The Grapevine Sun. (Grapevine, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 3, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 21, 1905 Page: 3 of 8
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«•*
ALL OVER TEXAS.
LANHAM DECLARED ELECTED.
•ns
LASTING RELIEF.
**> *<
280,411
r
»fc
to con.
A
minder to “Be strong.”
Wb
“I
ft
National Live Stock Association
KI
4 11 v I rt A rr. .
.-iUASrf
HR
i
MIGHT HAVE SAVED IT
&
A J
I
disfiguring ulcer
•j
were made
any
C.
W.
OS
7, j
< J
ite
Ki
—---- -I
ASSOCIATION TORN ASUNDER.
If you think you resemble a great
man, say nothing. Thfe resemblance Is
very apt to cease the moment you open
your mouth.
200,167
56,865
8,301
4,509
552
1,847
170
9,620
429
18
Ernest Walton,
Katy, at Denison
in the railway
ries which ci
hours later.
county,
offered
l Dallas
Aged Senator’e Courtesy.
Senator Pettus, of Alabama, though
he will be 84 years of age next July,
bond of It
the Jamal-
lie mainte-
of the fam-
have bean
,000 China
1 of Japan-
jOHNH.Wo^
m3
for
•kin
rrtGlftL
SOAP.
plomatlc
want an-
the Ger-
kmbassa-
pathetic
e King's
alklng of
between
t Britain
rance of
at I was
jmory of
mi I »*|*»»<W>»***>'■« *
Buried Treasure—
The Flood of Bills Still Pours In Un*
checked.
Austin, Tex., Jan. 14.—The House
met at 10 o’clock yesterday morning.
Representative Hancock was called to
the chair, President Pro Tem Hanger
occupying a seat on the stand. i
The canvassing of the vote for Gov-
ernor and Lieuatnt Governor was com-
pleted .
For Governor:
Lanham ...
Lowden ...
Clark
Jackdon ...
Leitner ....
Mills
Scattering .
the country,
Individual gro
The defect!
WOODBURY'S
M bwy making facial fortune*, its free curative
lather, act* a* a balm while deansng.
25 cent* A CAKE.
> Scalp
***
I
you, ma
so, too.
ask?* ‘ v..f..
ulous reply. “Ah! I am 83,” said the
Senator, as he lifted his hat and am*
bled along.
or under, Carl Sc
- Best display, w
Frazier.
W. S. Sharp, of
was awarded the
as one of the prei
Fair association.
imident
!•. trans
annual
Commia-
® Secre-
a affairs
that he
I as Is
y of con-
___■
I
night, “you
without eggs.”
At the opening o
majority and mn<
submitted by thee
ed to consider thep
The former, tvhlrf,
tiemen, was read I
Texas and recoin
sotekmen be ad ml
and that all vlsltll
lowed to vote on 'l
izing. It declared
tion with stock yarj
roads. The mlnorl
by E. R. Gosney ofl
vor of allowing o|
to vate as were nl
grow- tlonal Live Stock 1
standing.
After a wrangle!
hours and during st
wandered hither art
porlty report was M
them. '
■mention,
ports were
es appolnt-
ijpanlzatlon.
>m the cat-
|Cowan of
that only
igmbership,
men be al-
Of reorgan
E combina
fries or rail
, Submitted
fwas In fa
J delegates
of |he Na
bn in good
What Franklin Said.
Every schoolboy Is familiar wlti
the saying of Benjamin Franklin, at
the group of anxious-faced, yet loyai
men, stood around to sign the Immor
tai Declaration of Independence:
“Now we must all hang together oi
we’ll all hang separately.” But tht
rejoinder of the signer, Benjamin Har
rison, to the above witticism, is not sc
well known. Harrison, a portly man
looking down over his ample propor
tlons, said: “Yes, but when they droj
us all off at a rope’s end some one
of you light-weights will be kicking
and suffering long after I’m done for/
isted for
invention
r, the ma-
A Lot of Trouble from Too Much
Starchy Food.
A little boy of eight years whose
parents did not feed him on the right
kind of food, was always nervous and
Buffered from a weak condition of the
stomach and bowels. Finally be was
taken down with appendicitis and
after the operation the doctor, know-
ing that his intestinal digestion was
very weak, put him on Grape-Nuts
twice a day.
He rapidly recovered and about two
months thereafter, his Father states.
Theas two word* often describe the lo*t
opportunities lor fecial improvement.
Dehrs after mpuritie* and bring out the
beat that nature can bcMow.
Ji/. 1
BlMloners
ft lays, to
Be*lw8,
I Miarle*
Wddent.
Munisslon
• work uf
i to build
i has been
is data ob-
en and In
try to en-
Otamlssion
r plans for
a military
under the
rds on Feb-
the first of
► Spanish-
W'
Joe Smith, aged 23 years, died Fri- I
day evening at his home five miles east :
of Sherman, from the effect of an ac-
cidental discharge of a shotgun loaded
with small shot.
The 5-month-old son of W. O. Jones, I
of Paris, was discovered dead In bed
by its mother Friday morning. The
child was apparently well when the |
mother retired at night. •
The city director of Galveston for
1905 has Just been distributed, and I
gives the population of the city at I
13,745, an Increase of 1,092 over last I
rear.
It is announced that the annual re-1
ceptlon at the North Texas Female
College, at Sherman, will be held on I
Feb. 22, and indications are that it will I
be one of the most brilliant events of I
the year.
Mrs. Anna Flowers was sitting near
a red hot stove at her home In Dallas
when a gust of wind blew her dress
I against the stove. Instantly she was
the spin-1 ablaze and was so badly burned that
ary to In- |she died. .
Prominent officials of the T. & N. O.
Railroad state that a bill will be In-
troduced in the State Legislature au-
thorizing the road to sell the Sabine-
Dallas branch as demanded by the
! commission.
County Superintendent Brooks, of
teived inju-
ith a few
lar, and sleeps soundly, weighs 62
pounds, and his whole system la la a
lino condition of health.” Name given
by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
It is plain that if he had been put
on Grape-Nuts at an earlier period in
bls life, and kept from the use of
foods that he could not digest, he nev-
er would have had appendicitis. That
disease is caused by undigested food
decaying in the stomach and trowels,
causing irritation and making for the
growth of all kinds of microbes, set-
ting up a diseased condition which is
the active cause of appendicitis, and
this is more marked with people who
do not properly digest white broad.
Grape-Nuts is made of the selected
parts of wheat and barley and by the
peculiar processes of the cooking at
An Alaska Marriage.
Governor Brady of Alaska says that
«•***•< *
203,670
57,326
7,019
2,872
the canal.
The Secretary
ion that it may
crease from 10 to
of duty that may
ama on goods de
zone, and points o
now existing in ft
1906 and will not’
this market will b
States. He says
labor is not free1
It will not be eai
Jamaica laborers 1
ernor of Jamaica
sent to the comi
000 laborers, excel
for each laborer t
can government
nance under the j
Illes left behind,
made to supply a
men and a si
ese coolies. ‘
INITIAL OFFER.
In case your dealer eannot aupply you
E tend u* hi* name and we will send prepaid,
to any address for Si.oo the following toilet
t requisites.
1 Cake Woodbury's Facial Soap.
1 Tube “ Facial Cream.
1 •• •• Dental Cream.
1 Box “ Face Powd*r.
Together with our readable booklet
| Beauty * Maaque, a careful trealiie on tU
I care of the “outer aelf."
Booklet free on application.
I THE ANDREW JERGENS CO.,
| CINCINNATI, O.
••••••• >**°***<*4**<**O**MM**
Csrrles a Mirror.
A mirror, a crystal and a sword
are carried before the Emperor of
Japan on all state occasions. “Know
thyself," Is the message of the mirror;
“Be pure and shine," Is the crystal’s
l re-
CAUSE ANO CURS
. But how old are you, may r
“Sixty-four, sir,” was ths trem-
■C'’/
Plans are being!
ball to be given I
auspices of the Sea
ruary23. The affalfl
its kind since bi
American war. 1
After there was no hope from
she began using Cutlcura
I
People Looked at Her In Amazement
-—Pronounced Incurable-—Face
Now Clear as Ever—Thanks
God for Cutlcura.
An Enormous Umbrella.
An umbrella big enough to cover i
dozen persons belongs to the Churcl
of St. Peter Mancroft, Norwich, Eng
land. It Is used on wet days for wed
ding parties, so that the bride anc
bridegroom, the bridesmaids and
guests may not get their smart dress
es spoiled when walking from th<
church door to the carriages. It Is alsc
used by the clergy at funerals, whei
the service has to be held by th<
graveside in a pouring rain. That 1'
Is useful is obvious, and it Is rathe:
remarkable that many other churches
do not possess such an article as i
part of the ordinary church furniture
Taft Makes I
nt the rate
ed by Pan-
r the canal
e monopoly
P expire in
*ed, so that
the United
Mestlon of
ficulty, and Bills County is out In a letter appeal-
era all the Ing to the schools of the country to ob-
as the Gov- | serve Arbor Day, Feb. 22, by planting
shade and ornamental trees on the
10r I school grounds.
Fourteen bales of cotton belonging
to Frank Boggs, of Sherman, were
destroyed by fire on bls farm, seven
miles southwest of town, Saturday
night. The cotton presumably caught | (njunetion, while the sword Is a
firs from burning grass.
At Bonham an Elk lodge was install-
I ed with a fine charter membership of
car
Waxahachie.
, Choyce &
State Swine
adjourned
a meeting
nlficent ball and banquet.
At Sumner, Miss., Albert Boldni, the
negro who murdered Thomas Fogar-j
ity, an engineer on tue Yazoo and
Mississippi Vllley Railroad, at Tut*
Iwiler, in February laet, was hanged
Total ..280,954
S. W. T. Lanham was declared to
be duly elected Governor and George
D. Neal Lieutenant Governor. The
joint session ended and the Senate re-
tired.
Senate bill appropriating 8120,000 for
the mileage and per diem pay of offi-
cers and members of the Twenty-Ninth
Legislature and |20,000 contingsmt
expenses was read first and second
time, and finally passed.
The house announced the comple-
tion of various committees. An aval-
anche of bills marked the day*a pro-
ceedings. Many of these bills are to
the same purpose while some are at
cross purposes. One very good measure
Is one providing for loaning state
funds, not of a permanent nature, to
banks makes the highest bld for
them, the bank to give good and se-
cure bond. It Is figured that thia will
bring Into the treasury some 875,000
annually. There are many measures years, was
looking to Increasing the State revenue
and a fair proportion looking to Its ex-
penditure.
Loved V
In his remlnlsf
life Andrew Whffi
ecdote of Emprei
man Emperor’s m
dor had mentions
picture of Georgi
great-granddaugM
age, the long-ended bl
the United Stata
he said: “I<
mine, now hard •
brought up to ab
George III.” At
I smiled and anew
have known her «
of humor in bet
t . t
Total
Lieutenant Goveronr:
Neal
Davidson
Pearson ....
Rhodes
Nugent
Pollard
Scattering
Washington.;
Rooaevelt, In *
mltted to cong
report of the 1
sion, together
tary Taft. Rd
he says that
be given gr«
charged with
structlng the C
The Board o
should be redu
five or prefr
wheze duties,
should be asali
Secretary Ti
has done a gr
organization a
the canal. De
made In the v<
talned by the 1
procuring new
able the engir
to determine t!
Work has been inaugurated upon
the construction of the De Forest wire-
less telegraph station at
The Instrument will be of ten-kilowatt
power, and communication will be es-
tablished with Cuban and Mexican
as well ae intervening points.
John Brewer, a well-known farmer
Melvin, I. T., was killed Tuesday
t at his home by being shot with
jtgua. His wife saye the shot was
through the door by an unknown
r.
’J- w- Wttlls. Super
JM^Blntendent of Streeti
| of Lebanon, Ky.
says:
“My nightly rest was broken, owlni
to irregularities of the kidneys. 1
suffered intensely from severe palm
in the small of my back and through
the kidneys and was annoyed by pain
ful passages of abnormal secretions
Doctors failed to relieve me. I began
taking Doan’s Kidney- Pills and I ex-
perienced quick and lasting relief
Doan’s Kidney Pills will prove a bless
ing to all sufferers from kidney dlsor
ders who will give them a fair trial.”
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y„
proprietors. For sale by all druggist^
price 50 cents per box.
Shown by numerous cures made by
Dodd’s Kidney Pills. They cure the
Kidneys and the Rheumatism cures
Itself—Remarkable caee of Maggie
E. Deckert.
Eagle River, Wis., Jan. 10.—(Spe-
cial)—That rheumatism is caused by
disordered kidneys is proved by the
cures Dodd’s Kidney Pills are making
In every state in the Union. They
cure thp Kidneys and the Rheumatism
cures Itself. A cure that has cause*
deep Interest in this neighborhood -is
that of Maggie E. Deckert In speak-
ing of It she says:
”1 had kidney trouble and rheuma-
tism and was so lame I could not walk.
I could not sleep for I ached all over.
I was In a terrible state and firmly
believe that If I had not used Dodd’s
Kidney Pills I would be dead. I took
nine boxes of them and they have
done me more good than all the other
medicines I ever took. Now my aches
are all gone, I can eat and sleep and
I am feeling good. I want all the
world to know that Dodd’s Kidney
Pills cured me.”
We can take reproof patiently from
a book, but not from a tongue. The
book hurts not our pride, the living
reprover does.—T. Adams.
Hlrsch, of Dallas, was convlcfew"
in the. County Court, of Hunt County,
on the charge of violating the local op-
tion law by shipping whiskey to par-
ties who swore they had not ordered
same C. O. D. He was fined 880 and
given a sentence of sixty days in the
county jail. .
The Bell County Poultry and Pet
Stock Association has Just Issued a
thirty-page catalogue descriptive of the
poultry show that will be held at
Temple under its auspices on January
24 and 25. In additional to the regu
lar prizes offered there Is a long and
Impsoing list of special prizes.
Two applications for the position of
special supervising engineer have
been filed In the County Commission-
ers' Court of ballas County. These
applications are with reference to the
road work to be undertaken with the
proceeds of the 8500,060 bond Issue.
The applicants are John W. Maxey of
Houston and F. Uhl of Jackson, Tenn.
John L. Powers, aged 25 years, son
of R. 8. Powers of Paris slipped on the
sleet and fell from the steps of a mov-
1 Ing train at De Kalb sustaining a brok-
en back and blp. He died Thursday
. night.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde McClure of Ria-
Ing Star awoke on the morning of the
13th of January and found their in-
fant babe, 5 months old, dead in bed.
The baby seemed to be In perfect
health when they retired the night be-
fore.
Officials of the Chicago, Rock Island
and Pacific Railway announce that Ok-
lahoma City baa been made headquar-
ters for the immigration department,
embracing the territory from Kansas
City to El Paso.
Work has been
tn on ths I representative citizens. A special _
renty-four of Dallasites put the boys through the I gtin WOnderfully rugged and active,
two egrs [goat ride. At night all enjoyed a mag-1 aame ago ^e was ambling along
Pennsylvania avenue, Washington,
when he saw an old lady trying to
cross the street in face of a gale of
wind. The Senator gallantly escorted
I her to the sidewalk, whereupon she
I thanked him and said: "I hope, sir,
(that when you are as old as I am you r
Mrs. P. Hackett, of 400 Van Buren
St., Brooklyn, N. V., says: “I with
to give thanks for the marvelous cure
of my mother by Cutlcura. She had,
a severe ulcer, which physicians hadi
pronounced Incurable. It was a ter-
rible disfigurement, and people would
stand in amazement and look after
her. .—
doctors i— ,.r
Soap, Ointment, and Pilis, and now.
thank God, she is completely cured,
sad her face is as smooth and clear
as ever.” ,
A man is not liberal minded bteMMl
he is free to give his opinion. .
the factory, all of the starch is turned '
Into sugar ready for immediate diges-
t lion and the more perfect nourish- (
ment of all parts of the body, particu-
larly the brain and nerve centers. (
Read the little book, “The Road to
Wellvllle." found 1
X* Offi
• '
■
The Swine Show.
Waxahachie: The l
* Breoders’ Association
“He has grown to be strong, muscu- Thurssday afternoon after w
astlng two days During the meeting
many questions pertaining to. the in-
dustry of raising hogs were discussed
from a scientific and practical point
j of view.
Several hog raisers from different
sections of the State had hogs on ex-
hibition at the shew held in connec-
tion with the meeting of the state as-
sociation.
The awards of premiums
as follows:
Best Poland-China boar, ,
Choyce ft Frazier, Hutchins.
B««t Poland-Chin. ww.
Th°“°‘/'.Bsr„Cr“,k'
1 boar six months
J ft Frazier.
sow, six months
constitution which admitted packers
to membership and provides an open
door through which the railroads of
the country may at any time become
factors In the control of the organiza-
tion.
The cattlemen, horse and swlns
growers, together with representatives
some of the affiliated Industries, re-
fused to agree with the new constitu-
tion and withdrew when they consid-
ered its adoption probable and this as-
sociation formed a new organization
under the name of the American
Stock Growers’ Association, whose alm
It will be to wield a dominant Influenc®
In the interest of the cattle growers.
Roughly speaking, the sheep
era, commission men and stockyards
Interests remained with the National
Live Stock Association and the cattle
growers of all other animals for the
market have gone with the new asso-
ciation
The cattlemen having first strongly
opposed the admission into their or-
ganization of the packers, and partic-
ularly of .the railroads, claimed that
these Influences would ultimately dom-
inate the cattle growing Industries of
the charris of a variety performer and
she favored his suit at first. But later
some rivals with more money came
Into the field. “Swiftwater Bill” be-
came alarmed. He saw his prize slip-
ping from his grasp. He learned that
the woman he desired to wed detestet
the canned goods and pork and beans
• that formed the principal diet of the
community and lived principally on
eggs, of which there were a few cases
in Dawson Thereupon he went out
and bought every egg in Dawson.
“Now, then, my honey," he said that
must marry mo or go
She married him.
■I
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Keeling, J. E. The Grapevine Sun. (Grapevine, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 3, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 21, 1905, newspaper, January 21, 1905; Grapevine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1277784/m1/3/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Tarrant County Archives.