The Texas Mesquiter. (Mesquite, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, March 3, 1905 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
, , ...Asa,-:.- I •
I
m
Ki
■~n
|i|
Jiffe
A HEALTHY OLD AGE
OFTENTHE BEST PART OF LIFE
Help for Women Pausing Through
Change of Life , 1
Providence has allotted us each at
least seventy years in which to fulfill
our mission in life, and it is generally
oar own fault if we die prematurely.
Nervous exhaustion invites disease.
This statement is the positive truth.
When everything becomes a burden
and you cannot walk a few blocks with-
out excessive fatigue, and you break
oat into perspiration easily, and your
face flushes, and you grow excited and
shaky at the least provocation, and
yon cannot bear to be crossed in any-
tliing, you are in danger (your nerves
have given out; you need building up
at once ! To build up woman’s nerv-
ous system and during the period of
change of life we know of no better
medicine than Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound. Here is an
illustration. Mrs. Mary L. Koehne. 371
Garfield.Avenue, Chicago, 111., writes:
“I have used Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound for years in my family and it
never disappoints ; so when I felt that I was
nearing’the change of life I commenced treat-
ment with it. I took in all about six bottles
and it did me a great deal of good. It
stopped rny dizzy spells, pains in my back
and the headaches with which I had suffered
for months before taking the Compound. I
feel that if it had not been for this great med-
icine for women that I should not nave been
alive to-day. It is splendid for Women, old or
young, and will surely cure all female disor-
ders.’’
Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., in-
vites all sick and ailing women to write
her for advice. Her great experience
is at their service, free of cost.
Luck Is a constant
home of perseverance.
visitor
th9 ! INNOVATION IN FRENCH
Mrs. Winslow S Soothing By run.
For children settling, softens the Runs, reduces tn>
ttamu aUim, allays pain,cures windoollu. K&csbottlu.
I ■
To-day Is the father of To-morrow
and the child of Yesterday.
Piso’sCuro for Consumption is an Infallible
medicine for coughs and colds. —N. W. Samuku
Ocean drove, N. J., Feb. 17.1900.
Why preach eternal happiness and
deck ourselves with crepe?
fits nrsKKi^jaswsssssMK
If evil thoughts were crimes, what
penitentiaries would we need.
Superior quality and extra quantity
must. win. This is why Defiance Starch
Is taking the place of all others.
The reigning favorites seem to have
attentions showered upon them.
-
Every one to his trade. A hen can't
hatch a plot any more than a conspir-
ator can hatch an egg.
Free! |*ree!! jL.*
Write for our beautiful catalog of all
kinds of seeds, plants, flowers. Floral
Designs, etc. Best and freshest stock
in the South. Every seed fresh crop.
Try us. Lang, the Florist, Dallas, Tex.
One Day.
Finish every day and be done with
it. You have done what you could.
Some blunders and absurdities no
doubt crept in. Forget them as soon
as you can. ’ jk* ' ~ .
Wonderful Statistics.
When it is considered that the per-
centage of deaths from consumption
Is 91 per thousand against 63 per thou-
sand of any other malady, how im-
portant to guard against a slight cold.
Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet
Gum and Mullein is the great medicine
for coughs, colds and consumption.
At druggists, 25c., 60c. and $1.00 a
bottle.
A Photographer’s Trick,
l&xican photographers have hit
upop a way to make their subjects
“look pleasant.” After peering through
the apparatus and emerging from un-
der the black cloth, the photographer
says: “By the way, would you like
a drink?” “Well, I don’t mind," says
the man, with a pleased smile. “What
have you got?" “Beer, whisky and
wine,” says * the photographer, and
then, before the man can say which
he'll have, the camera does Its duty.
The “expression” of his photograph 13
always “lifelike.”
A Family Job.
the
One of the most remarkable In-
stances of the hereditary office among
solicitors is that of the acting under
sheriff for the city of London. Tutncll
Burchell sits in his sheriff’s court in
Red Lion squaare, on the bench that
his father, grandfather and great
grandfather successively occupied,
. * *, ■ i
You Have No Friends
that will not be interested in a remedy that
is being used extensively as a permanent
cure for Dyspepsia, Constipation, Head-
ache, Catarrh of the Mucous Membrane,
and all diseases of the Liver, Kidneys ami
Bladder. Only one dose a day. Write at
ouco to the Vernal Remedy Company, Le
ltoy, N. Y., and they will cheerfully send
you freo, a trial bottle of Vernal Palmet-
tona (Palmetto Berry Wine), to convince
'ou of tlio wonderful results to be obtained
rom its use. Sold by druggists everywhere.
We say that the women are weaker
creechers, but I’m bettin’ that if men
had had to wear the skirts an’ corsets
the race would be sorter dwindled
away seme time ago.
CUTICURA GROW3 HAIR.
Scalp Cleared of Dandruff and Hair
Restored by One Box of Cuticura
and One Cake of Cuticura
Soap.
A. W. Taft of Independence, Va„
writing under "date of Sept.. 15, 1904»
says: “I have had falling hair and
dandruff for twelve years and could
get nothing to help me. Finally I
bough^onv box^>f_C»ticura Ointment
and one cake of Cuticura Soap, and
they cleared my scalp of the dandruff
and stopped the hair falling. Now
my hair is growing as well as ever. I
am highly pleased with Cuticura Soap
as a toilet soap. (Signed) A. W. Taft.
Independence, Va.”
--s---' f[T
It’s a pity a women can’t strike from
the shoulder with her (1st as well as
she can with her tongue.
Flexion March Has Become Fad of
Military Instructors.
French army officers entertain a
firm belief In the efficacy of the flex-
ion march,” remarked a military man
who recently returned from a trip to
('Europe. “It is declared that the
flexion march is really something new
and v/111 eventually be adopted in all
the leading armies of the world.
“A general idea of the body move-
ments Is that the knees must be al-
ways bent and the feet lifted no high-
er than necessary to clear the Ine-
qualities of the ground, the step being
made neither by the toe nor by the
heel. The footfall should be noise-
less and the steps at first short and
frequent. The body must lean well
forward, the back must. be straight
and the head erect, the chest open
and the shoulders lpw. It Is recom-
mended that when at drill a short
stick be held with both hands in front
of the chest. The lessons should not
be more frequent than two or three
times a week.
“Medical comments on thq flexion
march, however, are somewhat sarcas-
tic, being to the effect that there is
nothing new in this discovery by the
French army. This style of march-
ing, it is declared, has been in vogue
among the American Indians since
they have been known to the white
man. The forward stoop of the Indian
in walking, it is pointed out, is fav-
ored by his peculiar foot covering.
''Dialects in the Philippines.
There are between forty and fifty
dialects in the Philppine islands. All
of these dialects belong to one com-
mon Malayan slock. Their grammat-
ical structure is the same. The sen-
tence in each one of them is built up
in the same way. The striking use
of affixes and suffixes, which gives
the speech its character, is common
to them all. There are, moreover,
words and expressions identical to
them all. A hundred common words
could readily be selected which would
^scarcely vary from one language to
another; but the fact still remains
that while similar in grammatical
structure , these languages are very
different In vocabulary—so different
that two members of any two tribes
brought together are unable to con-
verse, or at first even to make them-
selves understood for the simplest
steps of Intercourse.
OBSTINATE GASES
Of lencorrhea, excessive flowing, painful
periods, prolapsus, or falling of womb,
attended by weak back, bearing-down
sensations, ulceration of womb, pain
I J
and tenderness of ovaries, are almost
always cured by a fairly persistent use
of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription.
If in any case it should, in due time,
not seem quite adequate to meet every
phase of 6ome complicated case, Dr.
Fierce always stands ready to offer
valuable suggestions based upon years
of varied experience which often proves
of inestimable value. This he does en-
tirely free of charge to those using his
medicines. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce,
003 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
Do. R. V. Pi buck, Buffalo. N. Y. s
Dear Sir—I once thought I should never
enjoy good health again. What 1 suffered
with womb disease words cannot express.
Bad distressing bearing-down pains, painful
monthly sickness, backache, constipation,
also cold hands and feet at all times. Was
all run-di
but a specialist’s prescription, having
as a single aim the euro of diseases
peculiar to women.
Reliable dealers recommend “ Favor-
ite Prescription.” With tricky ones,
something else that pavs them bette*
will probably be urged upon you as
“just as good.” Perhaps it is for
them; but it can’t be for you. Soma
you
vorite Prescription ” is the medicine
you need, do not be cajoled into, ac-
cepting something else. The attempt
to induce ybu to do so is an insult to
your intelligence, Turn your back oa
the one who offers the affront.
DR. PIERCE S PLEASANT PELLETS
Cure biliousness, sick and bilious head-
ache, dizziness, costiveness, or consti-
pation of the bowels, loss of appetite,
coated tongue, sour stomach, windy
belqhings, ‘‘heart-burn,” pain and dis-
tress after eating, and kindred derange-
ments of the liver, stomach and bowels.
Persons subject to any of these troubles
should never be without a vial of tha
“ Pleasant Pellets ” at hand. They are
always adopted as a household rem-
edy after the first trial. Put up in
glass vials, tightly corked, therefore
always fresh and reliable.
One little “ Pellet” is a laxative, two
are cathartic; They regulate, invigor-
ate and cleanse the liver, stomaph and
i bowels. As a “dinner pill,” to pro-
938 4th Street. RenSer? Alban "TV. mote digestion, take one each day. To
or other j relieve the distress arising from over-
of these
_ iown. and there was nothing left of
me but a shadow. After I bad taken eight
bottles Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription,
two of his "Compound Extract of Smart -
Woed,” also some of Dr, Pierce's Pleasant
Pellets. I was entirely cured. I always keep
the remedies on baud now. and recommend
them to all my friends. Yours truly.
Mrs. JonN Bowers,
There is no opium, cocaine
narcotic in “Favorite Prescription.”
Neither does it contain alcohol, wh sky
or other intoxicant.
It often happens that childlessness is
due to conditions which may be cor-
rected, Many women have found that
the vitality and vigor imparted by Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription to the
womanly organa, has been the one thing
needful to fulfill the joy of motherhood.
This famous medicine is not a cure-all,
eating, nothing equals one ol
little “Pellets.” They're tiny,
coated, anfi-bilions granules, s
sugar-
scarcely
larger than mustard seeds.
Doctor Pierce’s great thousand-page
“Common Sense Medical Adviser1'will
be sent for the inere cost of mailing;
paper-bound for 21 one-cent stamps,
or cloth-bound for 31 stamps. It is a
grand and useful book. Address Dr.
K. V. Pierce, 063 Main St., Buffalo, N.Y.
The pessimist thinks the world is
worse than it really is, and the op-
timist thinks it is better—and both
ire wrong.
Soome people are so polite that it
always seem as though they went to
borrow money.
From a Merchant.
"I have sold three bottles of Hunt’s
Lightning Oil to Frank Swartz of Gal-
lup, N. M. They think it is the only
medicine for all purposes.”
C. P. Fisher,
» Plymouth, O. T.
Happiness.
I followed far o'er the heath and desert
land •
•The fairy gleaming of a distant light;
A shining lure, that beckoned as a hand,
And with fair promise pierced the hos-
tile night. —
O’er rugged stones, and marsh, and slimy
clay,
And clinging tanglings of the thorny
briar,
But still the dancing light shone far
kway.
And at my feet lay stagnant waste and
. ...j f mire.
When love takes its flight from a
window it usually selects the djning
room window.
The man who ac's contrary to his
wife’s advice and fails never hears
the last of it.
“I Went Home to Die from Gravel Trouble.
Doctors foiled. l)r. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy
cured me.” Mrs. C. W. Drown. Petersburg, N. T.
Philosophy may be comforting to
an empty stomach, but it doesn’t quite
till the bill.
More Flexible and Lasting
won't shake out or blow out; by uslnff
Defiance Starch you obtain better re-
sults than possible with any other
brand and one-third more for same
money. -
Wives wonder why husbands are so
pensive, and husbands wonder why
wives are eo expensive.
Weary. I paused,
track.
Glanced where the
hills declined
And lot athwart the
wrack.
The wizard beacon glimmered far
hind. '
—London News.
and turning in
long, bleak, barren
trailing. ragged
be-
fhtEsmB
A HOME FOR YOU.-Through our Endow-
ment Propel ty Contract, you can accumulate
Pioperty or secure a Home for leas monthly or
annual payments than you are now paying In
rent. Write for particulars. Agents wanted.
TEXAS- PROPERTY ASSOCIATION, ,309
Juanita Building, Dallas, Texas.
The world owes every man a living,
but lots of folks are too lazy to tol-
led it. *
Take care of the pennies and the
pounds will take care of your heirs. •
i
I know some fellers that would be
recognized as saints ef they’d do to-
day what they’re calC’l&tlng to do to-
mor^w.
Those Who Have Tried It
will use no other. Defiance Cold Wa-
ter Starch has no equal in Quantity
or Quality—16 oz. for 10 cents. Other
brands contain only 12 oz.
-,r .1 * 4* u 1 >. '
Habit is the spoiled child of Indul-
gence and chastity is the offspring of
temperance.
Statk or Omn, City or Toledo, I
I.UOAS OotlRTY. ( **•
Frank .1. Chunky make* oath that he la senior
partner of the Krill of P. J. Chunky & Co., (loin*
ruslnen* In ihe City of Toledo. County anil Slate
aforeaaid. and that »altl llriu will pay the sum of
ONE HCNIKtM) 1)01.1,AllS for-teach ini every
rase of Catakrii that cannot be cured by the use of
Hall's Catacku Cukk.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Swom to before me and subscribed lu my pres-
ence. tills 6th day of December, A.T). 1WW.
A. W. GLEASON,
•jjtEAj,^ Notary Public.
Mall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally and acts
directly on the blood and luucoua surfaces of the
system. Send for tesllmonlhls. free.
F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by all Druggist*. TV;
Take flan's FamUy Pills for constipation.
Honor Is the quality that pays the
gambling debt by standing off the
laundryman.
Voluntarily Gives Up Fees.
State Insurance Commissioner Thos.
b. O’Brien of Minnesota, has refused
to accept the fees of his office, which
in the past have amounted to over
$15,000 a ye&r. Mr. Q’Brien has in-
formed Gov.. Johnson that he does not
believe the law which allows the com-
missioner salary and clerk hire con-
templated his taking fees. He is of
the opinion that the fees belong to
the state and will turn them into the
state treasury. Last year the attorney
general ruled that the fees in question
belonged to the insurance commis-
sioner, but the incumbent takes issue
with the decision.
U Shoes which meet every demand made upon them for
wear and style last longer and look better.
“always just correct”
aOVERMND SHOES
JUST THE KIND YOU WANT
Your dealer will see that you are supplied with these
shoes if you Insist. Every dealer ought to give
you the best. See that you get these.
For business or dress ask for “SIR KNIGHT”
3®rr%tor-#taarifi do.1
LARGEST FINE SHOE EXCLUSIVIST8
ST. LOUIS, U. S. A.
$21.00 PRICE EIPUIHED
PHH ▲*! nn apn a fo'/pT^elM^KOlUJ^WAGONl it
JSJfiSEP.WfettWgg
| trite*. Kara baa widely adv.rtl.**. | $34,00 tO $38.00
HOW BUBOIEE CM ka •flare* at thsaa »rlraa and why
w wa con sail buggls* and oil other .abide* at much
■ lower prtrs* than any other houn S.IU*|tM
plained In our FOUR BIO FREE VEHld
ALOOUEB. Cut this ad. out and send!
Myths for Moderns.
Jove looked down ruefully upon the
Slaughterer of the Titans. Olympus
was really a sight, but Juno cherked
him up a bit. “Brace up, old man;
it’s all right. Remember Port Ar-
thur.” and Jove’s brow cleared as he
whistled down the tube for the jani-
tor to come and mop up the debris.
Venus was doing her best to per-
suade the bashful Adonis to let her
have just one kiss. The goddess
looked entrancing, but Adonis was
adamant. “No,” he answered sorrow-
fully to her pleadings. “Don’t yon
know there are microbes in kisses?”
It was Charon's fousy day on the
Styx. Several souls grumbled be-
cause of the crowd, and having to
wait while the ghostly feriy made a
second trip. Charon g'areij at them
with fiery disgust. “No ads in this
subway, anyhow!” he roarei.—New
York Times.
I to u* and
, Eiwai?!KktJS5XS*iS.WKa
' Eight and Heavy Wagon*, Vehicles of all.'
n «i. . - ---- — tion*,
thM
iakE
Oll*r
any OTHER HOUSE <
BMmMmmfflSmmmn
;plaln wbjr we *hlp *o a* to make freight
iwiSp/ii
...
wifK.lv* your ardar. OUR
Cm!B*uth O?*r^o&1k^l2£elSblS^Sitialoguo, aallstf
built expressly for Arkansas, Tjraa, Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi and
•toad southern roads, a beautiful catalogue In colon; you will also rst i
sSwrass SEARS, ROEBUCK & co„ Chicago.
rjroq ,
)R1. D
kIPII
O, tha Wise Old Owl.
“What do you flee, tell me, quickly!”
gasped (he superstitious woman of, the
clairvoyant who waa fast getting into
the woozy state.
“I can see—a tall, black-haired man
—two buttons qff his vest—looking
generally neglected—sitting in the lap
of—” --------------—,-2~— -j
“O, the wretch!” cried the super-
stitious one. “Go on, go on. Tell me
the worst.”
“Sitting I’# the lap of—sudden lux-
ury," finished the paychlc one.
“0|, the darling! I never really did
mistrust him. There, take this five.”
—Cincinnati Commercial Tribune.
Conviction Follows Trial
* > ■ >*'•.-{ > j ,'/ . *$, / . « f #'•'j •*’
When buying loose coffee or anything your grocer happens
to have in his bin, how do you know what you are
getting ? Some queer stories about coffee that is sold in bulk,
could be told, if the people who handle it (grocers), cared to
speak out.
Could any amount of mere talk have persuaded millions of
housekeepers to use
lion Coffee*
-I ° *
the lc&dcr Of Oil package coffees for over a quarter
of a century, if they had not found it superior to all other brands in
Purity* Strength, Flavor and Uniformity?
Til La popular tracers* ol UON COFFEE
can be due only to Inherent merit. There
Ji no otronper proof ol merit than eon-
tinned and Increasing popularity.
n the verdict ol MILLIONS OF
HOUSEKEEPERS does not convince
you of the merits ot LION COFFEE*
It costa yon but a trifle to buy a
package. It Is the easiest way to
convince yourself, and to make
yon n PERMANENT PURCHASER.
LION COrFEE is Bold only In 1 lb. sealed packages,
and reaches you as pure and clean as when It left our
factory.
Llon-bcad on every package. .
Save these Lion-hoods for valuable premiums
SOLD BY GROCERS
EVERYWHERE
WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.
&JL
.-1
# '
aS&d m.
ft,. 'mtu.
.....Mil**_________
m.mh
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Davis, John E. The Texas Mesquiter. (Mesquite, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, March 3, 1905, newspaper, March 3, 1905; Mesquite, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth501623/m1/2/: accessed May 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mesquite Public Library.