The Alto Herald (Alto, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 2, 1911 Page: 2 of 8
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BAKING
POWDER
That Makes the Baking Better
Pallurei are almost Impossible with
Calutnet.
We know that It will give you better
reaultw.
We know thnt the baking will be purer
—more wholenora*.
We know that It will be more evenly
raited.
And we know that Calumet Is more
•cnomieal. both in Its iihc and cost.
We know these things because we
bave put the quality Into It—we have
aern It tried out in every way. It Is ;
tjned now In millions of homes and Its
•ale# are growing daily. It la the
modern baking powder.
Have you tried It?
Calumet la highest In quality*—
moderate in price.
Rtcoircd Highest Award—
.World's Pure Food Exposition.
(ilumej
BAKING POVVD^
CHICAGO
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
1 Nine timet in ten when the liver U right (ha
■tomicli ami bowel, .re right.
CARTER S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
geutly but firmly com-
pel . I.ry liver to
do iti tin!
| Cure. '
• tip.tiou,
Induc-
tion,
Sick
Hudtcht, and Di.tr.•• .ft.r Eating.
Saudi Pill, Sm.n Do... 3w0 Pric.
Genuine Oliut b«u Signature
er.
That Awful Mrs. Jones.
Mrs. Smith—Sho Is bo unobservlng!
Mrs. llrown—And always complain-
ing. The other day, while ballooning
near a storm center, she collided with
a rain cloud and reported to the au-
thorities that tho driver of an aero-
plane sprinkler had splashed water all
over her best gown!—Widow.
Violation of Rules.
"They have expolled my favorite
waiter from his brotherhood," said
one hotel patron.
"Yob," replied the other, "he acci-
dentally smiled and said "Thank you.'
a dollar's worth for a 50-cent tip."
COLDS
Mtwyon's Cold Remedy Believes the
bead, throat and lungs almost Immediate-
ly. Checks Fevers, atops Discharges of
the nose, taken away all aches and pains
caused lir cold*. It cures Qrlp ana ob-
stinate roughs end prevents Pneumonia.
Write Prof. Munyon, Mrd and Jefferson
Bis.. I'hlts., I'a., for medical adrlco sb.
Solutoly free.
B
ISO'S
I • THE NAMC
„ or THI •■•> MCDICINI
for COUP HI E COUPS
GOOD NEWS EPITOMIZED
The Final Settlement,
"A verdict for $10,000 isn't so bad,"
eald tho Junior partner. "How much
Bhall we give our client?"
"Oh, give him $50." answered the
senior partner. "But hold!"
"Well?"
"Don't be hasty. Promise to give
him $50."
HAPPENINGS OF UNU8UAL IN-
TEREST TO OUR READERS, IN
READABLE SHAPE.
BOTH FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
(t It Was of Sufficient Importance
You Will Find It Recorded
Here.
Cleburne capitalists are figuring on
Installing an ice factory at Clifton.
It now looks like there will be no
Increaso In congressional membership.
Memphis has ten miles of cement
sidewalks under construction and con-
tract.
The First Baptist Church of Gaines-
ville will soon Install a new pipe or-
gan.
A new boiler for the city pumping
station has been bought by the city
council of Grand Saline.
Comanche Indians believe that late
Chief Quanah Parker was poisoned,
and did not die from natural causes.
Brig. (!en. Joseph Tllford, U. S. A.,
retired, died last week In Washington
at the advanced ago of 82 years.
A Constantinople newspaper reports
the Turkish steamer Hurrelt, filled
with Moslems, burned at sea and not
a paissenger saved.
Lieutenant S. B. West, U. S. A.,
of Port Davis, was frozen to death
while out in a blizzard near Cape
Nome, Alaiska.
St. Ix>uis was selected as the next
meeting place of t.he National lOduca-
tlon Association, department of sup-
erintendents.
The State legislature of New Hamp-
shire, now the largest State Legisla-
ture In this country will soon corfslst
of 400 members.
The city commission of Shreveport
has ordered un election to take place
on April 1, for tho issuance of $260,-
000 street Improvement bonds.
The «afe of the State Bank of Mead,
Oltla., was blown and $2300 stolen.
Tho robbers cut all telegraph and
telephone wires leading Into the town
before blowing the safe.
That the rivers and haxbors bill,
passed by the house, carrying $1,744,-
000 In appropriations for Texas river
surveys will bo approved by President
Taft Is understood to be assured.
Albert H. Sutherland, theatrical
manager, and husband of Julia King,
the actress, was. found dead in his
bed Tuesday morning at his home on
Broadway.
The election for the Incorporation
of Nlles, the packing house district
of North Port Worth, resulted In a
vote of 33 to 0 In favor of Incorpora-
ting.
At Alva, Oltla., Miss Ruby Lynn,
Miss Nola Alevander, Miss Eva King-
ton and Mrs. WUcov were accldently
poisoned by eating chocolate candy,
containing a ptomaine.
K. D. Eby, who had been In tho
tailoring business In Luling for tho
last five years, killed himself at 5:30
Monday afternoon by shooting himself
With a 38-calIber pistol.
Work Is betng rushed on the big
canal of tho Valley Reservoir Irriga-
tion company, which Is to water tho
lands about Ch&pln. Five cars of
machinery for the pumping plant
■were unloaded and have been placed.
A movement, bearing a promising
Appearance, Is on foot to lustall a
commercial canning plant at Hemp-
Stead.
Cutting a hole In the roof and then
sliding down a pipe, William Woods,
l^ee J. Turner and a man named Wade
escaped from the Jail at Belton. They
disappeared in some woods about a
mile north of town.
Pire at Cushing Monday night de-
stroyed a grocery store, a drug store
and a meat market, with a loss of
about $6,500.
R. M. Riley, aged 77 years, a Texas
Ranger, served through the Civil War
and was four years Sheriff of Llano
County, died In Austin last Wednes-
day night.
Anton Novodky, a Bohemian farm-
er living three miles south of Taylor,
was kicked In the side by a hortfe,
from the effects of which he died.
He Is survived by a widow aud one
child
The figures show that during 1909,
4,481,000 more hogs were killed In
this country for food purposes than
ell other animals combined. During
the year 1909 36,443,000 hogs were
killed tor food purposes and 31,960,000
of all other animals.
The largo creosotlng plant of the
International Creosotlng Company,
destroyed by lire at Beaumont last
January Is being rebuilt.
The Dallas School Board has asked
the city to vote a bouff Issue of
$250,000 for enlargement and Improve-
ment ot the city school buildings.
Bridgeport Is to voto on a $20,000
bond issue for a school building.
Chicago parties have under advise-
ment the establishment of a cement
factory at Clifton.
The California Senato last week
passed the recall blU, covering all
elective officers, by a vote of 36 to 4.
I. M. Putnam and associates of Ok-
lahoma City have arranged to glvo as
i starter 1500 acres of land lying
alongside of that municipality toward
the founding of a great Interdenom-
inational university. It 13 estimated
that these lands can be so handled as
to realize at least $3,000,000 for the
endowment fund.
At Shreveport the contract for the
construction of tho new Commercial
National Bank building, to be ten stor-
ies high and to cost $325,000, was
awarded to Stewart & Mctihey, con-
tractors, of Little Rock, Ark. Tho
building must bo completed within one
year.
Tho creamery at Roswell, N. M.,
having proved to be such a great suc-
cess, Dexter, six miles south of that
city, Is making arrangements for In-
stalling a similar plant.
Viscount Wolverhampton, formerly
Secretary of State for India, and from
1908 until 1910 l^ord President of the
Council, died in Ixmdon last Satur-
day.
Mrs. Baldwin Druinmond, formerly
Mrs. Marshall Field, Jr., of Chicago,
was robbed of diamonds, pearls and
other gems to the value of approxi-
mately $130,000 from her stato-room
on the steamship Amerika of the Ham-
burg-American Line some tlmo dur-
ing Saturday night.
Track laying on tho Galveston-Hous-
ton interurban lias been completed
from Texas City lo within five miles
of Houston, and the track has been
ballaisted ready for use.
The commissioners' court of Parker
County has decided to Improve the
grounds around the court house at
Weatherford by building walks, etc.,
to cost some $1,600.
A well borer on a farm a mne west
of Claremore, 6truck a flow of heavy
black oil at a depth of 85 feet. Tho
flow Is good, and the oil Is of a fine
lubricating quality.
Tho Masonic Order at Mount Ver-
non has let contract for a new two-
story brick building, tho upper story
of which will be used for lodge room.
H. L. Newman, founder of the Am-
eritan National Bank of P21 Paso, and
one of tho largest ranch owners in
that section, died at his homo Wed-
nesday nigh!, aged 73 yeans.
Af'.cr the contracts -were let for n
$100.0OC garbage and sewerage plant
at El P^o plant u year ago, It was
discovered that the site acquired by
the cl'.y was Included In tho Cham-
lzal y.ow. A nether tlte was purchas-
ed, und last veek the contracts were
signed anew and construction be#un.
I.a*t Tuesday morning about 10
o'clooi". while Mrs. Allen Reeves of
c.)0k<:i::e una out o.' the room, her
lirtlo ih-rjonth old child's clothing
eaight illo aud oil of Its clothes were
burned off and tho child died about
1:30 o'clock.
An unknown man was killed by an
fcastibound freight train four miles
wert of Clyde. Papers on the remains
Indicate his name to bo Col. William
Biggs, apparently from the Soldier's
Ifotiie at Los Anfcle*.
L.ist Thursday ir.orn'ny Are destroy-
ed I. E Wilson's cotton gin at Cle-
burne entailing a loss of about $20.-
OPo. Considerable oottrn near the gin
was burned.
The Co'.lin Cot t:ty Pair meeting,
was announced for March 1, but
the date has l>een changed to March
6. i his will Lo the first Monday In
March.
The Texas State Bakers' Conven-
tion will be hold in Dallas April 25,
26 and 27. Over 600 Invitations have
been ftent and a large attendance Is
fx poet ed.
W. K. Golden Is arranging to Install
a new steam laundry plant at Clifton.
Ore City Is a new town being pro-
moted on the new Port Bolivar Rail-
way.
Texas Division Sons of the Ameri-
can Revolution, at Its meeting in
Houston elected W. O. Bell, Austin,
president; F. F. Downs, Temple, sec-
retary. Tho next meeting will <be held
In Austin.
Tb« Kansas Senate yesterday de-
feated the Initiative and referendum
and the recall bills which had been
passed by tho House.
Troup Is having a season of side-
walk building.
Miss Mary Ohm, a German girl em-
ployed at the home of John Mueller,
of Abilene, was seriously burned Mon-
day morning when she attempted 1o
start a fire with gasoline, mistaking
the same for kerosene.
J. W. Powell, aged 28, of Buchanan,
killed his sweetheart. Miss Maud
West, aged 18. with a shotgun, and
then turning the weapon on himself
ended his own life. The tragedy Is
thought to have been caused by Jeal-
ousy.
WAS JUST COPYING MAMMA
Child's Actions That at First Mys-
tified Father Were Easily
Explained.
The little six-year-old daughter of a
well-known club woman was found In
bar piny room tho other day doing all
kinds of acrobatic stunts and gesticu-
lating wildly and weirdly. |
"What are you doing?" askod tho
child's father.
"I'm playing I'm mamma." she an-
swered Thon she made more unique
movements with her little arms and
said, "There father, you accept them.
That's what they do when mamma
makeB them."
"What shall I accept?" asked the
father, still more mystified, "and what
does mamma inako? Tell mo what
you are doing."
"Why," sho said, "I'm playing that
I am mamma at her club. Whenever
mamma goes to her club sho makes
motions and the others accept them.
I heard her say so over tho telephone
to Mrs. Smith this morning."—Illus-
trated Magazine.
DISTEMPER
In all its forma among all ages of horses,
>• well as dugs, cured and others in as me
Itable prevented from having the diaeaae
with BPOHN'B DISTEMPER CURE.
Every bottl. guaranteed Over 600 000
bottles sold laat year I SO and $1.00. Any
Xood druggiat, or aend to manufacturers,
igenta wanted. Rpolin Medical Co., Spcc.
Contagious Diseases. Goshen, lnd.
THAT
AWFUL
BACKACHE
Cured by Lydia E. Pinknam's
Vegetable Compound
Morton's Gap, Kentucky.—"I suf-
fered two years with female disorders.
my health was very
bad and I had a
continual backacho
which was simply
awfuL I could nut
stand on my feet
long enough to cook
a meal's victuals
without my bark
nearly killing mo,
and I would havo
such dragging sen-
sations I could
] - Ihardlr bear It. I
lad soreness In each side, could not
stand tight clothing, and was Irregular.
I was completely run down. On ad-
rice I took Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegf.
table Compound and Liver Pills ami
enjoying good health. It is now
re than two years and I bate not
Have to Pull Them In.
Ella—There are Just as good Osh
In the sea—
Stella—But you have to have a pull
to land them.
am
more ...
bad an ache or pain since I do all my
own work, washing and everything,
and never have tho backache anv more.
1 think your medicine is grand and I
praise It to all my neighbors. If you
think my testimony will help others
It."-r
you may publish It."—Mrs. Ollih
Woodall, Morton's Gap, Kentucky.
symptom of organlo
' If 3
Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum
•nd Mullen is Nstur.'. great remedy— pet permanent rellelf
Cures Coughi. Colds, Croup and Whooping t) .....
Cough anil all throat snd lung troubles. At
druggists, 25c, 60c and 11.00 per bottle.
fment
neglect It. To
you
Can a woman become a member of
the Daughters of the Revolution Just
because her ancestors murdered the
king's English?
Backache Is a
weakness or dera'ni
bave backache
W ou must reach
e. Nothing we
know of will do this so surely as Lydia
E. Pinkham's Compound.
Writ® to Mrs. Pinkhnm, nt
T.yiin, Mass., for special advice.
Your letter will be absolutely
confidential, and tho advice free.
Some men will do anything for the
sake of a little newspaper notoriety.
fii.en citrkp in e to
r<?«r_drugji l will refund money 1
MNT falls to car* anr ci
or Protruding 1*1 Um In 6 lo 14 d&/«. 60a
. ittWS,
of Itching, hi
'INT- I
lln4.
A girl Is always sure her latest love
Is the real thing.
Garfield Tea is the liest remedy for con-
stipation. Take a oup beforo retiring.
And many a man never realizes the
value of his home until ho has occa-
sion to collect the fire Insurance.
HUNT'S
OIL
THE LINIMENT TOR
RHEUMATISM
NEURAL6IA
ALL ACHES AND PAINS
sti'i. mi. Mellaril Mlclat C*., Hinsia, Tana,
IF YOU HAVE A SICKLY
YOUNGSTER TRY THIS FREE
The family with young children that la
without sickness In the house now am)
th.n la rare, and so It la important that
the head of the house should know what
to do In the little emergencies that arise.
A child with a s.rlous ailment needs a
doctor. It Is true, but In tho majority of
Instances, os any doctor knows, the child
suffers from some IntesUnal trouble,
usually constipation.
There Is no sense In giving It a pill or
a remedy containing an opiate, nor la
flushing of the bowels to be always rec-
©minonded. Itnther give It a small dose
of ii mild, gentle laxative tonic like Dr.
Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which, by clean-
ing out the bowels and strengthening the
little stomach muscles, will Immediately
correct the trouble.
This Is not alon. our opinion but that
of Mrs. N. H. Mead of fcreeport, Kana.,
whoa, granddaughter has beon taking It
successfully and of Mrs. J. It. Whiting
of I^na, Wis., who gives It to her children
and takes It herself. It Is sold in tlfty
cent and one dollar bottles at every
drug store, but If you want to test It In
your family before you buy It send your
address to Dr. Caldwell and he will for-
ward a supply free of charge.
For the free sample address Dr. W. B.
Caldwell, 201 Caldwell building. Monti-
cello. 111.
Suffered 16 Months
In a letter from lohnson City, Tenn., Mrs. S. H. Blair
writes: I had suffered from womanly troubles for 16
months, before I tried Card ui. I had four doctors attending
my case, but they did not help me, and I endured great
suffering until I began to take your great medicine. After
I had taken two bottles, I was greatly relieved, so I con-
tinued until I had used eight bottles, and now I feel about
well. I cannot say enough in favor of CarduL"
If you suffer from any of the troubles arising from
weakness or derangement of the womanly organs,
CARD UI
The Woman's Tonic
CC 89
the oft-tested, the old, reliable medicine, for women.
tn has be?!? ,heIPin8 sick women back
to health. We wish you would let ft help you.
ormnc ^,dii!?in«, *° }uS specific action upon the womanly
organs, Cardui has the further advantage of being a build-
ing, strengthening tonic, of special value to women.
K0J!,0,USKand8.of !??ies ^ave wr'tten to tell how they were
Whv nnl nLm i? Ju >vell"known remedy for their troubles,
why not profit by their experience and advice, and test it
for yourself? Get a bottle today.
At Your Druggist.
I
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Allen, E. E. The Alto Herald (Alto, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 2, 1911, newspaper, March 2, 1911; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth214133/m1/2/: accessed May 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Stella Hill Memorial Library.