The Matagorda County Tribune. (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 37, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 27, 1899 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Matagorda County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.
Extracted Text
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■■
Golden
BUCK
Wadding
A Ito')
SOMETHING ABOUT WARTS.
who n»».
nn h
*
r'
W
A Trjluft Moment*
ft*
f
CT
cart, cochlon s courtship,
I.
r
K
*
(
•4l
Id.
II
a
* *
M
I
I
■
ths
LONE WOLF'S LAST HOUR.
ho cup
I
sto JU—
fl
w.
t
rv
(letting Illa Own Banks
Is It
I \
1
*
a
4
■ p
an
P
ft
Kindly
Um
I
I If your merchant doesn’t handle, ter.-
*<J. 8. orGan^fjf,
i
/
i
MBs l
1
7
A
i
/
Jig.
» •
I
■I
3
a
Suck
a Ureal
i?
Eight <>f Hie twenty four
of Imliniin who have died lie In
ia «»• Matte
Blood; Beealte —Kleiueule
Piny.
Win. Doherty,
Trnv. Pas. Agent.
cure
Burning.
SQM* GOOD JOKES. ORIGINAL
AND EELECTED.
one Indi-
pc to laml
Ipe. i>«p» •
be
Per-
»(•
man. coldly. ,rhnw
be thankful for.
for bon buns.’'—
lowli
new
<?
■ •tip of
<<1,000
rd of
I
It 'tot't II t
I I 'I
IlhI ex
I ,1 nt
lie'il!'-.
I' '■ll.Hl,
I Si Oil.
L V - J
A
her son:
too boisterous.”
slvcly remarked.
kneeess,
I Foot-
Inu'kes
I Cuvet
It .-Iii.i
Its n n I
lor. N.
nir
Ml
he
led
"It sal
—Alar
kfl
—jr(,..,u i’.Uif.w, .nd not
Lo'JUTKltnnlCHIMItUlCo. «“•> n,lMSaM.
w^\Oinems«Ti.,,r^
CLe-o^e
Jr
CsD- <
This is heroic hut a penalty has to be _, _
. WOMAN'S
DEVOTION
TO HOME
.■(Ml
Id]
<• hai« iwen
i«4 thottaai
uring that
<le eoM
letter,,
calling
A HANDFUL OF DIRT MAY BE A HOUSE-
£ULr_OF SHAME.” CLEAN HOUSE WITH
SAPOLIO
'J "*
ILvlu
1
1
I
on I
ter, month
to., s72
ti <4
a ‘I
and
Mel
Rovcrnorj
tin
WHISKERS DYED
A Natural Blank by
Buckingham’s Dye.
tries so canto nt »o <tru„i.» ,, k. t. Halt a Oto,
Hfe
y
I
K,
ll.ir ot
repre-
111 ot
Bruno
is the
found
ns.
I Coghlan ot the
I neaitli Hi AL R IFAMS
rente t«» flips** ( bernlt a|
uria* *’td IjWQ ie«’.iujoniBiE.
yjra, ’1ft
Killer 1
nt fly, bift
. A hb. «»
Grocer. '
IL Ltom, n
My doctor said I wool! die. but Plan's
Cura for Consumption cured im*.—Ainoi
Kainer, Cbtrry Valley, Ill., Nov AH, ’90.
JPJOME duties to many women seem more important than
hl
. I
~.r»rr Ad. »MSS cirr »««.<« i>aii„
llutln? .nJ ,
■' i '
IOSE CONNECTION at Houston
Shreveport with all lines.
la line offers quick time and su-
servlcci
. Lleldruin,
a. Mnu'gr.
R. I). Yoakum.
1Si—- Gen. Pas. Agent.
tbe
she
T her mask
innrked {
they were the marked
"GULF AIR LINE.”
Kniton East & West Texas Railway.)
\MSIiorieit Line, 'the Qnlokeil Time.
The I Ino.t sPPV|ct.
E NEW THROUGH SLEEPING
LINE between Galveston. Hous
Ij tnd Kansas City via Galveston.
M'orte and Houston railway, Gulf
■■Line, and K. C. P. ,V G. It. It.
si eting at Shreveport with through
.Kbuled sleeping cars for St. Louis,
j’innati. Chattanooga. Atlanta. New
w and alLEastern and Southeastern
Ito lliel Renion to Him.
The nititi came out ot an office build-
ing on the run and started down the
street.
"Here!
A' Senillsns Question.
Housekeeper—“How about the peo-
ple In the flat above—have they any
children?''
Agent—"Mercy, no! The general sec-
retary of the Mother's Mutual Experi-
ence Association lives there.”—Chicago
News.
I vo« ■
I
p •."
1/ St.'S-
J
r.iAt'.'i^
r have ‘
L'/iu/t
ease, >
motiey
Lk llkn
l-
IX
g his
I ■ iil.-r.
h night
L
cl gee
nd.
ililh,..,
‘•"Zf
PAIN
"uscrupulou*
-J. agrees io
“ai the foil
reby guarantt
nnd bowel ti
Kay's
are folio’
and 11.W. or went pro
io* by Dr. B. .J. Ka
Spi ‘
for
In certain pnrt« of Sweden, where
the moat absolute confidence Is repos-
ed In the honesty of people, a very in
formal postal aystem is In vogue. As
the mall steanier reaches a landing
place a man goes ashore with letters,
which hr plncea in nn unlocked box on
the pier. Then the passer by who ex-
pects a letter opens the box, turns over
the letters nnd selects his own, un-
questioned by nn)’ one.
Many iiivu mid Romt' wointui.
call their con»cl<'m-«> whnt Ih
their lack of wurage.
An Ohio genlnn hnx invented a chnlr
that can be ndjunti'd Into 10<mi din’rrent
positions.
Man propoRca. nnd then when he
gets by liluixelf aud tnliika lt»over he
wonder, why he ever could have mnde
such a fool vf himself.
T1»m Purpose.
“This court martial haan’t anything
to do with canned beef, has it?" naked
the Spanish admiral.
"No,” answered the officer; "we
merely want to see about the nrarfner
in which our battleships were put In
brine.”—Washington Star.
Rleetile itell. Him, by the Kan.
Prof. Torvald Kohl of the Odder ob-
servatory, Denmark, reports that when
the huge sum spot of September last
was crossing the solar meridian, mag
nlflcent auroral lights flushed across
the heavens, and the electric bells In
the great telegraph station at Fred
erlcla rang without an/ visible cause.
The telegraphic service In Denmark
was disturbed for hours during the
auroral display. Prof. KoN think:;
that the agency of the sun in pro-
ducing the phenomena was evident
Similar exhibitions of "wireless teleg-
raphy” between the sun and the earth
have been noted In the past.
Get a bottle today of
Ayers
Sarsaparilla
‘ELF REFRIGERANT
| fl over MO <l«»gr«ni rolUrr t>MM» B f*
| timetlhi rrf rlgrrutoni Jumt lltar ■ ■■
■ m perfect ■»ib«tttutr ff r "
HKNti roti i irt< ri.Aiis. ir caaieT, wantcd.
VNIV KIIHAI. KlirillUF.K* TIMU CO.,
litre Flu.lilug Avenue, HROOKLTN. X. T.
! or Lt BV1XIET OF FUN. I FATAL INDIAN FEUD.
WIDOW Of MURDERED
SHOOTS SLAYER.
Slender Individual (who Is not at
•II comfortable)—These ’busses ought
to charge by weight.
The Fat Tn (sharply)—Ah! It they
did, they would never stop to pick you
up!—A ly Sloper.
First Tasteless Tonic
ever manufactured. All
other so-called “ Taste-
less” Tonics are imita-
tions. Ask any druggist
about this who is not
PUSHING an imitation.
> I’eend* Aga the
Whose retailuM.nl
Here!” cried the policeman
on the corner. "What's your hurry?"
“There's a man back there trying to
sell trie a book on twenty-eight weekly
instalments of $2.33 each!” cried the
’ietlm.
The policeman Instantly released his
hold.
"Run!” ho cried. "Run like a white-
head! Maybe you can get away from
him yet!”—Chicago Post.
Dr. Kay's Renovator,
Rhk.i oMKtlpHtlnn. livernnd kidney dHeawiit, bfl-
lioiiMiiCHM, nfudiM'he.etc. At druggimnDfiu A IL
X>'.'ll’ly Jtl.tkW) poimd.a of liirild ui‘(‘
dully eaten In the sultan of 1'urkey'a
houiwhokl.
■ and out
Be nn re
is Tex.
/
//
Berlln’k Society of Knilrond Infer-
mIn olferH n prize of 2(100 murks ($500)
for nn acceptn14<* Ncbetiie for automat-
ic gatca of railroad croHalnga. Th«
provlsioiiH are dint tbe gateH niiiMt lie
eltiscd by the oncoming train about
two miiiiiicH before the train reachea
the crossing. 'I’lie dlrectoratea are
eager to find cornelhlng bvtrbr than
human employe* to depend upon for
tiie protection of their railroad croaih
Inga.
Returning soldiers who have served
bf-yond the hviim an* sporting th<dr for-
eign servlet* stripes proudly. This
stripe, as new to our army as foreign
service is to our history, is a narrow
bar of red worn low down on each
’oeve.
ofMissPopu-
klar Esteem and
RMr. Ayer’s
Sarsaparilla.
Fifty years of
happiness,
b. fifty years of
■ doing good,
r The only Sar-
1 saparillainthe
1 world that
1 ever celebrat-
B ed its fiftieth
anniversary
and is doing it
today with no
signs of decay.
Its mission is
. to cure and
a - , —— \tohelp. No
Avon de- it has fifty happy years back of it.
tb»y abide, but no agoniclng pmyer for
their taking off If the> knew the
church waa agonltlng in >rgyer tor
their removal they mi«bt reform. The
rhurch may be at fault for not aaklni
for what they really dealre and feel
would be for the beneflt of society
The church should do its duly.
choice
toTio-
health.
No mutter how ill they feel, they drag theinselvea
through the daily tasks nnd pile up trouble.
I M
1^13
11
: 1
‘ * •’»!nli’gs
with
n'’"k tn.,,
“■•tbn j,.x
« Waltr
| J
I" s
I ‘' I
X
; I-
j -
I ! t WO “
I :•'»<
jjygal
I K >v-
III lull
Lu lu»’
O'
■ ®
I
IIolland'H young queen has u decided
' fotidiiesK for pretty clothes. A huge
,, .-.rug.-c xJ nsRortmcnt of dress goods was sent to
’)/> of having daily to replace the' ,he,
Jrn^p-
lArDAULTSG
S
I
CURE YOURIiLFf
frrul.au"! mucuut (•RMbratiM.
L..rr\* u.n"!tf •..*«*. *1*-*.*'?' -.n‘1 Mtrlu-
| Mold by Urniglitt,
or R*nt tn plain »r»0|*r,
Circular seal un rejilMt.
paid.
A woman in New Matamoras, Ohio,
Mrs. IsanKt.r. Braiuii in, tells in the
following letter how she fought with
disease of the feminine organs until
finally forced to take to her bed. She
nays:
•• Df.ar Mrs. Pinkham—I feel it my duty to write to you to
tell you that I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com-
pound and think there is no medicine in the world like it I
Buffered for nine years, and sometimes for twelve weeks at a
time I could not stand on my feet.
Baneful Church Membrrt*.
From The Baptist Outlook:
fight to pray to the I*ord to take home
to heaven those in the church who are
plainly a detriment to' the cause of
Christ? We pray for the Ixird to spare
the good when critically 111. Why not
with equal reverence ask Him to take
away those who are the bane of the
church? It is not to be done In hatred,
but in pure love for humanity. It is
not to be flone Irreverently. It Is not
to be done with the least purpose to
help It along. But reverently, lovingly,
with a submissive spirit to endure the
brother or sister If the Lord wills, why
not pray lor his taking off? If It is
right to pray the Ixird to preserve the
helpfill ones, why not pray the Ixird
to take home to heaven the cantanker-
ous, converted ones? We may be mis-
taken in judgment, ot course. Bo we
may be In praying for others to live.
We pray according to our best Judg-
ment, but thibmlsslvely. Why will not
thia work both ways? It seems to us
that the "removal" of certain onea
would be among the greatest blessings
to be desired by some churches. Why
Is it wrong for us to pray for the
prosperity of Zion as ft seems to us
to be wisest, leaving all to Him who
knows? There Is much In prayer.
Possibly the reason some good men
die Is because there !a no agonising
prayer for them jo live. Possibly the
reason some me.n In the way of the
progress to the church remain Is be-
caitw there Is simply agonising b'cause "Miis.u't I be glrlsterour, mamma?”
JtfL----------- wms——saMn i ............
Absolute Proof
I had female troubles of
all kinds; backache, and headache all the time.
Seven different doctors treated me. Some said
I would have to go to tbe hospital and
have an operation performed. But oh!
how thankful I am that 1 did not, that
I tried your Vegetable Cotn-
Pou,lt* instead. I cannot say
too much in its praise, nor
thank you enough for what it
has done for me. I want you
to publish this in all the papers
for the good of other
fr itifferers.”
\\ The wives and
niotliers of America
frvaffiSX aTC given to over-
BBBm work. Let them be
wise in time and at
the first indication
of female trouble
write to Mrs. Pink-
ham at Lynn, Mass.,
./. -AiZ <«§’’’ forheradvice. Thia
advice is promptly given without charge.
The present Mrs. Pinkham’s experience in treating female
Illa is unparalleled; for years she worked side by side with
Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and for sometime past has had sole
charge of the correspondence department of her great busi-
ness, advising and helping by letter as many as a hundred
thousand ailing women during a single year.
Very Natural.
A little boy ffnd girl were standing
at the bedside of a sick mother, who
were administering words of caution
to the pair. They were going out to
tea. and the mother said, ns she kissed
"Now. dear, mind and not be
Hts little sister pen-
ss she said good-by:
"La Creole"
HAIR RESTflRFR
Is a perfect hair
dressing nnd
... Reatorer.
CO., MEMPHIS.
Any W y tt» (iMt In.
"He comes not!" she faltered, wring.
Ing Iter hands.
The bot;r of the tryst was long past.
"He will never come!" cried the dis-
tracted girl. "But happily I know a
neat song and dance which will per-
haps enable me to earn my living.
Let her go, professor!"
The audience thundered applause,
appreciating at once the exquisite art
with which the specialty had been In-
terpolated in the melodrama.—Detroit
lournal.
Gi’ovp'h is the onlyChill
curctliat is sold through
out the entire malarial
sections of the United
States Every dealer is
authorized to guarantee
Grove’H. No cure No
Pay. Price 50c.
The Heat !*rrRrrlptl<»n fnr Chills
and Fever Ih u boule of Unova's Tamtrt.kph
Chill Tojiic. It is simply Iron and qulni
in a tasteless form. Nocnre—noi>;iy. i’rlcc.fto.
a vow that gome day he would kill
his half-brother for this atrocious
deed. The recent shooting was the ful-
fillment of the vow. The brothers re-
sided In Northern Minnesota at the
time Black Heart killed his mother,
but later separated and Anally met In
Oklahoma ten years ago. They have
lived side by side evtff since. When
Lone Wolf made the vow that he
would kill his brother some day he did
hot mean that he would shoot him
In the back. Indian brothers do not
do this, at least Ixme Wolf vowed he
would give his brother a fair chance to
defend himself. Since then he has met
his mother's murderer many times
upon the public road, but as Black
Heart was never armed, his brother
would not shoot. A recent Sunday
Was the occasion of a big wolf hunt
on the Cheyenne and Arapahoe reser-
vations In Southern Oklahoma. Among
the many other Indians who prepared
to go were these two brothers. When
they met on the hunting fcround Lone
Wolf drew his gun on Black Heart and
said: "Make ready. 1 am going to
avenge the murder of my mother
twenty-five years ago.” Then before
his brother could take aim he fired
four shots and killed Black Heart In-
stantly. When he went back hotnq,
and sat down to supper, several hours
later, Black Heart's squaw thrust a
gun through the window and shot him.
The fathers of troth Indians died many
years ago In Minnesota. The two wid-
owed squaws live yet and each have a
son. These boys will doubtless
brought up to hate each other,
haps the feud is not yet ended.
PjflBk : L.
■■■ ■■■
T .r r rkes"- I
"they shouul ■ lo|
gent Immigin** GIT ,UI
In this cun'
unless he ha( !
'Hll//! ifl’
MRS. JOSEPH B. COGHLAN.
Capt. and Mrs. Coghlan will make
visit here If he can secure a leave ot
absence.
-
•ta TKnvuMkffid MIIm qV BallruaC
It may b« tntsrsating to not* ths
~1ng statement of mllsags of the
York Central, leased and operated
lines, which shows ths
track ea>t of Buffalo tu
It la, of course, (ORjji
we-tsra
WANTED Ca»« hart
will n<rt banafit, Hrnil .1 r<
Co.. Naw Vork. for 10 aamt
Terre Haute, Ind.—When Capt. Joe
Raleigh, met Miss
Julia Barbour at a dance in this city
twenty-four years ago. It was n case
of love at first sight. He had come
■ the other ihiy nnd her
mother proeeeileil to choose for the
queen some nlpueii and plain materlnl,
but Willielinlmi flatly refused to abide
by the selection nnd xhosc figured
silks and brilliant dress innlerlnls even
for morning wear. She said that her
loving jiareut might make use of the
plain stuff if she liked them, but she '
wanted something prettier.
on
- - -----,
prlngti, N. Y. Write
r free advice about
A (Innr.tntre I < uru.
Molt dlfn>*Hlt tn cur*—< hmnlc ('onMlpntl<«n. Yet
('••caret* ('itndy ('Nthnrtl*' are uuRrNtit*o-<l t » cure
Any cue or money refunded. Dmgglati.I , .‘ .c.aoc.
Are You I'Mlng A Ufa r I «>of-Ka«i*?
It Is the only
Smarting,
Corns and Bunions.
Foot Ease, a powder to lie shaken Into
the shoes. At nil Druggists mid Shoe
Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad-
dress, Allen S. Olmsted. LeRoy, N. Y.
ef ninusement of the emperor
i is the training of goats and
! The former he has. by dint
leased and
! New York Central
! New York * Harte
Rpuyten pu-vll a
New York A futm
1 roy A Grrenbuah
Mohawk A .Mk'oum
Home, Watertown
and branchrn
Carthage Gt Arfti-----
Gouverneur
New .leraey
West Shore
Heeeh < <uel
Walktll Vr*
Hyrax uac <r
^brnuchee
•• m <|(1" 5»T*” ””sC I
nine's, and yet m their time TI™l|VH*Uo
-I tut u of the hour.
ISJWcTP’r
"Nothing but wheat'
I call a M«<a of win ut,"
| by ii lecturer apei.: ’
i a da. For partieula
| way fares, rlc., up)
of Immigration^ Dej
I tawa, ('ansda. or
Houston, Texas.
I rc« I by B
Ifliletc. I
I !'.»>( Halt 1
L 11 (i llltlc B
III Bhs'.c! .1
l< Primer. H
I A A. r. M
I >;<■ '<1 - 'hi
Btwllail B
o be A Bl | I
•Ion. 1 1
OPY.
H..
. ih’fiviT. ’ 3
’/ f '•client Combination.
"nt method nnd beneficial
T .. well known remedy,
i Fir. manii'nctnred by the
\A Flo \YRur Co., illustrate
jf obttt. )mg the liquid luxu-
ries of plants l<r. 'wn 'x> >•
laxative and p-'senting
Form most refreshing to the
nitalile to the system. It
■rect s’, engthening Inxa-
„ the system effectually,
js, headrehes and fevers
mptly and enabling one
ibitnul constipation per-
. perfect freedom from
1 r’rePaicl>uhie quality and sub-
□ nnd 'or''’"Meting on the kidneys,
I street enr IRr„ without Weakening
■i stel - will n>»m, make it the ideal
[i tion. We hi
J gics.. The «>f manufacturing figs
■ to receive i|.y are pleasant to tbe
1 lake cignmcdlcinal tpialitiesol the
J have r obtained from senna and
J. wfomatic plants, by a method
jiwn to the Cat.ifohsia Fig Cyrit
.' only. In order to get its bcni flclal
I'cts and to avoid imitations, please
hem her the full name of theCompany
sited on the front i f cverv package.
IliFORNIA fig syrup co. •
I FRAN0IBC0, CAL
T1VILLK. KT NEW YORK. X T. i
/lie by all Dniggtat.—Pries Me. per bottle 1
The Proud Futhsr.
"My boy says his ambition Is to grow
up to be a man just like his father."
"I wouldn’t let that worry me.
When 1 was your boy’s age I had a
burning derlre to be a pirate."—In-
dlnnapolls Journal.
—'—’—77 r-^®^
LSj’JL— ■
Your rume hnd hddresi on a postal card will
brin^ you absolute proof that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
for ’Pale People will cure you if you are afflicted
with any disease of the blood or nerves Mention
the disorder with which you are suffering and we
will send evidence that will convince and satisfy
you that Dr Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People will
cure you
Inese pills contain, in a condensed form, all the
elements necessary to give new life and richness to the
blood and restore shattered nerves. Theyare an un-
failing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia,
St. Vitus' dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism,
partial paralysis and all forms of weakness either
m men or women.
To a Lnwrerira Journal reporter Mr. G. II. Hnydar. n well known
eltlr.*'ii of Lawrence, Kan., reluted h wonderful alory.
••I nin now seventy yeffira of uxv. About three yearn uro 1 experi-
enced u colrfnean or numbnenx hi tbe feet, then rreepitiy up my
unlll It reached tny body. 1 grew thhj,Mi>petlt<« poor and did noi rellxh
my food. I boenmn unable to move about. ('ouHUlied eesernl dln-
tlnaiilNbrd pliyahdana. onn tidliriK me I bud locomotor uln xtn, Hiwdhcr,
cropping puralyaiR. I took their mcdlclnca but cor II.med to grow
wurae. A friend nd v I Red rue to try Dr. William*' Fink Pill* for 1'nlu
people. Before I ha<l finished luy firet. box I found tl.'H they were
b« mulling nic. I lined twelve boxen nnd whh perfectly cured. Although
os er rIx month* *lnra I need rny IrhI pill there Iiiir been no return of
the dlncHHP. My appetite I* good and general hvnltb belter than for
ninny yeara."
Look for thr full name on the package. At druggist, or direct from the
Dr. William, Medicine Co., Schenectady, N.Y. 50c. per box. b boxes $240.
(Special Letter.) '
Tbe feud of a quarter ot a century
•'ending between Black Heart and
Lone Wolf, two Chevennv Indiana, has
at last ended In death. Black Heart
was shot and killed by lx>ne Wolf on
tbe reaervatlon in Oklahoma a short
time ago. and two hours later Black
Heart's squaw killed her husband's
murderer by shooting four bullets Into
hts heart The tragedy was briefly re-
ported tn the newspapers at tbe time,
for killings are very cpmmon among
the Cbeyennea. The fact that a squaw
killed her husband's murderer was just
a trifle unique in Oklahoma Usually
the widowed one marries the slayer.
The story of the feud Is told as fol-
lows by Little Bull, ex-chlef of the
Cheyennes and Arapahoea: Black
Heart and Lone Wolf were born of the
same mother; but the father of Black
Heart was a chief In the Gros Ventres
clan of the Cheyennes, the aristocrats
of the race, while the father of lx>ne
Wolf Was Just a common Southern
Cheyenne Indian. These children were
both taken from their mother at an
early age, but when Ixme Wolf grew
up to be large enough he returned to
his mother and lived with her. Black
; Heart, the other son. heard of It. He
, Vent back to hla mother's tent also.
She spurned him because he was an
aristocrat and because of this he slew
her with his own hand. Over the dead
body of his mother, Lone Wolf made
i.s of'track'.
ot siding ........................i.OM W
number of mil,, of trnclr and
-mg......... i
Buffalo Express. April g, I89»,
The num who lias nothing to «ay
Isn’t always coiircIuiis of It until uftvr
| he bus tried to any It.
feSLjj to
A ScIfulHle Grsnitpspa.
'Tec. grandpa, my flower!" aha erl,d)
"I found It In the grasses!"
And wltt, a kindly smile the sags
Surveyed it through Ids glasses.
Rome Historical rorsoowgos
Had Thsiu.
The doctors excuse their incompe-
tence by declaring that these nuisance,
disappear as a child grows older. 1
profess to belieie them. No one in
the household remembers the historic
case of Cromwell, fortunately. Illa
warts did not vanish; you see them as
plain aa his noae on the mask taken
afier death preserved at Warwick cas-
tle. And there la Cicero; not that he
himself had warts, to speak of. though
I have seen that statement in a school-
book recently. It was an ancestor of
his who won distinction that way.
astonishing the Roman public with an
excrescence on the tip of his noae of
trefoil shape. Wherefore they call him
Cicero, vetch, and the nickname clung
to the family. It la rather comforting
than otherwise to learn that the heroes
and sages of old were afflicted with
warta. Even the "Godlike Greeks"
had them, as Lucian tells us In passing,
and their mothers applied to old
women for charms. The doctors were
as helpless then as now, of course,
with more excuse. -Pall Mall Magn
sine.
”La Creolejiil Restore those Gray Hairs of Yours
for Hwollen, ,
Sweating •Feet, i
Ask for Allen's
Parle has started a new fad- tliat of
milking tailor gowns In silk. For sum
mor this Is u pleasing Innovation unit
recalls the days when our mothers
wore brow u uml white nnd black nnd
white cheeked silks for traveling.
These tailor modes, consisting of skirt
and Jacket are built up In the same
durable silks, and may be a great sue
cess. It Is n dltttcult prophesy, but one
thing la certain, notin' of the beat
houses hnvo taken up the idea.
A Dei-lisratio i of War.
The public will watch with keen Inter-
est the fight now on in dead earnest.
One of the hugest and most Influential
firms In the east hailng arrayed Itself
against nil unscrupulous patent medi-
cine advertising, agrees Io back up with
Its -entire capital the following guaran-
tee: We hereby guarantee to alleviate
all stomach and bowel troubles by the
use of Dr. Kay s llenoiator If our In-
structlonif are followed. Hold liy drug-
? Dai I" •hf' training of gouts nnd s'*1" “l 23c ami Sl.oo. or sent prepaid
J rd*. The former he Ims. by dint ^0*.''LSXa’’” — " ”"y ?’W
' I patience, taught to do'jrlcks 1 their physicians
'([ Ikinil. One Is to Jump through >uur <=“»«•
y, Al^i- windows which me found
Bfcde In (Uilna. from the pnlnco
' ilbcst njage. It Ik said that the palace
JI *T?Pager coinplalns of the ex-
A suit at Oklahoma City haa brought
out a moat eurtoiui train of rircuiu
•tancea. a woman Nccured a divoiw
from her hunbaud, together with a
huge amoniH of alimony. The divorced
htinband then entered into an agree
ment with a good looking young man
In the neighborhood whereby the
young man was to pay court to the
woman, marry her, get control of all
her property and divide it with the
divorced huaband. The young man
carried out IUn agrv«mum1 to the let
ter and thou fled the country. 'I’he
•nit in now brought by the woman Io
recover the property of which mIio
was defrauded by the con»*plravy.
Slugcm (from the West) -Say, young
feller, if yer don’t keep your end of
dat contract, yer’ll hear something
drop!
jrs," he oAid, "Involucrate
ail the florets lingulate*
( utoIlH i:asiopetaious.
('ompoxltae. rsogvnoua—
\ pretty apocimen it I*.
Taraxacum dvns-laonls!*'
•aanp««u<i l.o«oni«tlvM,
A dsMn ar more ot th«*4S canso!
fdatlon aompound freight locomotives,
rvcautly ardared fur use ou the south-
woofers division ot the Baltiinurs &
Ohio railroad arc lu aervicc and are
giving splendid satisfaction. On the
Mississippi division they have In-
creased the train haul 40 per cent over
the old Hue. When the grade reduc-
tions arc completed tbe improvement
will be even more noticeable. J he
compound teu wheel luissonger eit
glues have developed nnexpected pull
Ing power and unusual speed.
Two I'olnta of View.
“My chlltlren," skid the poor man,
sadly, "are crglng for bread."
"Which shows." replied the rich
---—u... •<*--, tnpch you have to
NdL fine “t® crying
BromNwn Life.
1 ha Killing r,« * i.
■ Whan did they dlsirZ/r that
.mrgliir was a woman “When
looked in the glass to segT
*as on straight."—Tlt-Biw.
here to visit tbe wife and daughters of
Col. Philip Fouke, congressman from
the Bellville, Hl., district. The daugh-
ters were attending St. Agnes' Sem-
inary, and Mrs. Fouke was staying at
the hotel to be with them here. Cogh-
lan had been reared by Cot. Fouke and
was sent to Annapolis by him. At the
hotel he met some of the young men
of the city, and they Invited him to
attend their dancing club. When lie
met Miss Barbour he asked the gentle-
man who had escorted her to the dan«i
for his numbers on her card. That
was the beginning of the courtship,
He had Intended remaining In Terre
Haute only a few days, but Instead he
remained here all slimmer, spending
the full term of his leave, laying siege
to the hand of Miss Barbour. He was a
very witty, Jovial fellow, and was
much liked, notwithstanding his habit
of speaking his mind freely, a habit
which twice since has caused him to
lose numbers In the line of promotion.
In the last instance of the kind he said
some things about Mr. Cleveland
which wave more forcible than tactful.
Mrs. Coghlan Is a niece ot Col W. E
Mcl*ean, formerly deputy commission-
er ot pensions. Col. McLean says
A Itelllcosn Youth,
The boy is still father to the man
A certain prominent political hustler,
who like the British tar Ih "Pina-
fore." Is ever ready with his fists,
showed hlu pugilistic taste at an early
age.
The first day he went to school the '
family was, of coursb, anxious to know
his Impression of the n»w occupation.
"Well, Sammy," said his father,
"what did you learn your first day at
rchool?”
Straightening up and assuming
bellicose attitude. Sam replied, “Fath-
er, I learned 1 can lick every boy in
my class.”
A few days later his love ot pugilism
and frequent battles led to bls expul-
■'on. I!.’ came home that day and
surprised his good mother with the
remark. "Well, mother, thank the
l^ird 1 haw been turned out.” Cleve-
land Plaindealer.
T1B5 TRADE DEMANDS tiBOITS.
PARIS MEDICINE CG . St. Louis, Mo. Gentlemen:—We wish to congratulate you on the incwMed
sales we are having on your Drovo's Taafoloss Chill Tonlo. On emminii® our record ot
inventory under date of lan.'lfit. we find that we sold during the Chill season of 1898,
6rov«*« Tonic. Please* down order enclosed herewith, and oblige,
Yours truly, MEYER BROS. DRUG CO.
<h« .<> «IM ,
unrt |
Kim* of the we~ura flues
• -y Ei-eaur m1l?e<a, UHt their tn
■
U ftolhiug left to *ni0ll. ir,BI ,h<re
One of the )h>nvm ^<1 te wrW
lu5 '“i;;:,: * *■*’ ®»'«
with iRtrn afiet ward * * J •»«’U* or trouble
.uimXt^MKh’t"'."".'.l'.TwK u'^d'i
flwi • du.lpun <,n lhe
St»«nrn\ h lfrtric |*rn1<*
fb year* ThnuHamU *1.
lter|M*i s hut v <imnI Ii du-
hint never hwil one wingl
we have htHidtco- i
pr*tto1n< (hr futotr Mn<f c,
mln killer known
F"f Mile nt druggltot
If your dt'Rlcr dot's „.
and we will xeml you « i»,»x
STH. CRN'S I'.I.K.TUI
Ji wheat
I’ wHiyg
iRWrEAT
whit you mUrht
rut," Ih what was xaid
>ukIng of Western Can-
' <im uh lo route*, tnil-
•ply l<> HiinerintenUffiRt
‘pMitnunt Interior. Ot-
to Capt, K. Durrett,
< Variety of Jwk«< eel Irwwlee. ; <,ter •
Or iff Inal and Xolwoiod—Floleae* end
JetMMm from th* Tl«te of Humor
Witty Sayiaffm
•ihv took »he b!vi Nom bark aga n.
Hi.4 face her wlatful eye on;
1 thought,'* rliv Kaid, with quiverlny lift
a dandelion!"
aret Johnwon in Ut. Nicholas
* C.
it -) V wel1 :
/ V z X Fit. ’nann'actured by the
' B p ’ ,A Fit \vnvp Co., iilu •
J I >f obtn. )mg the liquid
J i>' ’
I I
Ij k"
An
opport’in ty of your life lx now
10 tolki fur nail ,»J d,iyg. Kgppri a<x
je us befor** rteoidln^ t > viudMr.igrj.
Best Prescription for Malaria, Chills and Fever,
Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic
It is simply iron and Quinine in a tasteless form.
Offweneburff
c«.hrondii<'k
A Oeweffalchie
Junction ....
and branches
J Mini tx-Miu he*.
“Iley ......................
Genova a Corning and
brrtiiehe* ...................... *4 82
Fall Brook and branches 10U70
w ............. R.*>
Hl i,awr.n.-.' A AUhondH.k C
Terminal IUII««y of Buflalo I
r •uitictoq Morelr * I JTytftl
H.'.l ,.n.l go,, f.uihe.l, give, .llffnee. ffii— ,
.""I ...,.ii, i, »t|,lllllM liliHterin, „r " '
l i.'.ikliiv hull groii'r „e1|« |< neiirly Total i
vrvrybrxly i.«<-, it. uv „ pn.k»ge. Ridlni
From the Washington Post: In one
of the new apartment Imuxes in town
they have nil<>p- <| a phin which docs
away with the rude 'Hello" which
came in willi the telijihoue, and which
conservative persons have ni cer been
able to use without an apology to
themsehes for Its link of elegance.
Every room lu the house is eonnected
with the office by telephone. You ring
the bell, put the reeeivei' to your ear,
nnd a respectful voice si,, r, with a ris-
ing inflection, not "Hello," but "Serv-
ice?”
Col. Fred Fiinston of tbe I'weulleth
KanRaa, whose gallnut conduct In the
riilllpplnes has won him enduring
fame, lias displayed Ids belligerent
tendencies In times of pence as well
ns In the thick of battle. "Something
more than ten years ago," says the
Emporia (Kan.) Gar.elte, "Funatoti
was a train collector on the Santa Fe
Once he took a niwlmy's gun from
him, pounded him up with It, put him
oil' the car, stiqqred the train mid
Chnsml the -cowlaiy for half a milt'
down the track, throwing rock ballast
nt him.”
too,
really
---, Z- • Gentlemen:—We wish to congratulate you on (he IncreMed
having on your Grove's Tastoloss Chill Tonic. C_--
- - 1 * we find that we sold during the Cl—----— -
. . ____i_____t____i il__ttoU
A
through a number of tp»ri,ly
•tates while the trackage >f tl.„
| York Central and leased lines I, all In
the densely populated State, oi New
York and Pennsylvania, accordmodat-
lug. by It, nnrui'ioiie t.aiue, million, ot
paasengere each year.
sept ins Her® *• ,h* of the New Yoiic
koch.n Central leased and operated lines
.....t.- ! nJ: IsS Hi’S
'"I* "f house Bpuyten Dtr vlt « port Morris 104
HUH- 4H.1 wr ! Nsw York A Putnan.................. ii Ji
" 1 ,'"1' , : ?.ro? * Greenbuah.................... too
k® i it.- HtM»vr Mohawk Ai Mu'ivna anti branch** 181. W
« i’ the lx-toi ver- | Roms. Watartown ft *-----"
PT*?tv, rs .Vnboi !
>t kt-. it torn.I htampN
"'I’ I’AM I. CO.,
i tin is*,-1», m.
::::::
:::::: 1?S
...... 4V5.10
.. , JtrJX
82M
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Ladd, J. Linn. The Matagorda County Tribune. (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 37, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 27, 1899, newspaper, May 27, 1899; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1346120/m1/3/?q=hamilton+county: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.