The Daily Examiner. (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 111, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 11, 1902 Page: 2 of 4
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ILfy Z)athj (Examiner.
Published every evening except Sunday
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Absolutely Hresb
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Early Triumph
Telephone No. 84.
Early Rose
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drift that way.
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such as Hows Trace chains, eHames, etc.
LEWIS J. WILSON
up
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The cold enap killed the toma-
to plants in most of the hot-beds,
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Martin,<
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RAISING
A GHOST
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Early Vermont
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Ws listened, but beard no
wuau. . « ■ ; Ot. a>
“Je’adonaforr cried — jjR|
other.
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BUIST
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HERBIN E,
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Pure Juices from Nat ral Roots?
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BU1ST
and perhaps die when relief can be so
easily obtained by giving TEE THINA,
j cents A druggists, or
mail 35 eents to C. J.’ Moffett, M. D.,
St. Donis, Mo. ,
8
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K..
!.
EwryMIt Mfl tc 3i?e :: \
tuzs-xxci-xx xio-.wxda, • sv, at/o’/ <:-T
Pr^-. ”O
> Frtpsred by JA2& F. BAUAR’J, Si >■«, Ho.
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Mi
Entered at the Navasota postoffice as
econd-ciass mail matter.
&
* ' / ‘T- /- ■■ /
Work on the new I. & G. N^
depot has progressed so far as to
allow the painters to begin slather-
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TV
'Jfl
I
S£jl
11..
Ml
fl
'JI L J J
wsSg %
fe-F'fe •
■
1,4 > A •
fl
<*
L -
• New line box paper and envel-
opes to match at El Merito Phar-
macy. •
Mr, John D., Quinn and Miss
Martha Yarborough are t-o be mar
r^ed at the Episcopal church to-. 1
." No cards.
BK*.
IL '
U
J*-'
was a significant remark the gen-
tleman made, and herein is one of night
the big advantages from factories
in Ahiline. There are but ’ few
th ug which really add to the
Wealths of the world—agriculture,
stock growing, mining and manu-
M. L. O. Andrews - Ed F. Blackshear
ANDREWS & SLACKSHEAR.
I ! ri
wte
84.......
‘Moneygto Loan
In any amount on improved
farms, city property and u'ood coi
laterals at low rate of interest
,P. O, P.i.x 11'1 1
“Silver Crown” Crg trs; trie best
cigar you ever smoked. S nd
>3 qo to the Littma.n Cigar Fac-
tory, Austin, and yon wijl get !o<,
express prepaid, or $2.00 p. r box
ol 50, Yo^wili want them again.
B
INSOMNIA
, “Ihave bHn wains PAWiOWfor
Insomnia. wiUk whlchT have beenaSicted for
over twenty years, ami I can eay IBstCuicareta
have given me more relief than anyether reme-
dy I have etter tried. I shall certainly recom-
mend them to my friends as being all they arg
represented." Taos Gillard, Sight, III
CANDY
CATHARTIC
/ _
&
g-A»> H
I
Now Offering Another’Lot of
Genuine Rel Triumph
Seed Potatoes
: Directly Shippe 1 from Maine 1
We alsu carry a full stock of Farm Hardware W
such as Plows Trace chains, ^Hames, etc. * *
iH
Notice. *
The fifjn of G K. F. Gille, do
ing a tailoring business on Wash
ingtnn avenue, has been chubged
to Gille & Gille, Mr. I], J. R _
GiHe being the new member of
the firin. L
Your patronage ^solicited,hnd
prompt attention will he given all
or.den? aw heretofore. G. K F
Giile wifhe.M to thank the public
for past patronage ami wi.»lu s a
continuance of same.
PfoMant. Palatable. Potent, Taste GMd. Do
Good, Never Bleken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 26e. AOo.
... CURS constipation. ...
IW«M «y r.«fy, awtryi, »«w T«rfc. M*
ie-TMAo aa wwnRtow:
fln^’' '
.. ...9:21 a. tn.
.... 12:24 p. tn.
.... 1:20 a. m.
F?-. > ■;
replanting, however, they will
have plenty time to grow them in
time to get an early crop, if noth-
ing eles prevents—Jrcksopville
Reformer.
It would be embarrassing to
read the Declaration of Independ-
ence to a Filipino. . -
1 J ■ 4- * -L • . ’V5! > < ••._.
Fort Worth, we are told, has
100 men who give $500 per month
to advertise the town. No won-
MOBILF, f-
ATLANTA.
SAVANNAH 4
JJID AIX POINTS IN Tȣ
STATE 07
FLORIDA. ‘
PASSENGERS ARRANGING
TOR TICKETS VIA TUI-
- Crystal orepe paper, and school
tablets just in at El Merito Phar-
macy. ?'■
and the. rest of us discussed in Jow
tones the probability of the peddler
winning thi nsouey. We feared ,that
the ghost raiser would play him some
trick, for he was a villainous looking
1 creature, while the peddler was a hap-
py go lucky individual Vho might be
easily .swindled. ;iBut when we con-
ridered that he himself held the stakes
We could not see how a fraud could be
possible. .f-L;. ;
“We sat thus, watching the clock in
the corner, drinking, smoking, chat-
ting, stealthily keeping an eye-on the
ghost raiser. He paid no attention to
ns whatever, keeping bls eyes on bls
newspaper. As the hands of the clopk >
neared the hour of 12 we expected to
see him get up and go ont What we
most f< “ -x
stairife'L ..
the stakes. A few minutes before mid-
night I said to hlpr.z r , .
“ ‘Are yon going to raise a ghost* sit-
ting there reading that newspaper?
“He turned bls green eyes slowly to-
ward me. 'I do not raise ghosts. I
have only the power th communicate_______________* _ ________
H&raoti to ryot hl* fpteod up'fltfllAl ttt ill* and successful t
midnight I have nothing'more to do
with the tattler. The spirit, of Etna-
than Harmon will be thetV i
clock began to strike the hour of 11
At the firjrt stroke we heard a sudden
jar tn the room above. By. the sixth
stroke something fell ketrily o« the
floor. Every stroke after that was ac-
companied by a piercing shriek, each
growing more frightful than the previ-
ous onei^ At last there was a cry of _J|p| . . ______.,_T_
‘Help!’ followed by gutteral sounds U their babes and little children to suffer
if some one were strangling. ; - .. . > ... ^1
“Every one of our party sprang U
hi* feet and, nui^liig irmMl attasipt ea811^ uuimi^cu u
ed to enter the peddler’s room, it fcas Jt c®818 ton,y 25
sound. - -■
M ‘Break open the doorf cried aa-
me a Hft,’ said I. ‘I’ll look
“I was lifted to the proper -level, but
•Sjffwiihffl-iraKM
| Nine- .?: -
| Tenths
|°f ' ■ _
| all the
| People
I Suffer
froma
Diseased
’eared was that he would go up I 5- Z)Ot.
frighten the peddler and. claim '♦ <
I
’•L
I’he Gunline Garden Seed
fe
i
. Mj
M1
SEED POTATOES g
9
DEGU'JTES ths liver, Stems ;aad Scivsk
R Cleanses theSy^ete,fui..;es liu &
pOHES Bfeigda, Biliousness, .
tt I
through ths transom.’
“I was lifted to the proper level, but
as the room was dark I could see noth-:
!ng. , ’ ?
“Then we tried to break ^open tbp
door. It was not only locked, but se-
curely bolted on the Inside by one of
the enormous bolts used in ,those days.
Finally the strongest as well as the
heaviest of the party drew back and.
rushing forward, drove bis heel against
the door. It flew open, and we all
rushed into the chamber.
“It was empty. A window was open,
and a shed a few feet below formed a
convenient stepping stone to the
ground. The peddler had fled. We
quickly went down stairs to the room
where we had left the ghost raiser. He
was not there. These two precious
rogues had made away with our $40.”
B0GEP T. HOWELL.
H. & T. C. RATES
Feb. 5. 6, 7. 8, 9, and 10, to
Neiv Orleans and re’urn. account
March Gras. »«tu >17-25; hniit tn
Feb. 17, 1902.
j. Mfc"
Seth Carolina d
^^7 Awarded I
add Medal -A
Sold By B. . Lehman
LOST:—One two-year old heifer,
blood-redj branded R. M., right
hip, marked hole and upder bit
iu right ear, under bit in left.
Reward for any information to
Costahle Forrester. '
FL
I
TEETHINA was. first used by Dr.-
Charles J Moffett, a graduate of Jeffer-
- , - « - . } F’1-! .
in hir extensive and successful treat-
ment of children in Georgia in over-
coming the troubles incident to teeth-’
ing and hot summers. TEEriliNA
“As h4 spoke the hammer of ths big (Teething Powders) counteracts the ei-
iMk> iw>»nn .tHto vOmi knw so fect weather and k^eps t've diges-
tive organs n a healthy condition. »>nd
has saved the lives of thousands ofc.
children in the doctor’s native state,
where' physicians prescribe and al?
mothers give it, and it i& criminal iff
mothers of our section to allow their
4
-- = '-a.''
The Connecticut Constitutional
Convention has before it a propo-
1 sition for woman suffrage, another
for minority representation, a third
for a radical civil service clause
and a forth making, a member of-
the Legislature ineligible to any
other elective or to any appointive
office.’. f ’
The Prohibitionists of Georgia,
say that outside of four cities ia
that State, of which Atlanta is the
Chief, there is no “wet” territory der stock pens and packing house-
in Georgia. Actually, there are
twenty-eight counties in Georgia
in which the sale of liquor is law-
ful, exclusive of swenty-two coun-
ties in which the South Carolina which will necessitate the groweis
dispensary system has been adopt-
ed. There are 137 counties in the
State of Georgia and in eighty-
seven of these absolute prohibition
exists. 1'^ , .1
$tOB Reward <100. ,
TlwTMdmafthisMMr win b« uleucd to
toaza that there is at least One dreaded diseaM
. TuUQnal taeatnMHt.
a intemany, acting
xnucQu* surfaces or
HI II
1
- i]
TO TfU|
SOUTHE ‘
A NEW SYSTEM Rs
. WITH ITS OWN I
MBMPBP
BIRMINGJ
AND MANY OTHER IM)r
POINTS IN THE SOU! ..
GOOD CONNECTIONS
BIRMINGHAM FOR
MONTGOMBK<
T-W
axiLUOAD TIME TABLE. „
Arrival and departure of trains from
the union depot:
H. & T. C.
NORTH BOUND.
No. r day...........................
No. 3 day.............. ......
No. 5 night.................—.......
SOUTH BOUND.
No. 2 day............................. 2:57 p. m.f
No. 4 day....L ............ ,5:16 p. m.
No. 6 night........... .............. 3:48 a- m.
SANTA FE.
To Somerville ......... „.';.jo:57 a. m.
To Cleveland................. S-1^ P- m
*
MOTHERS, DO YOU
KNOW
the many so-called birth medicines, and
most remedies for women in the treatment
of her, delicate organs, contain more or less
opium, morphine and strychnine?
Dj you Know that opium and morphine
are stupefying narcotic poisons?
Do you Knqjv that in most countries drug-
gist# are not permitted to sell narcotics with-
out labeling them poisons?
Do You Know that you should not take
internally any medicine for the pain accom-
panying pregnancy?
Do You Know that Mother’s Friend is a
purely vegetable preparation, and that it Is
applied externally only.
Do You Know that Motlfer’s Friend is a
celebrated prescription and that it has been
in use over forty years, and that each bottle
of the genuine bears the name of The Brad-
field Regulator Ce.?
Do you know that wh#n you use this per-
fect remedy during childbirth or throughout
the entire period of gestation that you will
be free of pain and bear healthy, clever
children? • ,
Well, these thing# are worth knowing.
They are facts. Oriruggists, fl.00. Accept
no substitute. Our book "Motherhood free.
THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.,
ATLANTA, GA.
/6'^MTE THE
---------L. ..LU..............I || I
EXCURSION
RATI S
| ‘ by BAUARO, Si >"<S, ??*
, „■! '-'I!!.'. '.I11. ■ .d11."' at.'ft'111 "? " .......
. - ■.a...... • .
Delirered by carriers to any part of
citj. Subscription price:
Per week ..................................10 cents.
Per month......................................40 cents
O^ct of publication in the Ackerman
9l Gudger block, up stairs.
SANTA FE RATES.
Slate Meeting I. O. O. F., San
Antonio, Tex , Feb. 3rd to 91b.
Round trip, >6.95.
Annual Meeting Department rif *
Superintendence, National Edu-,
cntional asaociiitioQ, Fe^, 25,t<»
27, 1902. For the above oecaMob
the Santa Fe will sell ticket* At A
rau-of one and one-third fare-
for the round trip, on the oertifi
calc plan. i ‘ .
Via Santa Fe;—Conference of
Peoples Party of Texas at Dalla*r
Feb. J 2th to lith. Round trip
$7-75. Dates of sale Feb. Illa
and 12th-
George Washington’s Birthday
Celebration. Lnredo, Texas, and
Monterey, Mexico, Feb. ^2 F<d'
the 11 bnve nrcHsion the Santa Fe
"ill zell tickets al a rate of $6 50
to Laredo and $9 50 to Monterey.
Dates of sale Ft b. 20lb and 21st.
Laredo tickets will be limited to
continuous passage each way and
to Feb 25th fin* final returtf .
Monterey ticket will be limited to
March 3rd for final return and
will allow a atop over io Laredo
on the going trip
grandpa proceeded:
“It was before the day of railroads
in America. I was traveling between
New York and Boston by coach and
stopped over in a village which has
since grown to be a city. During the
evening the coffee room was full, and
in those days people did not sit apart,
but fraternized with each other, drink
ing, smoking and telling stories. One
man, it is true, sat at a table by him-
self and would have nothing to do with
any one else. He was a man with a
red shocky head and snaggle teeth. No
one regretted his uusociability on ac-
count of his disagreeable appearance.
At one’of the tables half a dozen of us
were discussing the subject of supOr
natural appearances on earth, and n
young peddler brought his fist down on
the table and said:
“ *The man who says the dead come ,
back to us lies!’ <
“The redheaded man turned his head I
slowly and fixed a pair of greenish eyes
on the speaker.
“ ‘I say that the dead come back.’
“ Then you lie!’
“The peddler started up, but one held
him back.
“ ‘Young man,’ said the green eyed
man, ‘if I chose I could convince you
of the truth of my words.’ '
“ ‘If you will do so, I will give you
ail the money I have with me. ' Bee
here; it is $10.’
“The other turned away with a ges-
ture of contempt ’Raise the dead for
$101 What a sacrilege!’ Then, sudden-
ly changing his jnlnd, be said, *1’11 lay
you a wager of $100 to $50 that I can
call up one of the dead who will make
you bawl with terror.’
“ *But I have only $10?
.‘“Well, then, if you cannot make
good your words, hold your peace.*
“By thla>ttme we were ali interested
in making the green eyed man prove
-that he could raise the dead. To do
so It was necessary to get $40 to put
With the peddler’s $10. There were by
this time eight of us, and we each lent
the peddler $5. ■ /, <
“ ‘Who shall be stakeholder?* he
asked.
“ 'You,* said the green eyed man.
’Keep your flfty and take my hundred.
Go up to^ybur room. Is now 11
o’clock. At midnight I shall show you
your friend Elnathan Harmon’—.
1 ** ‘Blhathan HarmonL How did you
know ^9 was my, friend T 7 .
“ ‘Never mind that Go to your
room.’
“The peddler went up stairs, the
’I.
7
1
X
Weak Stomach antf I^Ld fejestkh;?_____
’’ I < »•»« r# ifr#»m
-. | Ag. fltj /H
[Original;]
“Come, graqdma. tell us a ghost
story.”
“There are no ghosts, my children."
“Oh, yes, there are!”
“I will tell them one,” said grandpa,
“one in which I had a part, so 1 can
vouch for Its truth.”
WUX HAVE AN -OP>»OBT7vi*rg
TO ENJOY THE C®MFC s C’
A. BRAND NEW, LFP-^O-DA'J J
LIMITED TRAIN-
The Southeastern
Limited.
rvu xnoaxaTioM as to aatm aww
bates enunJlir rvaKiman vfom
amxoATiov to att iismsBTTA'xm
or TXB OOMTANT, ox IO \
ALBX HltTON.
oamtKAX rxsexran A«mrx, 1
BRYAN SNYDER, . w
FAesMreata tkasfxo aUMAABA
Kurr toms,
___w
factoring about covering the call-
ings that Add anything to the
wealth produced. When agricul- ing on the piltnary coft' of green
'tore alone is used, it is uphilH
work, but with, the others added,
money hunts the community from
all directions. Farming and stock
funning are well established, but
we want factories added, and if we
fail to go on from one triumph to
another, we are deliberately throw
ihg Away an opportunity to at least
double our wealth producing pow
era Factories will largely increase
the proftar of the other industries,
while they hammer out,fortunes
foQi; their, owners.—Abiline Re-
. porter.
FortWe—-80 acres bottom land
3 miles west, of Navasota, 4-wire
fence, a houses, wpll, 2 mules,
5^ Jplo^, «I| go at a bargain, ,
J. M. Ackerman.
L'’t Sg
OMifficr
*
■ I fl
J
r . * !
hi. i ;■?
mtaieiadoiof it# worjrTiw’proprietore hive
•o much faith In it# curative power#, thatthev
.. Addrwa,?. J.CHEinffTAOO.,ToJMo,O.
WfcJdbvDrwrri-ta.Tae.
HaM’s ftunfly PHI# ars the belt.
How Factories Help.
"I live in an Eastern town of
7000 people,” said a traveling
man to the editor Wednesday,
“and since factories were estab-
WwML- •; 1 ■ • ' 1 *"A* ■
lished there which gave constant
* employment to thousands of peo-
ple all the time—for more than
half our villagers are at work in
factories—the savings banks have
deposits from the people of the
4own and farmers abound it to the
amount of eight million dollars.”
This talk came about from his
being informed by a citizen of the
effort being made by the Reporter
to interest dur people in factory
building. “While the factory
hands have saved the money, the
; i farmers around have grown rich,”
The way to reform a mao is to
.give him full credit for bis good
deeds, and jump on him like a ,
thousand bf bfricfc for bad ohea; * ______ .
no, man’s wrong was ever gotten green eyed man took up a newspaper,
right |)y attempt to balance bis ac-
count. with ope good deed against
forty mean ones; a man should
live right all along the line, as
nearly as depraved human nature
can do it.—Oakwoods Call.... ''
So-’th Carolina Interstate and
West India Exposition, Chafie$
ton, b. G., December 1, ft
ju1>e 1, 1902; one and one, hall
fare round trip. Limft
Dec. 10 to May 20, round irfe
tickets tc Chailesten on Toe *
of each week; rate $35.25. 1
.4
id*
fl
Wl Sl
...... .Ulo. !&
The children clapped their bands, and luZL
raudpa proceeded; r j
j ; ST I
w
k—Ji -
13 days from date of sale. .
Round trip tickets on sale
Galveston $6.4o; Houston $3.1
and Dallas $10.45. Limit 10 da
from date of sale.
Florida prints.
, .6. J. WotB.,
. ’ .. ;
l.AG-'U EXCURSIONS.
Dates shown are those 00 wbJ
tidtots are 00 eale. L^3
Marlin, Titas, AH-Yesr-RnuL..
excursion tieketa ftuoi I. & G. X.
points rate&juM’ and nne-
third fare'*—Wdfld’F.rtiv u»< H«»
Well, Natural Sanihinuin aid
Health Rrsnrt.
Laredo. Feb i l. W H«idngt<af- '
Birthday Celehrai.on.
Waco, Feb. 29, aod
Brigade Reunion.
Dallas, Feb. 11, and 12, Pdp-
pie's Pjirt. Convewiion.
New Oilpahs. F»-li. 5, tn 1U,
Mrudigra* FeaNM^tif*'- » *
Low exf<i'-io« r 10ft
hdkIh for d| the *tb <v « '
fniI partiucUr- »o' wi ■'’h n. y |,j
1 st . :oket
‘ Gy adc-^Mi«s! . I
1* .1. Pi’tiKvi
T \ . 1. X.o. X. K R
IMest U< lvX.»i-. .'
—.4 ...: 1 :
Life in'-1/1 a nee poli^iea
aal extended; vendois Irii
bought and txtewtlcd. Pi
Box u8. •
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The Daily Examiner. (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 111, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 11, 1902, newspaper, February 11, 1902; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1346638/m1/2/: accessed May 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Navasota Public Library.