line
cannot be equalled at any price.
m
21
8
fSTA&UsH^j)
JULY 6 ,8t6
Capital *2.500,000 |
W. L. DOUGLAS MAKES A SELLS MORE
MEM’S 9S.60 SHOES THAN AMY OTHER
MANUFACTURER IM THE WORLD.
Cl n nnn REWARD to anyone who can
$IU)UUU disprove this atatement.
If I could lake you Into m V three large factories
at Brockton, Mu*., and show you the Infinite
care with which every pair ot ahocs ia made you
would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes
coat more to make, why they hold their chape,
tit better, wear longer, and are of greater
intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe.
W-L Doughs• Strong Mmdm Shorn for
Mon, $2.60, 92.00. Boym’ School 9
Broom Shoo*. $2.60.62.91.76,91.60
CAUTION .—upon having W.L.Dong-
]*§ shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine
without bit name and price stamped on bottom.
fast Color £uelets used ; they will not wear brassy.
Write lor illustrated Catalog.
We grow strong by duties performed.
We grow morally and spiritually weak
by duties neglected.
PATENTS for PROFIT
mast tally protect an Invention. Booklet and
Desk Calendar FREE. Highest reference*.
Communication* confidential. Katabllabed 1361.
■aaoo, Fes wick k Lawrsnce, Washington, S, 0.
W. L.
(rated < at a log.
DOUGLAS. B;
rock ton. Mi
MERCHANTS KST
loaiaiana town investigate new propositi
handle Edison I'honographa Addr
Phonograph
rare Texaa
Honaton, Texas.
laition I
ire«a M
Co., Jobber!
You Look Prematurely Old
Because of thoee ugly, grizzly, gray halre. Use “LA CREOLE” HAIR RESTORER. Price, SI.OO, retail.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Herman, George C. The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 10, 1906, newspaper, May 10, 1906; Batesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth974735/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .