Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, September 9, 1904 Page: 2 of 8
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A'
RUSSIANS ON Tl
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BUILDING FOOD
WABASH LINE
W. N. u. Dallas—no.
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To Bring the Babies Around.
When a little human machine
ations in Indian
as a council of
the two tribes, which resulted in a
iaranteeing mutual protec-
brotherly love.
Indian Hold Big Smoker,
Guthrie, Ok.: Following a cus-
W. J. Bryan will make Speeches
in Illinois, Wisconsin and Indiana.
A simple little dimple in a woman’s
cheek can produce an attack of ver-
tigo in a big, husky man.
Most of man’s good resolutions are
made the following morning.
It must indeed be a somber occa-
sion that would induce some men to
stand with bare heads.
Cheer instead of complaint is ths
mark of the saint.
The bachelor, of course, has given
marriage some thought, but* as a rule,
he hasn’t got any knobs on his head
from deep thinking.
The Anchor Brand of Cour is made
out of the best of Texas soft wheat—
the best wheat for making fine flour.
We ask but one trial. At youg grocers.
What Our Eyes Do Not See.
Suppose our eyes were attuned to
the vibrations revealed to us by the
bolometer. Instead of seeing the stars
that we now see we should perceive
those whose light has long been extin-
guished, whose existence the methods
of modern physics have enabled us to
prove. The sun would appear surround-
ed by its corona, changing in form and
position every instant, and we should
no longer be obliged to wait for total
eclipses to study this phenomenon.
Currents of hot air would become visi-
ble like snow squalls, and the science
of heat would have no more secrets.
I
‘4
I
treaty gui
tion and
11:03 A. I.
6:49 P. M.
7:03 P. ■»
Sara
.</ •
Leaves St. Louis Union Station - - 11 :OO A. ■..
Loaves World’s Fair Station - • - 11:14 A. I.
Arrives Chicago..... - 7:00 P. I.
Ik.; • ■
"■tel.
train.
sturdy nerves
healthy body.
Look in each pkg. for the famous
Jtttle book, “The Road to WeUvilM**
ter when it sets in, and lack of oU
would be a situation not to be thought
of with anything like composure. Was
risks on shipments there in Hamburg
and London are 20 guineas per cent
and the underwriters’* still not thine
ing them high enough. What llttlfl
business is being done in war risks
to Japanese ports shows no advance In
rates, the situation in that country as
to provisioning being comparatively
favorable—In fact, about as good as it
is on an average.
most of our time looking for the placet
A fool is more foolish to-day than
he was yesterday.
tom of twenty-six years, the Osage pcsrance of the boll weevil in large
and Delaware Indians held their ’ “ * 1
annual smoke near Pawhuska last
week. In 1878, when the Osages
and Delawares weie transferred to
their present re*
Territory, there
.
The beauty about the life of a bach-
elor is that he seldom requires a
charge d’affaires, an ambassador or a
minister plenipotentiary to represent
him in diplomatic circles.
Ton can tell the time of day by the
sun, and you can tell the time of
night, also by the son.
“BANNER BLUE LIMITED”
BETWIEN
ST. LOUIS and CHICAGO
THE FINEST DAY TRAIN IN THE WORLD.
I
Sheppard Will Speak in the North.
Texarkana: Congressman Morris
Sheppard has received a request
from National Democratic head-
quarters to make speeches in the
North during the campaign, and
advising him that he may name the
States in .which he prefers to ope-
rate. He will accept the invitation
It’s an 111 wind that escapes from
the tire.
FREE
wwm•Msrss.ee. Nowveeb touay
•4. ongaad .and to ua ua on a portal aaito
---- --------------
tan «w«r
Hung and Riddled with Bullets.
Little Bock: A special to the Ga-
zette from Crossett states that the
negro who attempted to assault two
' “ 1 was
taken from the jail Sunday and
lynched about three miles from
Crossett. After stringing him to a
tree the mob riddled his body with
bullets. His assault upon the girls
took place on the Bonham planta-
tion, thirty-five miles from Cros-
sett. No details of the affair were
obtainable.
numbers in the cotton, together
with three other varieties of bugs.
Since the heavy rains, which broke
the long dronth here, a surprising
number of pests have made their
appearance in the cotton. One bug
especially, which is entirely new in
this section, feeds on the stem and
yonng bolls.
bsusss cemblned and
hnmediat. shlpmemt C .
you goods much quicker than ■
yonr order to us. no matter who
goods la Juot a few days. agnail
It tefcostoget geode frra ether I
Roods you order from “**
OfflFREE BIG He. 114 GRTALOGU
im7eiTu*F%Eis.'ii«Mfiu38E
end the Mg book wtll go to you by return rail postpaid, kwi allcwr acwctoea,car»ww s—say mitototoMNtoNto*
taste Bfliflf >RtoBtoflw,aWwNleetojeufreeby esters assll, pestpeM. Rsa’t bay aaytMsg aaywbsra until yew gstsurnte
Be. 114 Cstalsns. EWIjear a JKbii i aattabay aoyflMa. at bra ar stoowto—uetil ttay wrtte Parra Ea, 114 totabfi.
•017 BUY A CATALOGUE.
Ornes as much to yew as adl other general merchandise catalogues printed. Write for It today. De ft steer. NfOTi
pend lor tola FREE Nig We. 114 CetulogMS. hand ouroM catalogue (if jrouhato aae)Te Be—e Friend a—Ita year
Leaves Chicage......
Arrives Werif s Feir Sfatiea
Arrives St. Leuis Union Station
M tab ffS OLDSMOBILE
hw ItMinl mUrtto f.ntown lUto tlw M*»-
tarlt/ aftaliMd to tbla praailrahla and rollakto molar
■y-MT UM — -i.TrfFwi—-■ <rf UM wort. Rrloa
■BiaSKNkv UMW1 Agro* kMcynuc co.
tor Math Taaaa I«4. Tar.. ttollaa. IBaaa.
BEGGS’ BLOOD PURIFIES
CURES catarrh st the rtnmsrh
MJ
erl of the New York Athletic Club.
iHs timewas 27:18 1-5. He won
the race by seventy-five yards.
New Cotton Pesto.
McGregor: Fanners here are very
much excited over the sudden ap-
rel.
end i
ef tv-----_---------------, .
assembled the nobles on Sunday, May 1
14, at Holyrood, in the lodging of Sir
James Malt land of Thlrlstane, he
drank to them and caused them all to
shake hand.. On the following day,
after Banqueting them in Holyrood, he
caused the earls of Angus, Montrose,
Mar and Glencairn, also the master of
Glam mis and many others—all deadly
enemies to one another—to march
hand in hand two abreast from the
abbey to Holyrood along the Canon-
gate and High street of Edinburgh to
the town cross, where the provoet and
balllee had a table spread with wines
and sweetmeats. Here the company
once more drank to their eternal ami-
ty and separated. But a few weeks
later they were lying In wait, as of
old, to kill one another.
Labor Agents Driven Away.
Calvert: Three white men from
the black land country have
been inducing negroes to leave
were assaulted and beaten. "Tann-
ers here employ negroes by the
year and advance them supplies,
hence their objection to the ne-
groes being induced to leave dur-
ing the time when their services are
most valuable. Several hundred
have been taken out of the country
and farm labor is growing scarce.
................................ .
PACKERS AND BUTCHERS. . "-conciiist
Gentls but Great.
For Inactive Liver, Biliousness and
general depression of the system, I
And Simmons* Liver Purlfler (tin
boxes) acts like a chasm. You are
well almost before you realize yon
have been doctoring, so gentle yet
effective is its action.”
Felix Zeigler,
Mountain View, O. T.
Tin boxes only; 25c.
There’s luck in odd numbers. Three
of a kind ^jgat two pair of twins.
'Bone-Cjabin Quarry.
In central Wyoming, at the head ol
a “draw,” or small valley, not far
from the Medicine Bow River, lies the
ruin of a small and unique building,
which marks, the site of the greatesr
"find” of extinct animals made in a
single locality in any part of the
world. The fortunate 'fossil hunter who
■tumbled on this site was Mr. Walter
Granger, ef the American Museum ex-
pedition of 1897.
In the spring of 1898, as I approach-
ed the hillock on which the ruin
•tends, I observed, among the beauti
ful flowers, the blooming cacti and the
dwarf bushes of the desert, what were
apparently numbers of dark-brown
boulders. On closer examination. I*
proved that there is really not a sin-
gle rock, hardly even a pebble, on thia
hillock; all these apparent boulders
are ponderous fossils which have slow-
ly accumulated or washed out on the
surface from a great dinosaur bed be-
.neatlj. A Mexican sheep herder had
collected some of these petrified bones
for the foundations of his cabin, the
first ever built of sueb strange mate
rials. The excavation of a promisin';
outcrop was almost immediately re-
warded by finding a thigh bone nearly
■lx feet in length which sloped down-
ward Into the earth, running into the
lower leg and finally into the foot,
with all the respective parts lying in
the natural position as in life. This
proved to be the previously unknown
hind limb of the great dinosaur Diplo-
docus. In this manner the "Bone-
Cabin Quarry” was discovered and
christened.—Henry Fairfield Osborne.
In September Cgntury.
Wben the king of Benin, Africa, fled
from his palace on the approach of
the British troops some months ago
he left behind him the list rum, or
sacred rattle, used in religious wor-
ship when human sacrifices were of-
fered. In it is a receptacle for the
blood of human victims. It is of very
ancient design and owes its origin
possibly to Portuguese influences.
"The reverse view of the sistrum
shows an image of the crocodile
deity, one of the many to whom hu-
man sacrifices were made. The strange
-object is now in a museum.
New Swimming Record.
St. Louis: The swimming events
of the world’s Olympic games were
held Monday in the pool of the
United States life-saving corps,
which was surrounded by an im-
mense crowd. In the first event, ’
the one-mile championship, Rancsh
of Germany beat the world’s record
Sort in Sight
Chicago, Sept 6.—As the result
of a conference just held between
representatives of the unions In-
volved in the packing house strike
and of the owners of the plants, the
end of the long labor struggle is set
for the middle of this week.
An understanding was arrived at
by which the men will meet today
or tomorrow and vote on the ques-
tion of calling off the strike. Ac-
cording to the plans made they will
be instructed to cast their ballots
in the affirmative. These plans
were made with secrecy and care.
They originated a week ago in Chi-
cago with certain of the packers
and of the conservative labor lead-
ers.' Fearing the execution of the
scheme would fail if attempted in
Chicago, it was determined to make
the first move in New York.
The ending of the strike in the
Eastern city by the vote'of the men
on Saturday was the first step. The
settlement there made is the same
which is tomorrow promised for
The following are the chief
points of te arrangement:
The unions to call off the strike.
The packers to re-employ as
many of the strikers as they can
give work to and then give the pref-
erence to the former employes in
the future; as many of the new
workers as wish to remain are to be
retained.
Wages of the skilled men to re-
main at the rate paid before the
strike. • ■ -
The packers, who have often de-
clared they would .not meet the la-
bor men, will undoubtedly deny to-
day that a conference has been
held. But the fact remains that
duly authorized representatives of
the owners of packing plants did
meet the labor men.
What doubt existed as to the po-
sition of the switchmen in the
strike has been dispelled by Grand
Master Frank Hawley of the organ-
ization. Hawley, at a meeting of
the union, said the men would re-
main at work.
The first serious break in the
stock yards strike in Chicago came
last night, when fifty striking live
stock handlers were reinstated and
at once resumed their former du-
ties.
ir* Best Marksmen Come From,
haps the best marksmen in the
sr army are the men from the
■tains of Kentucky and Tenr.es
An Infantry captain told of a rn«
nit from Kentucky, a gawky mour.
-er, so awkard that It seemed ini
ible to "lick” him into a soldier
ih after my company was sent ou<
for target practice on the ranges,”
■aid the captain, “my Kentuckian berv
out every man in my company, some
of them veterans wearing the disttn
guished marksman's medals, tn a
common canter. He was as cracker
Jack ■ rifle shot as I ever saw in the
army, and I’d be willing to bet that
there’s not a shootist in that team
that lately won the Palma trophy in
Bngland that could outshoot him. The
gawky Kentucky boy's performance on
the raage filled me with amazement,
as it did everybody else who watched
his marvelous shooting, and when he
was through I said to him: '‘Look
here, boy, where did you ever gef a
chance to practice such fine shoot-
ing?* ’Pickin’ revnoo offleehs, suh.'
he replied, with a grin. *Yo all fuhgits
■uh, ha Ah'm from Kenucky” *'
and will ask that his assignments of 28:05 3-5, held by Charles Rub-
be made exclusively in the States
of Indiana, New York and New
Jersey.
(or
a large one) goes wrong, nothing is so
Important as the selection of food
which will always bring it around
again.
“My little baby boy fifteen months
old had pneumonia, then xame brain
fever, and no sooner bad he got over
these than he began to cut teeth and,
being so weak, he was frequently
thrown into convulsions,” says a Col-
orado mother.
“I decided a change might help, sc
took him to Kansas City for a visit.
V.’hen we got there he was so very
weak when he would cry be would
■ink away and seemed like he would
die.
"When I reached my sister’s home
•he said immediately that we must
feed him Grape-Nuts and, although I
had never used the food, we got some
■ad for a few days gave him Just the
juice of Grape-Nuts and milk. He
got stronger so quickly we were soon
feeding him the Grape-Nuts itself ar.d
la a wonderfully short t|me be fat-
tened right up and became strong
•nd well.
•That showed me something worth
knowing and, when later on my girl
■came, I raised her on Grape-Nuts and
she is a strong healthy baby and has
been. Yon will see from the little
photograph I send you what a strong,
■chubby youngster the boy is now. but
he didn’t look anything like that be-
fore we found this nourishing food.
■Giape-Nuts nourished him back to
strength when *he was so weak he
cculdn’t keep any other food on his
stomach.” Name iflven by Postum
-Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
All children can ba built to a more
sturdy and healthy condition upon
Grape-Nuts and cream. The food
•eontalna the elements nature de-
mands, from which to make the soft
gray filling in the nerve centers and
A well fed brain and strong,
absolutely insure a
Jfr - V ■ I
__________ftS
•hip ouiny Roods from MW
«s» Dsarsst woo, mailing
Mukden, tna Last Stand'of Kuropat- Thera Seems to Be Truest Some
kin, to Be Eveouated.
St. Petersburg, Sept. 6.—The
forces of Kuropatkin and Oyama
are racing for Mukden. This much
stands out in the news of Monday
and is indicated in a report for-
warded by Kuropatkin, who says
that his retreat is being conducted
in perfect order, though the Japan-
ese on Sunday repeatedly attacked
his rear and continued the attack
until Monday.. The result of the
race is in doubt The united Rus-
sion forces are now north of Yen-
tai, a station on the railroad about
ten miles northeast of Liao Yang.
They are pushing on to Mukden,
to which the bulk of the Japanese i
forces are marching direct, after i
having swarmed across the Taitse
River. A strong Japanese flanking i
column is about thirty miles north-
east of Liao Yang and trying to get
between the Russian forces and
Mukden. '
With this race in progress there i
was a brief dispatch from Mukden I
saying that preparations for the
evacuation of that place are pro-
ceeding. This report, if well found- ]
ed, as is pointed out in the Associ-
ated Press St Petersburg dis-
patches, Would mean the abandon- 1
ment of the whole of Southern |
Manchuria and the winding up of <
the present campaign. 1
It was rpported in St. Petersburg 1
at a lato hour Monday night that 1
Kuropatkin’s rear guard had been
almost annihilated and that the i
main Russian army was in danger i
of being surrounded.
Kuropatkin in his report makes <
no mention of the abandonment of 1
200 guns at Liao Yang, a rumor to <
which effect is in circulation. Ad- 1
vices from Port Arthur by way of <
Chefoo bring the fighting there up I
to Sept. 2 and say the Japanese i
losses were very heavy.
St. Petersburg, Sept. 6, 8:20 a. i
m.—It is impossible.at this hour to i
obtain any statement from the au- '
tborities regarding the reported i
preparations for the abandonment I
of Mukden. ' _ ]
This is the first intimation that
such a course is contemplated. If i
it turns out to be true, it means the ]
abandonment of the whole of South i
Manchuria and the winding up of i
the present campaign. 1
In fact, should Mukden be evac-
uated, there would be no point for
wintering the army of a quarter of
a million men with its many ;
WOUnded SOldierS. 1 wuu auvuipiru mj
On the other hand the evacua- white .girls Saturday night
There la a time and a place for
everything. That’s why we spend
tion of Mukden would give Field
Marshal Oyama commodious win-
ter quarters and the practical con-
trol of two lines of railway. The
Kinchou-Simintin line tapping rich
Chinese territory, stops little short
of Mukden, with which it is con-
nected by a good vagon road.
The report of the prospective
evacuation of Mukden, if well
founded, would indicate that the
crippling effect of the Liao Yang
fighting on Kuropatkin’s army' is
more serious than has yet been inti-
mated.
------------------.
Marlin :Each day there is a large
number of farmers in the city for
cotton pickers. Nearly all the busi-
ness streets are crowded with wag-
ons to haul the pickers to the fields.
The general price offered was 75e
per 100 pounds. The fields are said
to be white with the opening staple
and farmers areanxious to get it
out and on the market.
ALL EYES ON SOUTHWEST TEXAS
The San Antonio and Aransas Pass
Railway traverses the artesian water
belt and early market gardening coun-
try. Health, climate, schools and
churches unsurpassed. Send a two
cent stamp and get onr Aricultural
Folder. K. J. Martin, G. P. A., San An.
touio, Texas.
I_________
The question of precedence In thia
country la merely a question ol
hustle.
50-CENT CATALOGUE
NOTHING
to >««•!>• tor ratara
man. •••«•••<
larlMt handwmMt.
■ nt •••>■
far tha rawaat Srif ■
catetogaia avar to>a-
liaxaa. Mavar bafara
saia tor laaa tban aeatoito. Warth aeallr SS.M. XowHtn
aaafcathaaaklnc. Cutthlaa4.<mtaadBa>idtoaaaraaaaoati
•ar: ~SEN» 8k TOUM BIS Haw 114 CATALOBUE r«EE.'
it Will co to you bv beturn mail Free, rostraim.
-----------B|fl8EJ| T(|A1(
I BO. BOB aaatattoM, am IO. BOB Utontr
niuch lowar ttauiirvar betaaa. Maw aa4 law
aUoebar oataJoEaaalaak aaayanaiLa'£toa*Ul totor aHaaatoah M|h,
WAIB ta aAawa la aaa aaaflaa U
ISIPJSSES
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QUiCKERWPIENTgSSw
marchananaa In aaaaoatafRr Braalar tkan all agkar m
.wacaaahla
Ifyoaaaad
teamaa. grlf you araadolaiy
oiS IS TIE LABGEST MAIL
ORDER ROUSE II TIE WORLD.
VsrsH mrR BhlR Nwr«|ss4s Umn aril «th«r imU
•rderhMM* In 0N« United States raRkMiMN.
Ot her man order horae are mere aide sDowb
compared with ours. If eweryoM only knewbov
much greeter valvee wefhreonall kfndeef umt*
ohandtee than any other hones, bo ether mall or.
der houM wooldnrevaRBlaRte eveBB^ogleeteOT.
THE OILY MAIL ORDER HOUSE
that nameer cOTHrele a vast mnnher nt Dotte
rlee located north, couth, oast and west, oitn-
atedso that wo can ship mdmy Roods C--
factory w wiurebocse nearest rah
qukk delivery *nd very tow fi flight
Meuthsrn fsctorles sad wereMOTMn Ofl
^ir^R ^ROs^Rles Hort^H^Hr^R Oerlen it i
_* jaaayte-AatoteraeaJ
OTiplelna why* mr awnparod wttr- “
oustowwr*flThAs moneF nfiskiM*ooi>oRtai
— Cat Ihto sd?outamd srartouhei
■ ~---— —— —J eardjmy, “Rand aM^OTsr Ma 114
teyoefrsebyrwUanTienU, postpaid. Dso*t Leg
Dsvsflwttoliay saytblecsfibesfle er aOai »bs»s cell ttay wrtfefcr ew
-------------— —---xza---
wrt DIM___
merchandise .
--------------- a .... hand our old -— ---------- --------
totter or on the postal eard give up tbonamaef the party to whom rat handed ear oM catalodaa liitrm.
SEARS, ROEBUCK a CO., ChlcagoTill.
_JND OIK
____GO TO ----
ENORMOUS SIZE.
■MiaRagM^mrlC*
new aumI marrelously
merchandise departm
before: prtOOSi - " ________
hnd.eold In the
WHATBEL
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tonga ta *M|aa4
ft ■••11 auntobted
^lafMtoMgbaaR
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plaining b.ar
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AMdahanaafaadaalara. MuMy
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•—• >—itn«a Itof toteaw* to fM.
------gkanaayatbOTbaaw.
*----la stock
... ............aeMRBaaf
saiaunfafar sraator than all atbar maUardsr
— 774 ws hsrs testor* > M« waribaana tor
aaaf Baath, HartR. E*-l aad Waat.wa can .hip
- 1/a<baahoaaa. Ityoaaand
_______ouoee. and on a areat manw
__i you will tewolssothensus tenths bslght
wi >— ship fr—sss eTo—toetefltoeorwer*.
OUR FREE BIG itoW ciflLOGUE
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Shelby, Sam. Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, September 9, 1904, newspaper, September 9, 1904; Carrollton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1267394/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Carrollton Public Library.