The Henderson Times. (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 25, 1900 Page: 1 of 4
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THE HENDERSON TIMES.
BY R. T. M1LNER.
VOLUME, XLI.
'TOLERANT IN ALL THINGS, NEUTRAL IN NOTHING."
$1.00 PER ANNUM. 1
HENDERSON, RUSK COUNTY, TE XAS, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 25, 1900.
NUMBER 42.53
Double Store
On the Corner
Invite your inspection of the magnificent stock of fall and winter
merchandise we have succeeded in landing for our patrons. The pick
of the country's production, the greatest gathering of the strictly
first=class and desirable merchandise are here for your choosing.
It is worth your while to look at our assortment.
In connection with a most complete stock of the very highest quality
and reputable makes of
1 Clothing,
Shoes, Hats,
Dress Goods,
Cotton Goods,
and general line of DRY GOODS, we to=day invite your atten=
I tion to our house furnishing specialties, which on account of exten=
sive variety and low price haye made ours the recognized head=
quarters for anything in
|
Kb*
I
White ,
enamel
•"tf&LINE.
Buck's Stoves and Ranges.
Guaranteed for Fifteen Years.
If you want your kitchen affairs to run smoothly,
buy one of these stoves that are all merit and have not
a single flaw or defect. It's worth coming miles to buy
a Buck s stove. Prices range all the way from $7.50 to
$45.00.
Kitchen Utencils.
Our claims for these are but the statements of its
users. We handle the best quality and we can supply
you with a complete line of Ground and Granite Enamel
ware—always at lower prices than elsewhere.
Queensware, Glassware, Tinware.
Our stock of these goods is so varied that we omit
quotations, but believe us, we have the lowest prices.
These are a few of the strongest lines in our store.
W e carry immense assortment of Queensware in any
kind of table dishes, plates, cups and saucers in both
plain and decorated ware.
Lnder the head of Glassware we can supplv your
wants in most anything in only the best ware.
\ ariety of our Tinware stock is so comprehensive
that we positively never miss a sale on any article per-
taining to this line.
Lamps.
Elegant assortment in glass and decorated
kind from 15c to $1.50.
ssijsg -
$18.00
Trading
Hade Easy.
Your complete
Fall bill can
be made in our I
store which i-;
a consideration
aside from
the prices.
Make out y our bill, bring it to us and we will
fill it with satisfactory goods and low prices.
W. JiMpiga #;
Your
Fall Trading
Can be
done most
satisfactory
at
Kangerga's.
They sell
everything
(iEM FROM BRYAN.
j Nacogdoches Sentinel.
In a speech at Linton, Ind., a
3 few days ago, [Bryan used these
S matchless and unanswerable words:
"My friends, I want you to con-
y sider imperialism. It is the ex-
^ cuse that is being given for a large
standing army. They want the
splendors of an empire. Republi-
cans, you want the splendor of an
empire; we want the happiness of
a self-governing and contented
people. You want the American
trumpet to be heard around the
world; we want our sun of liberty
to shine so it will be seen around
the world. You want this nation
to go out as a bully and braggart;
you want this nation to jump on
to inferior people as you call them;
|; you want this nation to go out and
purchase trade with human blood.
You say it will pay. How much
is a man worth, measured by trade?
Two thousand dead bodies have
floated back across the Pacific.
How much is one of your sons—I
ask you fathers and mothers—how
much is one of your sons worth,
£ : measured by trade? I want to ex-
% i pand our trade by every peaceful
|' means, but I would not put one
American boy on the auction block
% 1 and sell him for all the trade of the
Orient if I had to buy it with his
blood. If you think you can iust-
^jly purchase trade with human
blood, do not go in the back room
" of a bank and talk about it, but
go and buy it with your own blood
and tlien let us know what the
blood is worth. Do not place a
price upon the blood of other peo-
ple."
Job Could'ntHave Stood It
If he'dhad Itching Piles. They're
terribly annoying; but Bucklen's
Arnica Salve will cure the worst
' case of Piles on earth. It has cur-
ed thousands. For Injuries, Pains
! or Bodily Eruptions it's the best
salve in the world. Price 25c, a
box. Cure guaranteed. Sold by,
p!J. I,. Cameron druggist. im.
Sewing Hachines.
All our sewing machines are guaranteed for 10
years and are sold this way: "Satisfaction or your
money back." Is there any risk in this?
"Peerless" machine has given satisfaction wherever
used.
"The Defiance" sewing machine is the perfection of
simplicity, durability, speed, strength, and ease of opera-
tion, a standard of excellence far in advance of any ma-
chine now on the market.
A perfect Ball-Bearing Machine furnished
complete with accessories
and set of steel attach-
ments, with 5 drawers, at
Sam Jones' Sayings.
A man with a fortune and a
; drunken son ain't happy.
1 A man with a loving wife and
ten good children has happiness
| and wealth, too. But a man with
S: ' a society wife and a pug dog—
>5 well, he ain't got neither.
Women should always hold out
to us a promise of purity. They
can't do that by posing lor cigar-
ette pictures and wearing a dress
with a good deal of it cut off the
top tor the ball room, or off at the
bottom for a bicycle.
If a woman came to me in that
rig to talk religion I'd give her
my coat to put on and talk to her
about free silver; about everything
but religion.
It God wanted her to appear
that way He'd provided her with
feathers.
Other Housekeepers.
We have other useful goods necessary about your
house keeping at one-third and sometimes at one-half
less than other stores dare to sell them.
Coffee mills, 20c; Parker coffee mills, 30c; round
wood bread tray, 20c; smoothing irons, 25; washboards,
10c; table knives and forks, 50c; wash pots, $1.20; gal-
vanized tubs, 50c; water buckets. 15c; flour sieves 10c.
Shot Guns, Loaded Shells
and all Kinds of Cartridges
will be found in our house furnishing department
Every gun is guaranteed and in order to introduce them
exceptionally low prices will be quoted.
I like p fast horse, but, O, Lord!
give me a slow woman.
Don't give me theology and
botany. I despise theology. I
want leligion and flowers.
I value more the way a man
does than the way he believes.
I don't doubt that some preach-
ers are so good that they are good
for nothing; and I don't doubt
that the Lord has called some
preachers just to keep them out of
devilment.
A first-class preacher should be
a mixture between a billy goat
and a mule. He could butt with
one end and kick with the other.
A remarkable engineering feat
| is soon to be attempted in Boston
! —the moving of a six-story brick
: and stone hotel building from one
' site to another without taking it
; | apart. The ground upon which
! the building now stands is of a
■ swampy character, and 780 piles
will have to be driyen around the
! foundation of the structure to sup-
j port the r,ooo jacks upon which it
! will be raised from its foundation
11 prior to its removal. It will be
11 transported to its location forty
[! feet away on steel rollers.—Terrell
| Times-Star.
Bryan Produces Silence.
While Mr. Bryan was speaking
at Marion, Indiana some one in
the audience asked in regard to the
North Carolina law. Mr. Bryan
said:
"My friend, I am glad you ask-
ed me that. I am prepared for
you. Now I am going to assume
that the republican who asked the
question is an honest man. I am
going to ask him about the con-
stitution of the republican State of
Oregon. I will read a provision
of that constitution. It says: Sec-
tion 35. No free negro or mulatto
not residing in this State at the
time of the adoption of this con-
stitution shall come, reside or be
within this State, hold any real
estate or make any contract or
maintain any such therein, and
the legislative assembly shall pro-
vide by penal laws for the removal
by public officers of all such ne-
groes and mulattoes and for their
effectual exclusion from the State
and for the punishment of persons
who shall bring them into the
State, or employ or harbor them.'
"That amendment was adopted
before the civil war. It makes it
unlawful for a free negro to go into
the State and it authorizes the
officers to put him out. But you
say that it is old. Let me remind
you that last June an effort was
made to repeal that portion of the
constitution and the effort to re-
peal was defeated, although the
State went 10,000 republican. But
my friend may not have time to go
to Oregon. If not, I want to tell
him to go to the city of Washing-
ton. That is nearer. Go to Wash-
ington and find out what provision
the republican administration has
made for the voters of Porto Rico.
"Now you are responsible.
Why don't you correct that? If
you have not the time to go to
Washington, let me remind you
that your administration has made
the Sulu treaty, and the Sulu
treaty provides that our flag shall
float over the sultan's palace and
that we shall pay the sultan so
much to keep it floating there.
That flag floats today over Sulu
slaves and the treaty recognizes
slavery as an existing institution
and instead of providing that the
slaves shall be iree, the Sulu treaty
provides in article 10 that he shali
have the right to purchase his
freedom whenever he can make
enough working for nothing a day
to buy himself at the market price.
There was never a more shameful
piece of hypocrisy than that under
which the republicans hide when
they talk about Southern amend-
ments. It was a republican con-
gress that took the right to vote
away from these in the District of
Columbia and for thirty years the
negro has been electing republican
presidents and getting janitorships
for return and you never hear a
modern republican say anything
for him except during a campaign
when his vote is needed."
The White Death ot Rocky Mountain
Region.
Of the natural phenomena pecu-
liar to the Rocky mountain region
none is more strange or terrible
than the mysterious storm known
to the Indians as "the white
death." Scientific men have nev-
er yet had an opportunity of inves-
tigating it, because it comes at iLc
most unexpected time and may
keep away from a certain locality
for years. Well-read men who
have been through it say that it is
really a frozen fog. But where the
fog comes from is more than any
one can say. This phenomenon
occurs most frequently in the
northern part of Colorado, in Wy-
oming and occasionally in Mon-
tana.
About two years ago a pnrty
three women and two men were
crossing North Park in a wagon in
the month of February. The air
was bitterly cold, but dry as a bone
and motionless. The sun shone
with almost startling brilliancy.
As the five people drove along over
the crisp snow they did not ex-
perience the least cold, but really
felt most comfortable, and rather
enjoyed the trip. Mountain peaks
fifty miles away could be seen as
A rudt GRAPE CREAM Or TARTAR POWDIR
DR
CREM
n
ki-.i
■a
15
I ilghest Hone
Golu
Avoi.l Balling: Fowler-;
tlum. 1'lie*' :v!nri
;r-d\s Fair
cr Fair
c >;ituluiu£
' 1 I-oaltli
Since we come to think of it
0f brother Smith, its not necessary to
go as far as The Henderson-
Times to find men who seem to
think that a man who criticises
Joe Bailey is devoid of "honorable
manly instincts and intelligence"
No, not by any means, there are
men nearer home who seem to
think that it is an unpardonable
sin to criticise their "pet,"—Wood
County Democrat.
The Times has always drawn a
distinction between manly critis-
distinctly as the pine trees by the i cjsm and jjase <;iarider js diffi.
roadside. !
"Suddenly one of the women
put her hand up to her face and
remarked that something had stung
her. Then other members of the
party did the same thing, although
not a sign of an insect could be
seen. All marveled greatly at
this. A moment later they no-
ticed that the distant mountains
were disappearing behind a cloud
of mist. Mist in Colorado in Feb-
ruary! Surely there must be some
mistake.
But there was no mistake, be-
cause within ten minutes a gentle
wind began to blow and the air
became filled with particles of
something that scintillated like
diamond dust in the sunshine.
! cult, to properly criticise a person;
I the biggest fool in the community
can deal in abuse and slander.
The Times has no patience with
the person who will slander a man
and then vote for him as a host of
so-called democratic editors are
doing with reference to Attorney
General Smith, who, it Bailey is
corrupt, is himself ten times more
so. When this paper will go so
far as to charge a man with all
sorts of bad faith in office it will
not turn around before the ink
dries and vote for him.
Nature can only feed the flame
of liie with the iood eaten which is
•J
It will be hard to head off Smith
county now that we haye started
in the direction of better roads.
When the people see what can be
done with a few good teams in
charge of a man who has good
ideas of how to work a road, they
will insist on keeping up this work
until there is no further need of
heavy work on the roads.—Tyler
Courier.
If you would increase your hap-
piness and prolong your life, forget
your neighbors' faults. Forget all
the slander you ever heard. Forget
the temptations. Forget the fault-
finding and give a little thought to
the cause that provoked it. For-
get the peculiarities of your friends,
and only remember the good points
which make you fond of them.
Forget all personal quarrels or
histories you may have heard by
accident and which, if reapeated,
would seem a thousand times
worse than they are. Blot out as
tar as possible all the disagreeables
of life; they will grow larger when
you remember them; and the con-
stant thought of the acts of mean-
ness or, worse still, malace, will
only tend to make you familiar with
them Obliterate everything dis-
agreeable from yesterday; start out
with a clean sheet for today and
write upon it for sweet memory's
sake only those things which are
loyely and loveable.—Ex.
Still the people droye on until digested, herbine will reinvigo-
they came to a cabin where a man rate a weak stomach, and so im-
signalled to them to stop. With prove digestion as to insure the
his head tied up in a bundle of
mufflers, he rushed out and hand-
ed the driyer a piece of paper on
which was written: "Come into
the house quick, or the storm will
kill all of you. Don't talk outside
here."
Of course, no time was lost in
getting under cover and putting
the horses in the stables. But thev
were a little late, for in less than
natural bloom of health. Price
50 cts. Sold by J. E. Hightower,
Druggist. N im.
The Republicans want to force
upon vou a standing army of 100,-
000. If this Government is ad-
ministered according to Jefferson's
plan of equal rights for all and
special privileges for none, there
will be no need for such a standing
army. The only reason that can
an hour the whole party was sick ! be giyeu why the Republicans
FOR GOLF RASH
Heat Rash, inflammations, itching, irritations
and chafings, undue or offensive perspiration,
and many other sanative uses, nothing so
cooling, purifying, and refreshing as a bath
•with CrTiccHA Soap, followed in the severer
forms by gentle anointings with CrncrRA,
the great skin cure and purest of emollients.
Cniccn Soap is beyond all doubt the moit effective
akin purifying end beautifying soap. as well a* the purest
and sweetest for toUrt, bath, and nursery. So'.d through-
out the world. 1*uttk« Daro asd Chim. Cob?.,
Fropt., Beatoo. " He* to Mart BeiUttfki Stta," fret
with violent coughs and fever.
Before the next morning, one of the
women died with all the symptoms
of pneumonia. The others were
violently ill of it, but managed to
pull through after long sickness
"I seen you people driving along
the road long before you got to my
house, and I knowed you didn't
know what you were drivin'
through," said the man, as soon as
the surviving members of the
party were able to talk. "That
stuff ye seen in the air is small
pieces of ice froze so cold it goes
down into your lungs without
meltin. If any man stayed cut a
few hours without his head covered
up he would be sure to die. One
winter, about eight years ago, it
cleaned out a whole Indian tribe
across the Wyoming line. They
are more afraid of it than they are
rattlesnakes. That's the reason
they call it the 'white death.' "—
Ainslee's Mazazine.
want such an army is to enforce
tyrannical laws against the labor-
ing man. Republicans say that
we are trying to scare you with
the cry of imperialism in the Phil-
ippines. We have no title to the
Philippines. All we ever got from
Spain in return for the $20,000,-
000 was a license to hunt in the
Philippines. We know when we
acquired the islands that the Fili-
pinos expected independence. We
say that the Filipinos should be
treated as the Republicans have
promised to treat the Cubans.—W.
J. Bryan.
Hon. J. W. Bailey, being inter-
viewed on the political situation
says: "I feel confident that In-
diana will be in our column this
year. We have a good chance to
carry Illinois as the republicans
have, and it is my opinion that
Kentucky, Delaware, Maryland
and West Virginia will be demo-
cratic "—Terrell Times-Star.
it.
on
The Standard ot Judgment.
Do you think that our bad
deeds are weighed only against the
unattainable perfection of saints'
and martyrs' lives, and never at
all the splendid temptations that
are the royal garments of sin! God
is just, and justice weaves a fair
judgment. It is not an unchange- I sp
able standard. A learned Greek 1 fr
in Constantinople was telling me | in
the other day a story of one j
Procrustes, a terrible highway rob-;
ber. He had a bed which he of-1
fered to those he took captive on |
condition that they should exactly j
fit its length; and if a man was too j
long, the robber hewed off his feet; is p
by so much, but if he was too-
short he stretched him on a rack j
until he was tail enough. If God ;
were to judge me as he judges you. j
by a ruled length of virtue, aline
for all and without alliance for our j
moral height, God would not be j
God, but Procrustes, a robber of!
souls and a murderer cf them.
Queen Eleanor in "Via Crusis."
met si.
e iive
our Dioo
d, and on
W
thrive or starve, as
is rich or poor,
is nothing else to live
itrem
DOC!
tinu
is 11 it
sleep.
ment
Bat
to k
i> n
: ar
and
>h, we are being re-
one muscle and brain,
nd mind, with con-
v of rich blood.
1th.
ik, in low spirits,
rest
is not
rveci; our blood
is little nutri-
whe
ep
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it.
f
ccjj tnc
& i,t
wnole bod\
woman an.
o
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;h. When
Emulsion
It sets the
<£ain—man
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Milner, R. T. The Henderson Times. (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 25, 1900, newspaper, October 25, 1900; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth235367/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.