The Panola Watchman. (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 4, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 24, 1903 Page: 1 of 8
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ThrPanc laVUatchmuti.
CAKTHAOE. PANOLA COUNTY. TBXAS, WEDNESDAY MORNINQ, JUNE *4. 190.).
Ths beauty of ths ancient
Oreeke has passed into a proverb,
pal the fact that it poaeeeeed an
athiaal value ae welt, in theif
epee, ie frequently ignored. That
Ihap were a people and a race
distinguished for pereonal come*
Uneee wae not nterelp an incident*
al fact) but the natural and in*
hereal reeult of a systematic and
ittteliigant effort to develop the
hlghsat physical perfection. The
Oreeke loved beauty not simply
for beauty1! sake, but beoause
they considered it the external
evidence of the truest mental and
moral attainment.
They have bequeathed to us
the statue of a perfect physical
man—a statue unrivaled in all
the history of sculptural art. It
was meant that it should typify
human perfection, and to the
trained and enlightened eye of
enter, in spite of good influeneee
of heredity and environment,
Examination convinced the sur*
geone of abnormal conditions in
theskutt. An operation proved
the diagnoeie correct and retnov*
al of the preeeure upon the brain
wae actually followed bp moral
rrnuTnuiJii •
Another case recorded was of
a man hitherto upright and hon<
orable, who after a fall developed
many degenerate traits, ft* was
rescued and amended thro
the wiee administration
surgeon's knife.
While it is encouraging to
know of remedial possibilities
such as these, it is far better to
obviate the necessity for them.
The Greeks believed it possible
and practicable to do this, and
the men and women of that race
verified and illustrated the be*
lief. They lived much in the
open air | encouraged physical
development to a rational extent;
cultivated a love for music, poet*
ry, painting and sculpture; in*
oulcated temperance, cherfulness
and refinement. These influences
combined to produce the most
beautiful men and women the
world has ever seen, models of
perfection for all time.
8t. Paul admonishes us to
think of those things that are
true and lovely and of good re*
port. The great Apostle of the
Oentiles realized the value of such
One el the Orators
Fancy Groceries\ ZlxSF**
^ Pnpfc WnHh. Tntaa tunn
COFFEES AMD TEAS
“Modev I* the root of alt evil,*’ *r’re often
told. Ye*, who of u* ha* hot wtnhed at
tltdi'i that Sre had a ItoS tynrd« Ail Uu> amUV
*ortnnn< than
unit*** It la
roue forwi at the mwrut pr>**lhlr
price*, hut don't forget that thi
Ihe food you eat i* of more |mti
the price »»f It. Itememlter tlmi
Fresh and Pure
It t* dear ut any price, and that I* entruvn-
tftttice tuhiiy ant hut the beat of anything.
All of the good thing* I nell to eat art* noli!
under a poaltice guarantee to lie ||m> heat, or
I liujr the good* hack at the *uuie price they
coat you. Hellltrg a* much a* I do, and buy-
ing a* often a* f do, my good* cannot fie
otherwine. If you don't believe all ♦' I*. visit
my *tore during the coming seek, or aend
me a 'phone order, (ind aee if you are not
latter pleuaed than you have ever* la-eh Ite-
fore. \Vl*e women have learned that there
la only a little money Itetrreeu them and the
gntid thing* t have to offer. : • i i—r~r
W. A. JON E1S,
to MNUk At LINCOLN
Hprvial to the New*.
Pori Worth, Texes, June It —
Col. H> M. Wynne of this city is
to be pne of three speakers el Ihe
Puurth of duly nelebretion et Ihe
. Wall Street end geessveH,
Mr, Welter Wellman telle ut
in the Chicego Record-Herald
found in the Houston Post of vm-
terdey, thet "Wall street in ‘96
regerded Mr, Bryan es an ex*
tremist, end gave *4,000,000 to
defeat him." He wee for the
hohietf Col, William Jrnnlttgs ’ ^ **»"*>» »»»»•
Bryan in Lincoln, Nebraska, The
celebration ie to be at Pairview,
the name given to Cot. Bryan's
home, and is to be what Cot,
Bryan regards as a proper ob*
servance of the memorial inde-
pendence Day. The three speak*
ers will be Tom L. Johnson of
Cleveland, Ohio, Dr. Howard 8.
Taylor, City Attorney of Chica*
go, and Coi. Wynne.
Col. Wynne said today that
the subject of his address would
be "Relation of the Common
People to the Republican Porm
of Government.'*
bines, stock gamblers and other
enemies of the people, so they
beethtat Mr, Wellman claims
to have found thet Wall street
dislikes Roosevelt because ha
dares to oppose them end ee*
pouse seemingly ihe people's
ceuee. They consider hint an
extremist end heve already told
the president thet they will not
contribute to his oetnpaign but to
defeat him they will give to the
democrats if they will run the
right man. There is the "nigger
in the wood pile." Already they
are talking an eastern men for
democratic nominee. Bo eager
General Gordon, in a speech Mr,, they to succeed they ere wll*
at New Orleans, told the veter* ^ U|,g to ne|| their party lender*
ans thet "You boys must not tile; »Hlpi« soul and all for that cam*
until you have built that monu*|flg|gM boodle. Roosevelt snaps
ment to Southern women. Build j hi* finger them and telle them
it white and pure, and let it tower «uch practices are corrupt and
to show what the men of the ought to be out of date. Roose*
South think of the women,"— velt, a republican, a son of the
Bryan Ragle. east, that eats with the negro
Amen and amen! What the and favors racial equality, call*
o 1*4 mas* 4 4
k a s v v o i: o v k if i k h a n m r <» i, n s t <> it \ n k —
men of the South think of the jiflg Wall street to "taw" while
women of the Mouth beggars elo* Ihe democratic leaders are blUftg
quence. The women of the Con- (Hke suckers at its bait! With ell
the student of structural human* j morai and mental tfalnlng, To •'difkttlf avi, tHte j H goods which now sell for »11l'”**!' °! !lV“U,l,tVh,S, V!
ity its meaning is absolutely clear have beautiful thoughts develops: --- would sell for no cents. The W^ihiatauffered^nd, lf, / ^
and conclusive. Pof in this be*, a beautiful heart and mind, andj The American Society of I jjui* , farmer could then buy as much W * f . . *! * * . !uw,iM,r Li* *
tss&s&ztiSL sfessSfa;- rirrstrT!,: tar z
hlghMt .tithorillM of our own J pt-taston.—Houston Chronicle. fnllcl ««(«, demanding »r, in- >< .... ........ .... ,h" »• " » »"
day declared that physical per- crease in the price of wheat, ar-
. would get if he could force the
hrice * f wheat ui I' Si while Southerner who, to build vote f<»r fo
<«Uon incur., ilco intellectual | ??***?*" "hd ' «uln» lh.l thi minimum Mice of1 n«lnu ih. wwnl V lh™' *<*»«•.
and dhlcil pcrfcrlion. Th^r tell *** J««* ! wbcm .noul.J he ,1 » bu.h.l »nd ,,rico,Vr l,l, «oo<l,.
MUMlif Ih. Oreek god could J»*l wmcIIcfrom ihe cotton »nd lhe w„ ,„r „ „ltir.ly fell,In f„r Ihe T"
Mop down from hi, pmlccUl t„. burning them. Thi. I, crrlnlnly r,„, rurmcm. h, rolmt f.-r no .»r,ff ............
assaates.*: 5as^rg.»r; i
president.—Lufkin
a 'prior* spirited. Hf m-neO, Oregon ,a iMtf#
rs n:d do tliero < f I M*i inhatdtants Was' \tSus* -•
cloudburst la 4 week and
half the people destroyed,
of whatever nation ■ t. *.............gsg
There Is a physical scale, care- ^f cotton. In Houston county, pto<lmtn by ^/operation of the together long enough to arbhA^ h'’^' Mtul Vom any one think for a mo-
^ ^ - -.......
p nimseu a man incapamc 01 ----- -----"------^ city a* national f^-ad<|uarters, to of what (hey have to buy. It is
Of low or unworthy action.; element in the production maintain higher/ prices for farm not at all feasible for them to get
i if a physical scale, care* fotton. In Houston county, products by cooperation of the together Ion* enough to -run J,s
that portrays the hlgheet and
haul development of our
moral faculties.
TC
The old Ctasek* wers
el m any tMngefhat
have
leeeon the Apollo feacheu
of
Certain ine-
ef the
dlti tovnrtnhly prodoce eertain
hi the individual.
ing up their cotton and planting
In June corn
reverence af the/- story:>1^
crease
The bulletin the bachbone of protection in this j
-Houston Chronicle.
4 because of the low
pplyof wheat and the
of production, owing to
it moet other com-
eoontry, although, as a leading
republican—the fate Hen Hatter*
worth—said in IAMB "The man-
ufacturers and the trusts get the
Ptsmtttsrt Hooenvnur v
the University of Virginia o
16th, ftuned by Jefferson.
occasion being ^l«n«i Da y ,}modfliee, f| at Chicago ie only protection and the profits of the
Thiele essentially e Southern in* I unequitable price for wheat. tariff; the farmer gets the hushs
•Utution and if by any chance the / ft may be heresy, but f would *n(i thf> humbug." How much
spirit of ite illustrious founder / like to suggest to the fruity Mo- hmger will the farmer continue to
and the great prindptee ho advo* ciety that there ie another and. }n,7 republican gold bricks?
ented made any fanprenaion upon easier and a more c^rtmln wayj CNst.es A. P.rrwsami.
the mind of the proWdent it will for the farmers to accomplish the ^ :
be good for him and the eodntrpc result aimed at, and it does not J ™ military seems fo tie
That fellow In New Orleans
who applied for an injunction QH*
against a dog is running the
thing in the ground. The corre*
sopndent to the New York Sun
gives this account of it:
. "Joseph H. Marks, a promt*
I nent citizen, has applied for an
injunction to restrain a dog own*
1 od by George D. Luce, his next*
w
Stauts
Your Photographer
|ff% fun a* sumM I
4SSft
Kewrtnr lMMW wk«c Mrptimni ** ***' *lm"n ew‘! rnwmd*tim^hTn- ’h<mB** *• **«*•• Mark, ml-
*° *» l» lh» Uni am h«d. « khj -«W ymm „ ^
mcMmtkr^&cpintle. Lw*itla aLrk?Z.*■** .<•? *»•**
(w* b4. #]
la- An^fff t ^
too/many farmer* and they work in Mervia and HrwathNt Charcriog that his health and
. , ——-j.- fffotoo mam nsttsiM to form eeiay, Kottvsky, hts foeoaa*d[ comfort have already been dem-
Hooahvmd Aowa ynKHcaf sw- otrust, aod even if they were not the actenrem of the civilized agwi. he ^ays her a iudgment
are not protected by the world upon those two small terri- for reasonable lamages and U/t
"“lea. as are the meoofar.t* tr*ie*. They have hdh achieved an rnjtmcteih corn man-ling the
The latter com get to- fame hot 4 a very unenviable defendant tr> abute^the nrnwar.ee."
a gather, form a treat andl force kind. . --
ieapw gout of a few od the smaff tne prfeeo aa Mgh aa the tariff ^ -- D is swkf that the persecuted
: iffy he mho Ms priHtraf oppo- waM at any fhne they choose ^drlahome fruit grower* jwwso1 House have their eyes
of a large stock of ease* tike farmers eon do no such **»»*»»—Mg to make a hig *h*p>* tamed iowgmgiy towards the
«Ntl of Liberia peacheo to Ln-, United Btatee and that plana are
in the or. foot to bring hpUbJUOti of
' or f'H hang the last one of
gacit/in ksaagoratfag thw invns* they
MgnHon of the peetodfeu soandaf. tariff
‘ going through the form of as SNtt
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Collins, Jasper & Carswell, O. P. The Panola Watchman. (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 4, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 24, 1903, newspaper, June 24, 1903; Carthage, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth901027/m1/1/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sammy Brown Library.