Palo Pinto County Star. (Palo Pinto, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, March 10, 1905 Page: 2 of 4
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'UROTTURB
My stock' l® rtow und up-to-daie. A big line of Carpets
tfhd Mattifig. I want the trade of Palo Pinto and vicinity ‘
for the year 1904. Will sell as cheap as any house in TexaB r
vf
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND KM HALM EK,
Rt(|EKAL WELLS, ’I'E&iitjf.
^oooo^oooooooooooooooooooo cxx>ooooooooooooooooooooooo
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Tht Palo Pinto County Star,
Entered at the postotnce in Palo Pintc
Toxns. an second data matter.
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PUBLISHED EVER Y' FRIDA-Y
J.C. SON. Editor and Proprietor.
Hoq. H. P. B’relsford, repre-
sentative from--.Last) and county,
has our-thanks for copies of the
I/egialaCTv’© record, *
• % * ■ i ■ •: -• • ** Ww ' « • i t
Is a newspaper man who gives
a half column of his valuable
Space twelve -months in each year
for an occasional short trip over
the road a free-passer?—Spring-
town Local.
a,
The authorities bf the Texas
experiment station have decided
to operate a sub-station at Chil-
bcothe, in the panhandle, to
make tests in growing grain and
forage plants. A. B. Connor, a
grad pate of the agricultural col-
*ege, will be in charge of the stib-
fitation.
Hon. John H. Reagan, the Old
Roman of Texas, died at his
home nehr Palestine, Anderson
county, last Monday morning at
5:.30, at the age of 87-yeass.
Judge Reagah’s death removes
thS sole survivor of Jefferson Da-
yis’ cabinet, and one of the great
leaders of the confederate cause.
Judge. Reagan7 fought for Texan
independence, was the'author 6f
♦tie interstate commerce law, and
ha® been for over sixty years a
public servant, and ha's been
throughout his long and usefal
Hfe a stalwart apostle of democ-
racy. ■ ■ ■ _
Brown, of the Glen Rose Her-
ald, is one of the editors who
think. As an evidenoe' of it he
always says something in his pa-
per. He also gives the local
news, and alwaos speaks out for
anything that is for the up-
building of Glen Rose. We
don't blame him for the latter—
Glen Rose appears to need build-
ing up. We were there several
and noticed several
. Mww...ww>.vd, but suppose
they have moved away or retired.
By investigating the advertising
colums of the Herald, we find
that the town now consists of the
Herald, two hotels, a national
hank and a 6-line drug store.—
Stephenville Empire.
By reference to the columns of
the of the Star, ’it would seem
that all there is in Palo Pinto is
the Star, the court house and
t\yo doctors. It is a mistaken
idea or downright stinginess of
the business men of a town not to
be represented in the columns of
their local paper. *
According to the Austin States-
man, a number of the members
of the legislator.® are agitating
the matter of an April 10 sine
lie adjournment for th£ regular
session. It i® figured out that
much of the work now confront-
ing the legislature Can be dis-
posed of by that time,-and the,
members consider that it is well
to dispose of iul pending legisla-
tion along general lines' by a sin®
die adjournment and then be re-
ienvtppd- in special session to
“msider the general ap-
years ago
nice | .businesses,
............'■■■ ■■ ii i— .. ......' ...........
matters as may need special at-
tention. It is pretty safe to say
that there will be fib gehdr£l ap-
probation bill passed at the
present regular session. 'While
there is no official statement from
the legislature tp that effect; the
prophecy iff based upon the fact
that there has been no general
appropriation bill sent into either
house, and from preSenf indica-
tions there is not likely to be any
sent very soon. Sir. Murray, the
house finance committe chair-
man, says that he dops not feel
disposed to sepd in any ap-
-propropriation bill until tfie leg-
islature l\as provided some means
of getting some money, so that
the .finance committee can figure
out approximately whfit the state
is going to get in revenues for
the comiqg twm years. He says
that it sounds all mighty nioe to
say pass the appropriation bill
and the. legislature will provide
the money later on, but experi-
ence haa taught him that it is
the finance committee that gets
cussed out in the glorious here-
after for acting upon Such adv.ice
and that sq fftt as he and his
committee is oanoernad, they are
determined to have something to
figure on before they consent to
settle down to making out a * bill
that will spend all the money that
the state can get in-.
A Graduate’s Story
———*• "• ■
[Original.! -
•Tath^r,” said Frank Notklns one
evening when the family were sitting
before a cheerful Are, “you promised
me when I became of age you Would
tell me that story of your Btudent life.
I’m twenty-one today.”
. Frank, i’ll keep my promise.
When I was In college I made the ac-
quaintance of a girl we will call Nan-
cy. You seq, your mother might be
jealous, and I wouldn’t like her to
know the girl’s real name. Nancy and
I kept getting spoonter and spoonter,
-vv.
And,,
atlon.
that lie . _
thatI wasi
years of
course In
er grade
posed
four;
haps If
ha* e got i
ing uli
be drbvfe us I
formances oi
“the time 1
waa In mid*
pen v Jest,
years. Our
ui> Nancy
my sleigh to
there, drive. 1
about the
our educat
of rendezve
r nuuvjr, “W (ire;
I spend three or
vlthout mak-
as?
are the most
The mosc
vein* trial
HOMAS A- EDISON, the in-
ventor, in mapping out the
problems of the futurri, gives
first place to the necessity of
fighting the bacteria which
give Us our -diseases. . Nest
to the actual bacteria Of dis-
ease, the moaqttltos and flies
dangerous enemies of
man..
The mosquito with its bite injects into our
iiaiaris, y<" * ‘ ‘
troubles. The fly, with spongy feet, collects
yellow fever, and other fatal
the invisible germs, of diseases, spreads
them over our food and poisons us with
typhoid, cholera and other plagues qf the
homan Ykee. ... ,
Dr. Pierce, the eminent physician of Buf-
falo, N. Y., says, " If each person will con-
sider his system as an army of men which
he.,controls yea general, and will.sei
proper provisioning and that it has
iy
metal, and will, sec to Its
. . ting and that it has plenty
of ammunition in the shape of good red
corpuscles to every square millimeter of
blood. The heat tonic for increasing the red
blood corpuscles and building up healthy
tissue is na'ji pubt Df. Pierce’s Golden Meek
ical Discovery. TftiS medicine has bepn on
the market for over a third of a'Century
arid numbers it* cures by the thousand.
.Many popular patent medicines or tonics
are made up largely of alcohol and will
shrink the corpuscles of the Blood and
make them weaker for resistance. What
is needed Is an. altera live extract, like Dr.
Piprce’s Ool|le» M.diqal Discovery, made
of roots and herbs, witfibht rhe pari of alco-
hol, that wilt assist the stolhricb-.ln assimi-
lating or taking froth the food'such ele-
thetits as am required for the blood, also an
alterative that will amift tne activity of the
liver and cause it to thrtfw off the poisons
in the blood. When we have accomplished
this we ftkve put the system in a fortified
condition so strong That it can repel the
germs of disease which'Wis find every-
where— in the street-can; the Shops, the
factories, the-,bed{ootns.,wherever many
people congregate, or where sunlight add
good air derpot penetrate. A
Accept no substitute for "Golden Medical ,
Discovery,*’ There is nothing* "Just as
good ” for diseases of the stomaefl. blood
and lungs.
Neglected constipation means headache,
tart-bunt, Sour stomkch foul taste in the
-j™
loge boy'
ore ine,
tn be
for Nancy,
ould
her
W.....
in time without mak-
rselves. As it
one of the
ird—an eli
for this absurdity
Just after one—
a we had
was for me to pick
road, take her ip
Junction, get spliced
ck and say nothing
till we had fin!
ncy was at the
. ,._T done up In fort an
#lth a pair of cheeks which -the frost
tinged with- the hue of red apples.
She Jumped Into the sleigh, I pulled
up the robe, and we started.
“Nancy told me that her father was
Suspicious of her, and she thought be
had been, watching her, ao I had bet-,
ter drive pretty fast. This I did so
fpr ris I cotfld, hilt the road ’hetween
out college town and the Junction Is
billy, and, the snow was deep rind un-
trodden with occasional bad drifts. Bo
dbr progress t was necessarily Mow.
Nancy kept looking back unearitty, and
when we reached the top of a rise
about a fhlle from the town Nancy,
upon glancing to the rear, gave my
arip « grip, exclaiming: _
“ ‘Oh. my goodness gracious!'
"Turning my bend, I saw a sleigh,
descending the next slope behind us
drawn by two horses, who were gallop-
ing through ffi4 snow, scattering It like
spray. Of course I knew we’were fol-
lowed, and, giving the horse a cut, we
started down our decline, scattering'
snow in the' game fashion. But I
knew that one horse was no matCh for-
two-horses with an equal Iqad, and It
Occurred to me,that our plan Would be
nipped unless I could hit ui
agent. _ |
" ‘Nancy,* I said, ‘I’m going to drop
you in a drift.*
•“What for y;gbe asked. .
“ ‘J^ksdo it' tfbeu your father Is on.
the dther Bide of the rise and c%n‘t see
ns.’
“ ‘But what will I do there7*
“‘Lie low till he has(passed, then
walk home. Hg Hasn’t srien who III in
this-sleigh; th« hack is .too high, rind
the robe belrtnd is abovC ohr heads.'
“ ‘AH right,' said Nancy. This looks
like a good placeJwe’re coming to.'
“I pulled up beside g drift more thrin
ftn feet deep’.that I should pot
show any tracks; took Nancy up ohd
tossed her feet ftjremost Into It. The
snow was light She went down three-
qugrters of her length And wriggled
down the rest of the way. .1 drove on
and when I got tbjthe' top of the next
hill looked back. In a few minutes the'
pursuing sleigh appeared, and I knew
I'had not been seen-dropping Nancy..
I kept up a good price, hoping to draw
her father on so far that he wouldn’t
rub against her on the way back. 1 led
him as far as the bridge, whenT slowed
np and let bim overtake meT When he'
spw no one In the sleigh be lookpd
somewhat mystified for a moment then
Mid 8AVag6l7<j^ ,
“ ‘You youngs rascal, what have yoh
got under that robe V
..........
apon a strat-
Have Just: t'ecefterf a ffill lifi'6 bf the finest
CLOTHING
• ♦
over shown in Minoral WcHs. Also
; ... ' • v
- a nice select'iun of
STETSON. HATS
' •• - ' . - ’
find they carry a full stoc.k of “Walk
Over’f and Edwin Clapp ^
. SHOES
' ' ■ t t o ^ • *• , » *, y
Don’t fail to call and see us when in Minoral Wells.
H. M. COLEMAN & CO.
I
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• ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦oeeewwwww® ♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦<
-Ml 'M<»®
00000000000000900000000000!
G. W. Hogan. T. E. Matthews.-
iiogan & Matthews,
UpBtalrs Ralnes-tAitidlng. Mlntirivl Well*, Texas.
Real Estite to Silt or Trade; Ba Sure and See Us
oooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Is Life Worth Living?
You students think
i •'•Nothing.’
“•Yes,-you haV^'
you’re a match for Satan in deviltry,
but you can’t fool me. Poll up the
robe.’ ,
“I drew up the rob® ®o that he could
see the bottom of t|ie sleigh. He was
thunderstruck,
ripologlze for hli
about without a
to towu. Ifs fo
town and the ju
dropped Nancy a j
knew she would!
•get back home.
“When I saw
that when her fa
nothing to her at
asked her where i
" *To Aunt Sart
^ “The 1 title Ilarl
Una
“LlarT’ exclal
dlgnantty. “Not i
Aunt Borah’s 00
Aunt Sarah WouM
intended, to tell he
“Why,* mother*” J
do you know at
The mother, wit
again over her wd
“She ought,to
ther, with a
Nancy.”
JThe daughter
her mother.
“But wbdfi'
askrid Frank.
“Ob, we .1
succeeded,’1
“You teem a
Eleanor:
“Of count
ther. “but I
now top old «
too disgruntled to
ke, he turned'
and drove back
flee Jtotween the
since I had
the town I
M time to
BMu---
‘ she told me
In he said
ride, but later
been.
answered."
’Eleanor Not-
the mother to-
» ' She stopped at
iy home so that
Inn what she
r.” - .
inor, “what
T’
‘ vexed smile, bent
.. y
(Hi
. AT-
i - -
"A? . .
■i ; •;
H
. •.
ihI*
i
That question ifl anstf’ered by the thousands of dollars paid to tl
Joctofs every, .year.. Then take the opportunity to live. I! you bav
that tired feeling, or Indigestion, Constipation, Rheumatism, or
Blood Disease, we will cure you with J)r.' Thlirmotlds Bit
Syrupit will cost you nothing.
, We Guarantee to Cure Catarrh
In ail it® horrible forma with jbr. Thurmonds Catarrh*
Cure• For twenty yeara we have success fully treated Catarrh, curl “
thouflane® and can oure you. Go to D, B. Wakren or B. P. Mad
Druggists, and talk to them about it, and if tfio/don^f jmlorse .it <
take it. Not only do they epdofpe jt; but put our money behind it, af
if it doesn’t do all we Claim, they wiH refiindjyour mone^r. Write .,,
our Dr. Thurmond and-your letter shall, have ffii pefsdnalattentioi^
All inquiries strictly sonfidential, For’sale by
IK B. Warren and B. P. fffudiIox«'Paio Pinto, Texan.
c -
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tiMl
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J. C. SON,
NOTARY PUBLIC,
Palo Pinto Comity
. -
All kinds of instruments of writing nu-
henticated and Depositions taken.
PALO PINTO. TEXAS.
OZMANLIS
ORIENTAL
SEXUAL
PILLS
Cmftthtu, Sptrmeterrhea,
HWSMMli, ri•IfDItOuit.
Lott of Htmoru *e. WIU
st.1BSrrw
QUICS BT7SINBSS TBITS
vTO NORTHERN POINTS
are beat made v
W-ffi
THROUGH SLEEPER TO
ST. LOUIS AND KANSAS CITY
' ~ : ' o^ Vhe* .
“METEOR,-:
* ^ . chipp.''
i.p. a.:
&
SPECIAL
CLUBBING OFFER.
A nytn who is tuHy alive tp his own in- >
teresUiWUL take his local paper because hh-
gets a doss- of.news and useful informaliOri
from it that he can get no wore else.
* jbtroNg MINDED,
Up-to-date men alto « apt a good general'>
newspuprit in order to fc^eptin eTqse touch
with the outside world. Such a paper is ;
the Dallas hkmi-wkekly nrws.
• A cpmbipntlon of the PaTo Plritn County, *
Blar rii.d the Dallas vaws is just what the'-
farmers in this section qeed la order te keep;
thoroughly potted upon loeril Dews, heme
enterprises, persoimt -items, State news, n*-‘-
tionsl affairs jtdcT foreign matter*: to short >
this coinbiosilpn fleers the
this i>oinbiost!p» fitn jB tl
fiftirfly Up to cthe tinws bn in'ormutiou'.
Subscribe now—only f l.Cb for
farmer, and bifo
sail ”
for both.
MINERAL WELLS, TEXAS.’
The Health
a lid Pleasure It esorfc*
of'Tex as."
RKACUEU VIA THE
Weatherford, Mine, el
Nortiiwe$.ar
.THE
mineral -we
; ROTO
rr
W
c r *1
Ecursion
all the
tear
r"Q‘|S
-'*ik
fiecoad 1
■ ' ■ ■
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Son, J. C. Palo Pinto County Star. (Palo Pinto, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, March 10, 1905, newspaper, March 10, 1905; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145842/m1/2/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Boyce Ditto Public Library.