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Austin American-Statesman from Austin, Texas • 6

Location:
Austin, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

AUSTIN DAILY 8TATE3MA5, TCE3DAY, OCTOBIR SCHOOL AND CHURCH. AN INDIAN'S GREAT FEAT. THE WOMAN WHO EATS. THE HORSE'S LEGS. ii Self Torture! That's what amounts fV'i to.

when yu at" without Pearline. now-a-cU' And the that yci; srrange part of it is, ikl be willing to suher, wnen it loss not vzln. only for your That needless back-breaking rub, rub, rub isn't saving you anything. It's costing you money. It is simply wearing out the things that you're washing.

Why would you rather doit? That is what the women who are saving their strength and their clothes with Pearline can't understand. Beware of Imitations 360 JAMES Jf. T. WANTED, FOR SALE, ETC. Advertisement inserted In tail oolamn at the fallowing rates each insertion: Wanted SltuatloM.

For Bent, Sale, four linen 2 oenta, and 6 oenta for each additional line; or commercial advertising in this column will be charged for at, two Uaet or lata 25 cents, three Unea and upwards 10 cents per line. Seven worda constitute a Une In this oommo. All notices appearing In tbeae oolnmj men Invariably be paid for in advance, Ho eecti -lorn will be made to this rula. fTTANTED To sell new jamt la 1 pound cans' at 13 cents; new jelly, i lbs, 25 cents, W. Warren, 1301 Lavaca St.

Try ANTED At onffe. Cook and nurse. Ap-" ply at 608 San A-tonio street. Try ANTED To tell charcoal; 19 cuntt per barrel, prair hay, 35 ceals per bile. F.

W. Warreo. TTTANTED To tell Losk'a Caliloroia frnlU at so per ze 1 tgr 18 to 2i jauda for tl Wd-ren rrJ ANTED Ak-enu fur rtiaai'i genuine ra-e seha'im cut front blik meer- tuaum; WH'i-; a IOMn8 in IE; sa pie 35c Write to B. F. ti.Uaad, ETauston, try ANTED Everybody to kaow that the thlrt factory of S.

Kolchensky has moved to 9I Congress avenue, upstairs; our cutumert will piease cau aid see us, TTTANTED To exchange income bearing bushiest property in Austin for a slock of merchandine. N. Dlttlingtr. WANTED If you are a Catho lc, unemployed aud will work for 18 per week, write MacConneil 11 Franklin it, Boston, TyANTED Yon to tee Brush't cheap heating stoves. They are down to rock bottom.

70S BEST. TO RENT The Kreiile building, now occn pied by Suarbrougb. Hicks, possession giren January 1 or sooner. Bast lighted store rooms in Austin. Bize, 46x160 fL; tare ttoriea.

Will C. treisle. rpo EENT-Tery low, as I desire to rent them at once small storerooms on 6ih it between the Avenue and DrUkll hotel Apply to George A. Brush. FOB SALS.

pOR SALE Two year old pear treei at 12X cents a piece Enquire of E. A. Morris, of ManviL Texas, or Dr. W. A.

Morris, AasUn. pOR HALE Four lott comer 15th and Con greet avenue, diagonally across from Governor Luubock'g retidenee Lou ee south. termi and cheap. W. F.

M.Gehee62Q Couxress avenue. pOR SALE The finest farm in Travis county, Texus. 30 aeres of laud nrirfH ahnnt miles north of courthouse, i50 acres ia cultiva-Uon, all fenced with wire, inleudid wed of water; pasture fenced off by itself; box house of four or ve rooms. Price, $37 per acre, terms one hlf cash, balance 1. 2 and 3 ya' interest per cent per annum.

Also 640 acres of laad in Fort Besd couuly oa 8. A. A. P. R.

near Whie' twitch: wdl be sold at a bargain, or will exchange for good Austin property. John B. Viqsou 4i Austin, Tex. pOR 8 1 LE Fifteen young, soun horses, 4 matched spans: reared in the mountains of Travis cou and wi 1 be sold on reliable guarantee to be sou aud ftee from vice. Time fven It desired.

Mr Jeff Horan will show horses In pasture near the city. HISCELLABOOSS. I WILL BUT Bute Warrant" ar.d awounti gaint comptroller. R. H.

Kirby, No, 620 Congrest avenue LADIES Your Dane sent on ttamped envelope will give you tteady work; good tala-ry. No canvaaaing. Neitie Harriwn, San Fran ico, CL INSURANCE AT COST-The following first-class companies retires ted; Fireman's Fond, Northern of London, Manchester, MaeoD, Phoeiix of London, Hanover of New York, Amerkan Surety Co. H. Ray-mord, Lltten building, No.

106 West 7Ut ttreet WANTED Lowett delivered price In city on twenty f20 eordi leawned cedar wood. Addreti Cedar Wood, p. 0. box 450, Austin. QOfiH CASH buyi a fine lot 50x150, on E.

Ulh St, from car hue. It i a bargain. Geo. S. Smith, 907 Congress Avenue.

LONE Star dye house. Cleaning, dyeing, scouring, ladi g' and gentlemen's garment Atao all kinds of tailoring nea; done. 405 Congress avenue, Austin. Charles Koch. T) OOFING.

guttering plumbing and general job wot bv experienced mecJianici. Max AMU 320 6th St. "VyOTICE Just tecMved, new hams, break-J( fast bacon and Royal Patent Flour. F. Warren, 1501 Lavaca street.

GOOD agent to represent the beat building, loan and Investment company ia the state: none bal good men wanted Our saving bonds are the best Investment yon can make; they are paid np In small installments, thug putdng them within the of ail. Agenu make good money: a few state agents wanted. Apyly to The Endowment aaviagi Company, San Marcos, Tex. VTOTICE TO VOTESS-Notice it hereby AM given that on Tuesday, the 2nd day of tober next, the books fo ths registration of the voters of thecitv of Austin will be oT-ened tn the Bruegserhoff building. He 3 Ongress avenue.

City of Auatfn, one door tonth of Gam-inel'i book store, and the fame will be kept open for the reglHtration of voters for 20 consecutive daTs. aundan excluded, from 8 a m. till 8 p. m. of each day ad no longer.

B. A. Bogce, Registrar. D53THT3, doctor, lawyers and profet-slonal gentlemen: The finest office, outh or north front, roomy, lofty and well lighted, can be rented in the Board of Trade building, tecond flwr. Apply In ttore, 401 CoDgcesa ave.

For indigestion try San Antonio XXX Pearl b-jitl beer, the finest ia tne market. UK jii -rr cican A irvr A Medicine Hu Whoa Arrowa Never Returned to Earth. Harry Kellar, the magician, tells of a singular feat whiirh he witnessed In the Rosebud agency, in South Dakota, several year ago, which was as wonderful in its way as. anything related of the east. Among other things of note, among the tribe who were pointed out to the party was a morose, rather Cabby-looking Indian, the high priest, or medicine man, of the Ogallalla.

The magician endeavored to secure an interview with him, but the old man was silent and unapproachable. At last, after obtaining the friendly intercession of the chief, lied Cloud, the party made its way to the medicine man's wigwam and drew him forth. "It was evening, said Kellar. "The sun had set, and the Indian village stood forth in the white light of a full moon. The medicine man heard our petition in silence, and then, without a word, took down a beautifully-fashioned bow which hung from his tent pole.

He selected carefully seven finely-finished arrows, the shafts of which were of wood and the points of flint. The old man examined his weapons closely, and then strode out on the prairie a short distance, followed a little in the rear by our party. It was bright moonlight, and a practiced eye could readily follow his movements. "drawing an arrow to the head of his bowstring and looking up a moment into the sky, as if to locate the exact spot which he wished to pierce, he let go the powerful bow. The arrow went swift and straight into the air, so perfectly perpendicular that it seemed as if in its return it would almost fall upon the very head of the archer.

We tried in vain to follow its course, and as we waited for the whistle of the returning arrow a perceptible smile crept over the old man's face. After waiting several minutes he dispatched a second shaft after the first, in exactly the same manner and toward exactly the same point. We waited in suspense and still there was no indication of the return of either. "The third, fourth, fifth and sixth shafts were drawn from his quiver and dispatched at intervals. When he had shot them all the medicine man unstrung his bow and leaned upon it thoughtfully.

A glance at my watch showed me that fully fifteen minutes had elapsed since he had shot the Erst arrow, and not one of them had returned to earth so far as I could tell. We waited five minutes more, and the old man returned to his tepee. "I followed, but the old man had disappeared. I waited for a long time, hoping that through the use of money I could obtain his secret. JJut he did not return any more than did his mysterious arrows.

The only explanation I could ever give for this really remarkable performance was one suggested to me by a friend. The Indians have long known the existence of magnetic iron ore, and have used their secret among themselves for the per. formance of a number of feats. My friend suggested that the hollow center pole of the medicine man's tepe was made of magnetic iron, and that the old man was an archer of such wonderful accuracy that he was able to direct his shafts one after another, so that upon their return to earth, unseen in the pale moonlight, they buried themselves in the ground, at the bottom of the center pole, swerved, it might be, a few inches by the magnetic attraction. "Unfortunately this suggestion was made to me after my opportunity for examination had gone by, and the old archer's performance is still to me a profound mystery.

There is nothing very improbable though in the suggestion, provided that no wind was blowing at the time. I have seen Indian archers at a long distance drive an arrow into a mark and then split this arrow with a second repeatedly." N. Y. Herald. SAMOANS ON SUNDAY.

Hollow Log t'aed aa Bella to Call the Worship r. On Sunday mornings the church members file down the street to the church dressed in their finest apparel, all manner of costumes being visible. The swells wear in addition to their lova-lava a white shirt, collarless and flapping unrestrainedly in the breeze. The women wear their best mother hubbard of brightest color and perch on the top of their heads hats of a fashion obsolete in Noah's time. The chimes of bells used to call the members to service are very unique.

As a substitute for bell metal hollow logs are used. Each village hasalarge one dug out of some great tree, with natural partitions left in each end to form heads. The aperture is long and narrow, and the bell is rung by striking the edges in a peculiar manner with a short, heavy club, producing a dull booming sound that can be heard a long distance. The larga bell is sounded for worship Thursdays, Saturdays, Sundays and the first dav of each month. In addi tion to the large bell the village has several small ones, dug out of small logs of varying sizes, producing differ ent tones.

These are held in one hand and struck with a small hardwood stick; the performers marching about the village and drumming a time as a call to worship. Small children play these, but it requires a certain knack to sound large ones. Churches are built of coral rocks and bowlders laid in plaster made of burned coral; they have low open windows and doors. A good share of the congregation make their entrance and exit through the windows. These little churches have sugar-cane thatched roofs and are located, some of them, on the extreme points of the beach.

N. Advertiser. Her Second Thought. "Is vmir Vienna bread fresh0'' anl-e Mrs. McDride of the baker, but before he could reply she added: "How stunid of me.

to be sure? Of course, it couldn't be very fresh, for it takes about ten days to come from ienna. You may give me two loaves. the baker gave the stalest he had. pgne. 6h Da Sot Alwaya Know What Cooatl-totra Proper food.

Somebody, who display eaonyh ffrxd sense to fctart a milU'tiiam, say that the coming woman will be a just in prorxirtton an fhf learns to eat. For generations pat women have lived on bread and butter bakers bread at that and tea and warm-up potatoes. they were warmed tip in milk; sometime in fat or butter; but they were warrned-trverpota toes all the farce. Now this ia dish that ia well enonjrh in its way, but it in not aiarminfrly prolific in the production of brain material. The cominsf woman in going to eat ali the gixxl things of life.

Hhe wUl eat the lxHt she can (ret on all occasions, and ntoch of it aa common sen.M! and an inteliiifent under-standing of the needs of her system will dictate. Exit teapot and bread and butter, and in their place we will hare good aoiip, well-cooked meats if one cares for them, plenty of milk, es, butter and a fair amount of the (tweet things of life. For the coming woman i to I an out-of-door creature, and can onsurne pure saccharine matter in reasonable quantities to excellent advantage. I'erhapa he will make her own confectionery. If he doe.

much the better; for (die will lie more certain that it is made of proper material. Womeo have been Rtarvinff them-nelre to death in a systematic, sympathetic and aristocratic fashion for a (for.i I many years, and it i quite time that, they put a btop to it. The apostle of healthful development ia telling thern that it in out of the question to keep a good fire in the physical furnace without proper material. There are maoy people who are under the doctor's care, and who swallow no end of nauseous drugs and drink all sorts of vile-tasting and smelling water, when the moht that they need is plenty of good food to eat and all of the out-of-door exercise that they can bear. Such a cous of treatment would bring them tip to the standard in a short time, but it would diminish the doctor's fees, and that is precisely what he docs not want.

It would be a good thing if some medical man could develop as a specialty the faculty of teaching people how to eat and what to eat, instead of them with draffs that nine times out of ten aggravate the ease they seem to remove. Then we might hope for strong, healthy, well-developed girls and women, who are fit for ail the duties of life. It is no secret to many thoughtful persons that the diet of women, especially those of limited means, is nowhere near sufficient to keep them in good condition. It might be a benefit if, instead of fresh-air funds and excursions and a few weeks in the con try, there could be restaurants provided where women could for a moderate sum get meals that are sufficiently nourishing to keep up their vitality and give them some sort of show for rising above the level to which their burdens of overwork and under-feeding have dragged them. N.

J-edger. SOCIETY SPOILS THEM. fllgh-nred Vagn by Xo Meana the Most Intelligent. So long as our dogs were employed in the labor of the organized recreations of man, the tendency of the association with the superior being was in a high measure educative. They were constantly submitted to a more or less critical but always effective selection which tended ever to develop a higher grade of intelligence.

With the advance in the organization of society the dog is ever losing something of his utility. even in the way of sport. He is fast becoming a mere idle favorite, prized for unimportant peculiarities of form. The effort in the main is not now to make creatures which can help in the employments of man, but to breed for show alone, demanding no more intelligence than necessary to make the creature a well-behaved denizen of a house. The result is the institution of a wonderful variety in the size, shape and special peculiarities of different breeds, with what appears to me to be a concomitant loss in their intelligence.

It appears to me, in a word, that our treatment of this noble artimal, where he is bred for ornament, is, in effect, degrading. Prof. N. S. Shaler, in Scrib-ner's.

lleea In the Mammoth ave. "Mammoth cave in Kentucky is getting to be a gigantic bee hive," said a recent visitor. "The last time I went through this big hole in the ground I took both the long and short routes, as they are called by the guides. At several places there were rather too many bees for me to feel eatircly comfortable, although I was not attacked by any of them. I the cave should be explored for honey some rich finds would undoubtedly be made.

The bees are increasing constantly. In fact, while I have visited the cave frequently for several years, it has only been about two years since I knew that they were there, and this year it would be impossible for a visitor not to know Cincinnati Enquirer. James Venney was run over by an ice wagon in New York and one of his broken ribs punctured his lung. The escaping air got into the cellular tissue under the skin and puffed him up so that at the hospital he was known as the "'human pincushion." But he is recovering. 'There was a mock marriage at a church entertainment in SteuK'nville, O.

The principals were a maiden ladv of the advanced age of eighty and a many of sixty-five. Now the bride claim.i the man is her real husband, and he has so scared that he appear-- a-, old a- she. Mr. I.u.non- hy do you ahvavs question patients so closely about what they eat? 1 the icforu.athm you get help you to diagnose their eases?" Irrv Emede no! Hot. by so doing.

I am enabled to guess what their station in life is. and how fts 1 can rol p. out of 1-. rrr. tn4 rt am was practically dead in trance.

there are S17 preachers in the Reformed church, SfO Lutheran, Zl Methodist and 23 Baptist. The Massachusetts Sunday Protective league has issued an appeal to members of bicycling, boating and athletic clubs to avoid all "meets' and games on the Lord's Hay. M. Jean Kleury, the father of "Henry Greville, the novelist, died recently. He was professor of French in the University of tit.

Petersburg, and author of a book on Rabelais. At Moscow a new conservatory of music is now being erected by order of the czar. The building will cost and will accommodate about 1,000 pupils. Statues of N. Rubinstein, a former director, jind of Tschaikowsky, who long taught there, will be placed ia the square around the new building.

Sixty years ago the incumbent of a church in Hall used to be called Vicar Bromby. Just after the passage of the first reform bill, in 132, he preached a sermon in which he uttered this wholesome Socratic passage: "In these days we hear a great deal about reform. Let me give you a piece of advice: The best reform is to make one person better. I need not say who that person should be." Pennsylvania is contributing its share of distiguished educators to New Kngland. Prof.

Halliet, who won his distinction as a teacher first in Pennsylvania normal schools and afterward as superintendent of the city schools of Reading, removed to Springfield, to take charge of the public schools of that city. The nominating committee of the Boston school board has recently invited Supt. Balliet to become a candidate for the position of superintendent of the Boston schools, but he declined to become a candidate against the present incumbent New rnies have lately been issued for the Paris conservatoire of music, according to which professors must retire at the age of seventy, and must give at least three lessons a month. Classes are to be limited to ten pupils, except those of harmony, piano and or-an, which may have twelve. Pupils in singing must complete their course in four years, those in harmony and piano in five.

The minimum age for admission is fixed at 18 for men and 17 for women; the maximum age for singers is 26 for men and 23 for women; for harmony 22, and for piano 18, The oldest active professor in Germany is said to be Privy Councilor Stickel, professor of oriental languages at Jena, who recently celebrated the nineteenth anniversary of his birth. Prof. Stickel answered Prince Bismarck's question as to his age in the following manner: "I have seen Napoleon the First; Germany in its condi tion of deepest disgrace. I have known Goethe, and in him seen Germany at the pinnacle of its literary development; and now I see in your highness him who brought our Fatherland to the pinnacle of political development." Roman Catholics in London will soon have a cathedral of an architec ture unique in that city. It will he a basilica, built on the model of Constan-tine's original church of St.

Peter at Rome, 350 feet long by 170 wide and 100 high, and will hold 10,000 people. Attached to it is to be a monastery for thirty monks and forty-five lay brethren, to which the Benedictines who for centuries served Westminister Abbey, are to be invited. The land was bought by Cardinal Manning nearly thirty years ago for 55,000, and is now worth 300,000. The buildings will cost 250,000, toward which one contributor has already given 20,000. CRUSHING A LADY KILLER.

The Wicked Girl Fooled Him Into Hiding Behind a Sofa When Mamma Came. George N. is well known in club circles. And he has a great opinion of his ability to "kill" debutantes. He brags a good deal about his power, too, and somehow or other a certain young lady who lives in the vicinity of the university heard that George had said that he would make any girl fall in love with him.

She made up her mind to get even with him. He called several times upon her and she made him believe that she took in all he said: He got to saying that she was nice, but anybody could guy her, to use George's expressive phraseology. This made the young lady 1 mad. She concocted a very nice plan to encompass his defeat. They sat on the sofa together, and George began telling her wonderful things about what he had done, and the look in her vacant eyes made George think that she was believing all he said.

By and by they heard the mother coming down stairs. The young lady said: "Oh, George, get behind the sofa and frighten mamma!" George did as he was bidden. When the mother entered the parlor she remarked: "Didn't I hear Mr. 's voice just now?" The bright daughter said: "Oh, yes! but George is so timid that he hid behind the sofa when he heard you coming downstairs!" George is no fool and he tumbled. He crawled out from behind the sofa, looked for his hat and made his departure without a word.

Syracuse Post A Strange SpeU. Frances Have you heard from that young man who was so devoted to you a month ago? Kitty Yes, I received a letter from him yesterday, and he seems to be under some strange spell; a weird spell, I might say. 'Perhaps it is your fascination that has done it" "I should hope not. He puts two l's in 'until' and no in Detroit Free Press. What 11 Might Eipeet.

UfVhen I succeed in getting on the right side of you I'm going to propose. jshe Well, if you do, you'll find yourself on the left side almost immediately. Truth. A Ceefal Animal Thal.Ia.ln Faet, Mounted on Spring. It is difficult to understand how the legs of horses stand the wear and tear of work in onr great cities, where every tep of their irod shod hoofs is npon a hard, unyielding road.

There is no other creature living, with the exception of the donkey or mule, which can long bear the constant battering entailed by rapid locomotion over a paved surface. But if we look at the structure of the horse's legs, we see how it is that the jar and vibration do not injure him more. His "pasterns," the part just above the hoof, yield a little at each step, and so break the force of the concussion. He is, in fact, mounted on springs. This is one chief reason why he is a pleasant animal to ride.

Anyone who has tried riding a cow or ox has found the difference between the easy, elastic movements of the horse and the jilting and jogging of a horned mount. Again, wild beasts of ancient date further explain the fact for us. The herds of wild horses had to travel far and fast, for dear life, over rock-strewn deserts, both when in search of food and when pursued by their hereditary foes. It was necessary, in habitually traversing hard and stony plains for many hours at a stretch, to. have strong hoofs, and legs which would both stand wear and tear and at the same time save the body from injurious effects of the constant jar and concussion.

The importance of this can be judged by those who have ridden both a cushion-tired cycle and an old-fashioned "boneshaker." Vibration is always more exhausting to the body. The reason why a pneumatic-tired sulky is worth several seconds in the mile to a trotter is not so much because it of lighter draught, but because practically no vibration is conveyed along the shafts and traces to the horse's body. Ever so little vibration will weary his muscles and hamper his movements to a certain extent. North American Review. AN ANCIENT MYTH.

It Says That Humanity Descended From a Tree. The descent of the human race from some particular species cf tree is one of the oldest myths that can be found running through the folk stories of every nation. In Virgil we find reference to the race of "men who took their birth from trunks of trees," and among some of the early commentators on that statement we even find speculations as to the particular species of tree from which the race sprung. The very earliest Egyptians, as well as those who lived under later dynasties, had a legend of the "Tree of Life," and many of the leading investigators, both ancient and modern, have expressed the opinion that from Egypt came the bibical story of the "Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil" which graced the original garden made by the All-Wise for our first parents. Prof.

Thiselton (see his Folk Lore of Plants) believes that the scriptural narrative cited is a survival of the be lief in the "Tree Descent of Man," and that the abiding faith of mankind ia the tradition again crops out in Revelations, where the "Tree of Life" plays as important a part as that of the famous tree mentioned in the first book of the Bible. The nati ves of Madagascar have a tradition which is believed and perpetuated among them to the effect that the first man was born alive from a tree, and that he immediately set about making himself a "helpmeet," fashioning her from a knotted limb by the aid of a mussel shell carving-knife! Marsden's Ilistory of Sumatra tells 11s that the people of the Philippine islands also have the tree-descent legend among them, and King, in his Life Among the Bushmen of Australia, says that the people there habitually live among the trees, because "they are taught from infancy that their early ancestors were trees endowed with the faculty of speaking and moving about from place to place." St. Louis Republic. FASHIONS IN PETTICOATS. Care Taken to Seenre Perfect Fit Black for Traveling.

A flannel petticoat is certainly a mundane thing, and yet even flannel petticoats have a fashion of their own. Time was when hand embroidery on flannel must be had and elaborate work put on even coarse material. Now embroidered flannel is generally relegated to children's wear, and only a tiny fancy edge is used to finish the narrow ruffles, which are invariably trimmed with lace. Physicians and would-be critics may inveigh against small hips and waist, but there is yet to be found the woman who will not endeavor to look as smaU as possible, particularly as she grows older, so that the greatest attention is paid to every undergarment, not only that it should be tasteful and costly, but also that it should be made to enhance or disguise the figure. Yokes are necessities in petticoats.

Flannel petticoats should not reach below the knees, and should be carefully cut A good pattern is to have a wide 'back breadth cut across, and a full piece joined thereto. The side pieces, of course, must be gored. Lace insertion one or two rows alone one or more narrow flounces edged with lace, always looks well. Light blue and light pink are the favorite colors, although some women prefer white. I have seen black flannel petticoats, and as some women always wear black underwear in traveling, these black petticoats are used for that purpose.

They were certainly pretty, for they were well cut and made and had ruffles of black instead of white lace, headed with broad black satin ribbon feather-stitched on either side. Vogue. The primrose is yellow, because, as the scientists say, it alters the vibrations of white light from 37.6-10 in an inch to 44.000 in an inch, and the number in a second of time from 453.000,-900,000.000 to 535.0M.000.rjO.OOO, but nobody understands her- er why. I A RETIRED BUSINESS WOMAN, A Page From Her History. The Import-ml etpftlnm To t-nin tin en--tmn: I Ima troubled with iesrt yr-a mm-h of that tint- vry rc war I wtr-t.

4 by one wu I tut in f'r't Cii.lvwf i rviirw fi uvoubI of tr.jr health. A r.by-,ir-. told my friendi that I rmU1 not li Myft t-Hful Iwd were bailiy ant I was a fw-l iMis orifliitun when a ypnfif man bre-rd rity attention to lrr. Mile' Mew Heart 'nrw, arid said that Mi Mister, who had frlw with lieart ea, bad been cure'! by the, remedy, and again healthy woman. I pur' -I a Wtl of the Heart (Jure, and In b-i than wo hour ofter faking the first de i could a derided Improvement, in therirefiiutWri jf my btixoi.

VVln-n IumI taken thren I rould movH my ankles, something I bail not done, for montiis nd limbs htd been swollen so ion tbiit they km-iwI almost put rilled fore I hail taken of bottle of the Heart dire, Oi swelling hud all gtinn down, and I wh no much U'to'r that, I did my own work On my recommendation others are takl-i tlU valuable remedy -Mr Morgan, VV HiirHm t'liii ao. ill. Ir. Mi IIfrK Jifo'-ry of In heart (IIk-s-, IwhoM by ll tniz' on postin vnt Mm Iir. MiltM Mmilt al Co on of prii bottle.

-1 bottle for ex pre-w jir pub). It Im iKnltlvtily free fro kit oti.i(etirJiiii4i'rKns(iriji;t For eale by Morley Brof, and J. J. Tobin. TRAINS OM THE MISSOURI, KANSAS TEXAS RAILWAY Now Run Solid St.lLoiiis Chicago ICansasCity i ,1, Wagher Buffet sleeping Cars FREE CHAIR GARS, Hawken' famoua pec tables and eyeglasses correctly adjusted by an ex pert optician at GRAHAM ANDREWS' DRUG STORE.

AUSTIN. No cbirge for testing eyesight, Erery pair warranted ook'sl'ottonlioct COMPOUND. 'A rwnl docorery by an eU 'LadiM. th only ptrfaetly (afaand rrlUblo ouvtlciaa tfrfni. Bewara of miprtnclpled Inigglta oCr Inferior nvrdlcinM la place of Uila Aak for Ook'a Cotton Root Camaoaaa, laa tw otwM- tntt, or Id1om tl and oenta tn poataf la Ultar 9nd wi win Mud, tealol, by return matt.

Fall walad partlt-uiar la plain envelope, to ladlaa onij, ftampa. Aildroim Pond Lily CorapanT. 3 )rk. Detroit. UlcH.

For iaJe b7 Jno. H. Chileg. IT POPS. EffeiTescent, too, ExbLarating, Just the thing to "build up the jonstittstiou.

Hires' Rootbcer Wholesome ar.l trengtlier.ia, pure blood, free irom boiU carbuncles. General ood lu-nltl: results from drinking HIRES Rootbeer tlie year round. "ackage makca. five gii'ofls, Ak your druggut or jtocc fr Take no other. Send l-crrt ftamn ta 7 117 Arch J'bilaJilphrfi lr tvjut.

tul picture tar What. Oniy for that tylih ho? Tt eg. that is Hurt Shoe eompa-ny'g famous line; they ell thera close And lots of therxi. You xnt a pair? OfOISMNJAILS.

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About Austin American-Statesman Archive

Pages Available:
2,714,819
Years Available:
1871-2018