The Panola Watchman. (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 27, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 7, 1917 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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“As a man aaweth so
shall, he also reap*’ to
which has been urged
* ‘He that fertilizeth heav-
ily shall reap bountifully.**
To insure a good crop of Com
in the Fall, use
in the Spring. Our com formulas
Look for the Red Bag printed on the outside.
It is your guarantee of goodness inside.
MERIDIAN FERTILIZER FACTORY
that with a little training and
encouragement he will see
the greater profits possible for
him through farming and
eventually will leave the city
and go hack to the land.
Overwork, worry, overeat-
ing end lock of exercise and
sleep are responsible, for much
kidney trouble. If your back
aches and Che kifoejn seem
weak, neat up and use Doan's
Kidney Pills.
D. F. Mills, farmer, Car-
thage, says: “I had trouble
with my kidneys, brought on
by heavy work on the farm.
My back ached much of the
time and peine shot through
my hips, whenever I attempted
to lift or bend over. The kid-
ney secretions were highly
colored, contained sediment
like brick dust and burned in
passage. I felt drowsy and
languid and had no aimbition.
Doan’s Kidney Pills, procured
from Hooker’s Drug Store,
gave me permanent benefit.”
50c, at all dealers. Foster*
Milburn Co., Mfgrs.. Buffalo.
N. Y.
ten. now deceased, and one wh«* you &»»«■ • summ* tuck n»r
son, John Ed Gamer, who sur-i !»«» to perform iu function*
rives. His second wife was],ou ni«- food
„ __ , yoa Mt fenaects in yoor stomach iu-
Martba Wroten Alter g|ed u 4^^ Thi# utlUmM tbe
her death in 1884 he married stomach and cause* aaue*. vomiting
Mrs. Cornelia Spradley. Af- *«<*■ a terrible headache. Take Chan-
ter about six yean he was left,* TaWeu They win tose «e
a widower for the third time; yo“r , "**
and on July 27, 1890, he WOS They caly cost a quarter.
lary of the
twice the
regardless of the fact that the
teacher spent more time and
money in the preparation for
their life work. More evidence
on this subject can be had by
writing the Tyler Commercial
College at Tyler. Texas, for
their large illustrated cata-
logue giving full particulan of
America’s largest commepcial
training school, wttfr more
than two thousand enrollments
annually and reading what
teachers say who have attend-
ed this institution, of the ad-
vantages it offers eo those en-
tering the business world
where they can greatly in-
crease their earning capacity,
enabling them to own homes
of their own and
to think
We are inclined
that our prohibition? element
in the legislature who prom-
ised the people so much when
asking for the distinguished
•honors of representatives in
the halls of legislation, and
afterwards “lying down on
their jobs” when they had a
chance to make good, have
made most beautiful speci-
mens of asses of themselves,
lacking the ears. However,
“what fools Some mortals be.”
DO TRIFLES ANNOY?
What a b leased thing it Is
that we can forget! Today’s
troubles look large,‘ but a week
lienee we will have forgotten
nnd buried them out of sight.
Bays one writer, 'If you would
keep a book and daily put
down the things that worry
you, and see what.becomes of
them, it would benefit you.
You allow a thing to annoy you
just as you allow a fly to settle
on you and annoy you; and
vrou lose your temper and you
justify yourself by being
thrown off your balance by
causes which yo\i do not trace
out. But if you could see what
it was that threw you off your
balance before breakfast, and
put it down in that little book,
and follow it up and follow it
•out and ascertain what be-
comes of it, you would see
what a fool you were in the
matter.” The art of forgetting
OINTMENT (alin to core tLfCiM ol Itching,
Win 1. Bk*« ‘line tn.tlin* Hits ln6(oHdftft,
Tlr zr. . > r* r .and Rext. SOc.
enjoy the
comforts that should rightly be
theirs.
attended more associations,
than aay other Baptist of his
time. The first time the writer
ever saw or heard him preach
was at kfelrose when on a cer-
tain Sunday long years ago he
preached the funeral of Mrs.
Emma Seale, who was before
her marriage to Elwood Seals.
Miss Emma Price. In the af-
ternoon he went to the Cross
Roads and preached and then
went to Mount Enterprise. I
still remember that he was
driving two small ponies to a
light buggy. %
And now he is gone. No
progress and outcome of a few1 mdre shall we see his kindly
of our troubles, it would make I fj
us so ashamed of the fuss we | »\
make over them, that we n
shod Id be glad to drop such tl
things and bury them at once
in eternal forgetfulness. Life
ja too short to be worn out in Ij
petty worries, frettings, hat-
reds and vexations.
John Thomas Garner was
born in Shelby county, Texas,
August 24, 1846. During the
following winter, when he was
a 6-months-old infant, his fa-
ther and family removed to
Panola county. They arrived
at Beckville at the beginning
of a severe snow storm and
found hoapitable shelter in the
home of James Forsyth, father
of £apt. J. P. Forsyth, and re-
mained several days until the
weather improved. Then the
Garner family located on a
pre-emption on Irons bayou
and there young Tom spent
his boyhood.
When the war began in 1861
he enlisted first in Capt. Dan
Dixon’s company, Col. Water-
hose’s regiment but after about
BACK TO THE LAND.
For father—a coay armchair, his favorite
paper and A RESTFUL LIGHT.
For mother—the easiest chair, her sewing
basket and AN EASY LIGHT.
For the children—at-home-lessons or books,
A CLEAR LIGHT easy on youthful eyes.
These are the comforts you get when you
burn
FAMILYLITE
It is an illuminating oil made specially for
home use. It burns with a soft, brilliant
glow—and bums evenly down to the last
The Chicago City Gardens
Association has found a prac-
tical help for the “back-to-the
laad” movement through the
cultivation of vacant spaces
within the city* limits by the
poor and unemployed. Each
year the association apportions
400 eight-acre farms to as
many families who stand in
need of moral or financial as-
sistance. A large number of!
these amateur farmers he-1
come attached to the work, |
learn the financial return to be;
obtained from right methods,,
get some idea of scientific ng-,
riculture. and each year a
large number of “graduates”
leave the “baby farms” to en-
gage in the regular work of
on a larger
Familylite is a clean oil, it gives off no smell
or smoke. It requires less trimming of the
wick—and less refilling of the lamp
Try Familylite. It is one of the numerous
Texaco Products made for home urn. Have
THC ONBUMONiA SEASON.
a month was discharged on ae
IBRLAIN’S COUCH REMEDY
FAVORITE FOR COLO*
truck farming |
scale. The work in Chicago is
under the supervision ef Laura
Dainty Pelham, president of ,
the association. She is «r orbing ,
upon the principle thaC the '
raw Italian o* Slav immigrant
count of his youth. Nf xt he en-
listed in the Texas mikita as a
Substitute for Ed Lewis and
served a term of one
year.
Shortly after the battle' of
Mfcnpfleld, La., he enlisted for
the third time a* * Brittle**
the Co. C.. 28th Texas fofhatry
which formed^ a unit of Oafl-
MERIDIAN
^T'LJ7£*r
S**EVEP0*r
MERIDIAN
light;
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Park, R. M. The Panola Watchman. (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 27, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 7, 1917, newspaper, March 7, 1917; Carthage, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1072369/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sammy Brown Library.