The Commerce Journal. (Commerce, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. [27], Ed. 1 Friday, January 12, 1906 Page: 2 of 8
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X
We
\
in MEMORUM.
Br
ith a large manufacturing
11
C3
Bin
‘f
r
.1
4
Plump Woman’* Complaint.
I
Texas
WILL BE ON SALE DAILY VIA
PACIFIC
E
15 TO OCTOBER 31, 1905 INCLUSIVE
SEPTEMBER
Two
Baxter.
Fourthrough solid tra-ns daily.
*
f
r
. 1.1
Between] St.
IK*1
Bl
. -
ri
I j
7. J. AMDERSOM. Gex. Ptss ML
HOUSTON TEXAS.
Ai
an
The follow in
sued this wees
ors, reported
Washington, E
babi
1(2X2
and Niagara Falls without change of cars.
Stopover allowed at Detroit and Niagara Falls.
All meals ferved in Wabash Palace Dining Cars.
More Through Sli
SOUTHERN
SUNSET ROUTE
t
For schedule of Pullman 1 ouriat ,Curs
and other Information, ace neareat
railroad axent, or write to
JOS. HELLEM, Asst Get. Pus. Mi-
ISCW /AtUdHU ..........- -
would refuse to be dictated to in
-------- am
I
/
LOW RATES 2 CALIFORNIA
ONE-WAY COLONIST TICKETS
.
’ the
vity.
Sold
"j
n |
> u
For over]
have end]
Pectoral I
weak lunl
sum ption.1
medicine I
prove. T1J
time you I
* I had »n awl
nothing aerrnel
Ayer’a < herrr I
I rseornmend I
they have a <1
Washington. I>1
A/<
of
a
ui.xg.cu ...7- recently that Japanese
her charm the would not be allowed to come to
• j.-. X- ... 1__1..., 1 -...<1 that the colonv
has bad an
ent wi...
. . firm.
electric vibrations.
-------- a force
to her (while
Ayer’s Pills k.
All vegctabli
Smoke Is Evidence o* Waste.
Since the final products of the per
feet combustion of any fuel are water
and carbon dioxide, neither of which
constitutes or makes smoke, the ex-
istence of smoke is proof of the imper-
fect burt:ing of whatever substance is
consumed for heat or power.
Physicianl
the b I o o <■
human bo !v|
the heart on]
minutes. It]
comes irregi
body suffers]
follows poor]
Emulsion m;
pure. One
J were
• women.
I male carrying
down Lx . . ------ . -w-w- o—— - - c»
religion to him while he thought] and fly from the scene.”
Perfection can only be attained
in the physical by allowing Na-
ture to appropriate and not dis-
sipate her own resources. Ca-
thartics gripe,"weaken—dissipate,
while Dert itt’a Litt.e Early Ris-
ers simply expel all putrid mat-
1 i.vc ter and bile, thua allowing
irud with great satisfaction, liver to assume normal actb
Artec wun g , . afOT tb« complexion.
byC.O. Hill.
dependence! Never! Who says,
‘•Never’" William A. Reid asked j
SCO!
EMVli
is sm h a
it passes soH
the blood. ■
geste.i in b-rc]
stomach ; a <]
tage in this.]
for the stonfl
and more dil
To get the grl
of good w ith I
sible effort is ]
everyone in ]
Scott’s l .mulsl
that. A chai
better takes p
fore you expc]
Did He Fear Germa? I
Dr. Heber Jones, to whom the
citizens of Memphis recently pre- ’
sented a purse of $10,000 for his
care of the quarantine this year, <
has weathered five epidemics in J
the city and yet it is recorded that ’
he was “greatly embarrassed” I
when the leading woman who pre- ;
sented the check kissed him full
upon the lips. 1
For coughs and colds no reme-
dy is equal to Kennedy’s Laxa- 1
tive Honey and Tar. It is differ-
ent from all others—better, be-
cause it expels all cold from the
system by acting ns a cathartic
on the bowels. Affords imme-
diate relief in croup, coughs,
colds, whooping cough, etc. j
Children love it. Sold by C. O.
• Hill.
Hurried the Declaration.
Interesting Photographic Collection.
I instructor st Vassar college has
pd and interesting collection of
hgraphs the photographs of the
U of young women who are cot
Fgraduatca. The babies in this
ctlon are strong and besuttftjl
~'-wta*er over 100.
A reasonable amount of food
thoroughly digested and proper-
ly assimilated will always in-
crease the strength. If your
stomach is a “little off” Rodot
Dyspepsia Cure will digest what
you eat and enable the digestive
organs to assimilate and trans-
form all foods into tissue-build-
ing blood. Kodol relieves sour
heart-bum
Pal-
agents wanted
TO SELL
DR. GUNN’S ANTISEPTIC,
anc.m« Slow Fever, La Grippe. Chills and Fever, All Stomach
and Kidney Troubles, Catarrh and Rheumatism, and is the Best
Lad Ca’ll'SmT Hewitt’s Grocery Store, Commerce,
Texas, and get a bottle and terms to agents, or w rite
Waco Electric Medicine Company,
WACO, TEXAS.
Flies on the Declaration of In-|
the other day if flies did not has-1
ten the work of the delegates, and!
a historian replies, quoting the
words of Thomas Jefferson : ”1 ■
shall never cease to be grateful to j
John Adams, the colossus of that i
debate. While the discussion j
was going on fatherly okl Ben
Franklin, 70 years old, leaning on FOLLOW TME
his cane, sat by my side and com-
forted me with his jokes when-; \V A E> A CH D( )l J | F“
ever the criticisms were unusual- v V
meetings near a livery stable, the To New York, Boston, Buffalo, Niagara Falls, Chicago. Canad?
i ------------ , [ wore short breeches and ■ and the Northwest.
i ed head of the G. A. R-, lost both tj„n sllk stockings, and with hand-!
, legs at the second battle oi kerchief i„ hand they were t'J'L Four through solid trams daily. The only line^betw^u St. Louin
j Bull Rim- Later, when in hos- gently employed >n lashing the
t\e ano oiiiei UiiiOii soldier' I [jjes from their ieg>. Ln, very vex-
visited by charitably inclined I atious was the aimoyance, and to ;
! _o great impatience did it arouse
neat basket sat ( tj,e snfferers, that they were only!
’ V- }
...
Girl Pstents * Button.
i Miss Edith A. Smith, of Salt
i Lake Citv. has been granted a pat-
i ent for a button that can be se-
! curelv fastened on a garment
without sewing. The button is
said to be washable, and, better
As the eastbound train pull- d
in on the 2nd of January, in the jhat Ruie
u-baggage car ahead was the body yke palmist says
in f a young man en route for the hand of Miss Nethersole shows
cauonora cemetery, there to
intAiiayong mao, Robert Collins,;
Od been bereft of both parents
towi infancy, and though cared for
B«jy kind relatives, he missed all | through
V that truly enteis into the inner. ^Lh'-Xslie*bolds
life of a child—a mother’s love. -
He was born in Alabama and em-
in
to
eye was gone ana me quic* pmw j-”"" a s1lo€ lhan right jn fr Hit.
had stopped. Dead among] jrnjess you happen to be as thin:
strangers and away from home, j as a tro'ney pole, leaning over to in various parts of the world,
the poor lad, we hope, had found iaCe
mother and was no longer a t—, , . ■ .
homeless orphan. There was foot on the other knee .t brmgs
nothing on his person to identify
him, but two of his old friends, I fce[ your wav., of course, if you's
who had been prospecting out j
west, happened to arrive in bort
Worth that day, and hearing that
an unknown young man had died
of consumption at the station,
they pushed their way through
the excited crowd and recognized
him. Messrs. Tucker and Yar-
brough then took possession of
the remains and as quickly as
possible shipped all that was left
of poor Bob Collins to his sorrow-
friends. He was tenderly la-d Co
rest beside his aunt who had
reared him, Mrs. J, T. Dunn, in
the old historic cemetery of
Sonora.
- ■
H
H
\ H
.lean Day. M
J.-:
Edn.i I
Susie S’■ .' <il
I.enna < -.lit®
bury
games. '’•■!•]
served w ith ]
sandwi, fl
picnic sti les. I
ent were: Mel
tenberry anl
Misses Tula!
Johns and F.tl]
enjoyed seein
play. At five
to their home!
Dau(«r or b Cold Bud How K> Avoid Tl>«m ■ (
More fatalities have their ori- I
gin in or result from a cold than I
from any other cause. This fact 1
alone should make people more I
careful, as there is no danger |
whatever from a cold when it is I
properly treated in the beginning I
For many years Chamberlain’s I
Cough Remedy has been recog- I
nized as the most prompt and ef- 11
fecteal medicine in use for this 1
, , disease. It acts on nature’s plan 1
in demand loosen9 the cough, relieves the I
lungs, opens the secretions and ■
aids nature in restoring the sys- I
tem to a healthy condition. Sold j 1
by all druggists. j
Kitchener’s Two Aunts. A
Lord Kitcheners love affair of ■
has been discussed in i
Now lie a
two old
His
They rolled him into the stationin I ^riian in a shoe shop the other happiest days in England are J
• 1 ... . --1.— | passed in their company. It is to j
their care that he confided all the (
presentations made to him after
his success in Africa, also a splen- (
> did lot ef curios he has collected
j“. T. Dunn, in 1890. He was
then a bright little boy, industri-
ous and greatly beloved by hie
mates. As he grew up to man-
hood, still feeling that “mother-
want” as Mrs. Browning express-
es it, he left hie friends to try the
far west, and for several years all
went well with him. Then that
insiduous disease, consumption,
which had carried off his young
mother and father, laid its with-
ering hand on his manly frame
and he went into a swift decline.
His last letter to friends at home
reached them the 25tb of Decem-
ber. It was written at Toyah,
Texas, several hundred miles
wast of Fort Worth. Mrs Mary
Wolfe, his aunt, who was visiting
friends in Fairlie, where his rela-
tives live, sent him money and a|
letter begging him to come home
to them. On the reception of
this he made an effort to get
home, but as the <
passed through the coach shout-
ing “Fort Worth!” he could only i
hold up his hands speechless.
as al- •_b— a L _ mXbb ktzvrt irt '
a reclining chair and as they day, "that the shoe-makers are
stopped the chair the light of that' greatly lacking in enterprise
gone and the quick pulse havmg found no better place
stopped. Dead among f-n'les^ you happen to he as thin I
* “ trolley pole, leaning over to j
or unlace a shoe is a trying
task, and if you sit up and put one
the laces in such a position that
you cannot see them and have to
got a maid to dress you you re at
liberty to get as stout as you
please, but if not the matter is no
joke. I've asked several shoe-
makers about this, and they say
that the onlv place where the shoe
could be laced with comfort would
be on the inside of the ankle, and
if the laces should be put there
the eyelets on one shoe would
knock against those of the other.
Nevertheless, 1 saw an actress
take off her shoes on the stage
in a play the other night. They
were laced on the inside, and she
performed the operation easily and
without discomfort. If I could
get such footwear I’d be glad to
buy it.”
The Orlp
“Before we can sympathize
with others, we must have suf-
fered ourselves.” No one can
realize the suffering attendant
upon an attack of the grip, un-
less he has had the actual expe-
rience. There is probably no
disease that causes so much
phvsioAl nl"i mental agony, or stomach, belching,
’ ' ’ successfully defies med-1 and all forms of indigestion.
All danger from the atable and strengthening. Sold
■’ be avoided i by C. O. Hill.
of Chamber-] — ~-
When Tanner Was "Converted.”
Corporal Tanner, recently elect- members
is » - e bA. — \ I? trvef HrvF H 1 .t • . 11
I T Loeatid in the Panhandle ?
( iCXdS idrmirs Country constitute a'SSI pro- I
I portion of tho«. who are out . f de> t ,«*•.»• an (
? vf all that is nectst-arv to comfort and easy b> urs, and own \
t BANK ACCOUNTS . S
) Those Xia- are not so fortunate should profit by past expert- >
< enets and recognize that these condition- are posable in <
S the PANHANDLE. \
? as no where else,for the reason that no mher ae tion now offers J
< a mF„.CUASS LANU AT LOW rWKM |
I and that the Agricultural ami Stock fanning p nubilities1 of J
j U is tec-mu are the eMual of. -nd in Some respect- betier than ?
> three to five times higher priced property located elsewhete. >
< In a word Many magnificent opjiortunities are still I
S onen here to those poaaesing but little ney, t ut prompt in- )
( vwtigatiou and QUICK ACTION are advisable, as ep-cu- \
/ lators have investigated and «re fart purchasing >
? knowledge < f quickly developing opportunities to
S others at greatly reduc'd prices <
1 THE DENVER ROAD t
( Sells cheap Round-Trip tickets twice a w.ek with stop-owrS
( privileges. For Full information, write to A
< A. A. GLISON, G. P. A., Fort Worth, Texas.
Iping Car Lines—Better service and Quicker
’ Time.
Take the
Banner blue limited,
[s and Chicago. The Handsomest Train in
America.
Consul the agents of connecting lines or addreee,
/ W. F. CONNER, S. W. P. A.,
V 395 slain St., Room 302, Dallas, Tenn
! vet. unbreakable, and is particu-
jarlv adapted for underclothing
and wash material. Miss Smith
has had an offer to place her pat-
Zealand, announced in
speech
New Zealand and that the colony
the matter. This is in reference
to a circular from the British colo-
nial office addressed to the colo-
nies and demanding the repeal
of laws that are repugnant to the
feelings of nations with which
Great Britain is at peace.
Olga Nethariola’a Hand.
Olga Nethersole’s hand is to
|go down through the corridors of ;
I time in a volume entitled. “The
1 7 ’: the World.” |
ahead was the body jyke painiist says of it: “The
be marvelous physical power in fin- |
t • Jo e-er- hut she is weak in the snoul-
y lid by the side of his tneuds. £he .. irritated and
” " does n<3t like to argue. She is in-
| consistent, but persistent, and will
carry nine points out of ten _
• /! her electric vibrations. .^ZeJa'nd Up in Arma.
The fingers also possess a forte
- - •••( to her (while Mr. Seddon, the premier
| in the absence of others) an un- New
i- usual power with a mingled mys- <
igrated to Texas with his uncle, tery which makes I ;
® ww ---- American people despite their di -
like. She is idealistic far more
than practical, and she could not
be practical if she would. She
will rule and dominate all under
her by her ungoverned force. Be-
fore an audience she feels control
and opposition, but can do her
best under opposition. She dis-
likes submissiveness to any one.
She would become dominating if
interrupted or angry. She could
be cruel in punishment, but sym-
pathetic if gain were at stake.
She is artful in argument, diplo-
matic and tactful. She is fond of
the amusements and pleasures ot
life, but is very jealous of’those
she loves. She is conventional be-
cause it is politic.”
Greatly in Demand
Nothing is more
than a medicine which meets
modern requirements for a blood
■ and system cleanser, such as Dr.
i King’s New Life Pills. They are
" just what you need to cure stom-
| ach and liver troubles. Try
them. At Hundley s drug store,
conductor 9^, guaranteed. ,
English papers of late
lavishes his affection on
“It seems to me." sa»l a plump aunts, sisters of his mother.
1 England
passed in their company.
which so
ical aid.
grip, however, may
by the prompt use of etiamoer-1
Iain’s Cough Remedy. Among
the tens of thousands who havej
used this remedy, not »une ease,
has even been reported, that has .
resulted in pneumonia or t ia Later, when in hos-1 gentiy employed in lashing
has not recovered, r or y . a|)d oth(,r Union soldiers . llies from tiie;r legs. So very
nil druggists. 1 were visited by charitably inclined I ---------*•— ------—
---*•— I fine day an elderly fe- so
_ —. a L. — — l.z»4 te —i «
beside^Tanner and talked ! too g;ad t0 sign the Declaration
of the delicacies in the basket. At <
length she lifted the lid and took
therefrom a tract on the evils of
dancing which she handed to the
patient. Tanner looked it oyer
and then said earnestly: 1 give
you Hiy word of horror,
that 'III never danee again as
long as 1 live.” The elderly lady
departed with great satist.dKnq
| fully believing that *hr «*<*«
! a convert. ...
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Lyford, A. A. The Commerce Journal. (Commerce, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. [27], Ed. 1 Friday, January 12, 1906, newspaper, January 12, 1906; Commerce, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1359008/m1/2/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .