The Seymour News (Seymour, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, February 15, 1901 Page: 1 of 8
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SEYMOUR, BAYLOR CO., TEX., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1901. Whole No. 585
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Such as Inflammation, Congestion,
Ulcer tion, Irregularities, etc., suc-
cessfully treated by Dr. Ahluian
without operations, without curetting
without pain, by a method of his own
discovery.
Thousands of ladies suffer from di-
seases peculiar to the sex without
knowing that they are afflicted in
that way. They ascribe their suffer-
ing to some other cause, The follow-
ing symptoms show disease present:
Headache ; a burning sensation at
the top aud back part of the head ; a
feeling of pain, heaviness or puHiness
iu the lower part of the abdomen ;
dragging down sensatious jxtrouble
with the stomach and digestion ; pain
and cramping in limbs ; pain under
shoulder blades, weak back ; sinking
spells ; fluttering of the heart ; hot
and cold flashes over the body and
face ; iirigularitv, with more or less
pain and an unhealthy discharge.
The old treatment, as all who have
tried it know, requires a bloody oper-
ation, and then does not always cure.
Dr. Ablman's treatment is of an en-
tirely different character—painless,
yet effective.
DR. AHLMAN will positively cure
any case of Female Complaint not
cancerous.
Consultation aud examination free
in Chronic ease-i. Both chronic aud
ac.ute diseases treated, and calls
made in town or country. .
Dr. Ahlmau is permanently located
in Seymour.
Alfred ilmao, M. D.
9 '
Office: West room in rear of
Bank building, ground floor.
§£ymocir, - - ^axeis.
For up-to-ds te den
tistry, see Dr. Coil,
Hanson building. 3tf.
Don't foil to read our watch con-
test and save yonr coupons as
they will be valuable near the
close of the contest.
The ideal Home.
The Ideal life and place for wo-
man is home. It is one of the
tragedies of the age that so many
have forgotten this. Every man
with a heart in his breast has the
home-longing. It is natural. For
ages past he has been the home
builder, and woman has kept it
sweet. It is deplorable today to
see so many homes, or so many
foundations not even laid. A man
way lose fortune, health, power,
but if there are four walls whore
a true heart waits for his coming,
to draw the sting out of it all, he
still lives.
Love is the first law of the uni-
verse. The woman who really
loves is willing to drop out of ex-
istence altogether to fiud herself
in her husband's arms, instead.
It is love that teaches her that
his devotion is the deepest thing
she has met with in life. If wo-
men never meet men who want to
make wives of them it is their own
fault. There is something they
have failed in, or put aside. It
may be tenderness, sympathy,
charm or any of the traits that are
inseparably feminine in man's
mind. We see a vast army of six-
teen-year-old girls every day pour-
ing into the wholesale and retail
shops of the «iity. Occasionally
we hear a sigh. "Poor things,"
well-meaniug people say, and
many of them get sympathy un-
deserved. Any number of tho
girls have parents who are in a
position to send them schools. If
not to pay school, there is the high.
Thev are working for, say, ten
dollars a week—less than a man
of family can afford to do the
same work for. The reason many
of these girls force the men to
walk the streets 'is vanity—inor-
dinate love of dress. They dec-
orate themselves with the feath-
er& of male birds (you'll find that
in your Darwin), which nature
gave the male birds to charm the
females. They strike at his sens-
es and they hit his mental side, if
he has any, through them. This
love of 'Iress in them is an animal
passion. Dressy—fine feathers—is
at the bottom of as tuuch misery
in the world as any one thing in
it. It cries out in iuaudibly from
every walk of life) from the under
world, from society, from com-
merce and from the prison. More
women would be asked to share
man's home if he could afford the
indulgence of this mania that
menaces the century. He sees
the wrecks of it all about him.
The ideally happy women (and
there are many of these, too) is
the one who loves her husband
better than her clothes, whose
greatest radiance blefesea home,
whose faith is firm and patient,
and whose sympathy is bouudless.
This is an old-fashioned ideal, but
it is the true one. Let us be
thaukful that there are many like
her. There is no such thing
aa " the new woman." Woman is
as old as femininity. The only
new one is rocked in aoradlo and
speaks in a glutinous t,ong.ue.—
Hallie Erminie Rives in Chicago
American.
ANNOUNCEMENT!
Don'ts of Dress.
Don't be dashing—be dainto.
Don't sacrifice fitness te fashion.
Don't spoil the gown for the yard
of stuff.
Don't neglect quality for the sake
of quanity.
Don't pioneer fashion with a cheap
dressmaker.
Don't imagine that beauty will atone
for untidiness.
Dont wear feathers iu your hat aud
patches on your boots.
Don't dress your head at tbe ex-
pense of your hands and Hoet.
Don't make your owa d* isses un-
less you can do it really well.
Don't put cost before cut. Corded
silk won't cover a clumsy fit,
Dont wear a sailor hat aud a blouse
after your fortieth birthday
Don't pinch your waist. Fat like
murder will out—somewhere
Don't clothe yourself in man's ap-
parel and expect the courtesy due to
a lady.
Dou't powder your cheeks without
looking in a glass afterwards.
Dou't put all your allowance out-
side. A ragged petticoat killa the
smartest gown.
Dou't make hay of your possessions
and then credit pour limited purse
with your shabby appearance.
Dou't let your dressmaker dress
you. Dress your self. She may give
you smartness, but individuality—
uever.
NEW STORE,
NEW BUSINESS.
New Stock of Goods,
A one Price House,
A Spot Cash House,
u
1 A House that wants your Trade,
Mens Boots and Shoes, Ladies and Children
Shoes aud Slippers, Mens aud Boys Hats, M^ns
and Bovs Negligee Shirts, Mens aud Bovs odd
Pants, Overalls, work Shirts, Gloves, Suspenders
Boys Waists aud a complete line of Mens Under-
wear, Etc., will be ready for your inspection on
or about March first 1901.
IKVIXiLTIOTsT
Wheu in town, we invite you to visit our store.
Do not hesitate because you are not acquainted.
You will always flud our counters loaded with
Perfect Fitting garinnnts, Distinctive stylos, Su-
perior workmanship and Lowest Prices. You
can purchase or not, according to vour inelina-
tiou. It will bo to your interest to buy of us.
Not an old piece of goods in th« house—every
article is the latst production. Our prices will
always be as low as the lowest and our merchan-
dise of every grade, a guarantee of itself.
Remember the NEW STORE is next door to
W. R. Traweek, Northwest corner of the Square.
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J. pi. U/illia/r\5 & Qo„
J. p. U/illiams, /Tlai^r. |
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Wanted.
Reliable man for manager of
branch office we Wish to open in
this vicinity# If your record is
O. K. here is an opportunity.
Kindly give good reference when
writing. The A. T. Morris whole-
sale bouse, Cincinnati, Ohio. Il-
lustrated catalogue lour cents
stamps. 5tl2.
Buokltm's Arnica Salve.
Has world-wide fame for marvel-
lous cures. It surpasses auy othef
salye, lotion, ointment or balm foi*
cuts, corns, burns, boils, sores, felons,
ulcers, tetters, Halt rheum, fever sores,
chapped hands, Skin eruptions; iu-
fallible for piles. Cure guaranteed.
Only 25c at Forrest Taylor's drujf
store.
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I take this apportunity to express my
thanks to my customers for their liberal
patronage-in the past season and will ap-
preciate their future business, with the
guarantee to always furnish them with
new and fresh goods, at the lowest possi-
ble price that is consistant with the mar-
ket. Always come and see me., Again I
thank yo*u. Wishing you a happy 'and
prosperous year for 1901,
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Barber, George P. The Seymour News (Seymour, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, February 15, 1901, newspaper, February 15, 1901; Seymour, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth235270/m1/1/: accessed April 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.