Cherokee County Banner. (Jacksonville, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, October 4, 1901 Page: 6 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Cherokee County Banner and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Jacksonville Public Library.
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Great Flood Sale Celebration!
We propose now to celebrate
Just one year ago we made an advent here with Our Great Flood Sale.
THOMPSON
KIDNEY DISEASES
a W. T. PINKARD. .a
date
I
• Jacksonville, Texas. •
CAN SAVE YOU MONEYON BRICKWORK
R. L. robin:
w. M. InBODEN.
C. B. EnANEL.
Imboden, Robinson & Eman
Pure Juices from Natural Roots.
Rusk and Jacksonville, Texas.
Will practice in all the Courts.
Prepared by JAMES F. BALLARD, St Louis, Mo,
Texas.
€
(
o
Q
Nine=
Tenths
of
all the
People
Suffer
from a
Diseased
Liver.
z
o
1
Jlttorn^s
JH1D
CcunseIors=at=Laiv.
M. H. Fite,
FIRE INSURANCE
AGENT....
Jacksonville,
A. S. WHITTEN,
DEALERS IN —
General M erchandise. |
PECULATES the Liver, Stomach and Bowels,
n Cleanses the System, Purifies the Blood,
pURES Malaria, Biliousness, Constipation,
• Weak Stomach and Impaired Digestion.
Every Bottle Guaranteed to Give Satisfaction.
TARG-E; BOLE, - SMALL D08E.
Price, 50 Cents.
We have seen the frail infant
when the faint struggle for ex-
istence seemed almost ended, re-
suscitated and made strong by
the use of White’s Cream Ver-
mifuge. Price, 25 cents.
Callon C. C. Childs for staple,
fancy groceries and feed stuff.
Next door to Wiggins’ beef mar-
ket. Phone No. 28.
HERBINE.
Staple and Fancy
Groceries,
Hay, Corn, Oats,
Bran and Feed Stuff.
We carry a full line of Saddles, Bridles,
Collars, Single and Double Harness, Wagon
Harness, Etc. We controll the sale of the old
reliable Studebaker Wagon Co’s. Goods, and
have a car of their Wagons and Buggies to be
here in 18 days. We are agents for the Good-
fellow Shoe Co’s, goods. They make the World’s
Best Shoes. Every pair guaranteed.
We make a Special Low Price on staple grocer=
ies. We will save you money on your Fall
purchases. See us before you buy.
Boys Suits, Men’s and Youths Suits===In fact this
week will be one of the biggest Bargain Sales that
we have ever had.,. ~
General Jacksonville.
Contractor. Texas..........
Maliy’s Suggestions.
Under College Station
Pile=ine Cures
Money refunded if it ever fails.
Anti-Ague cur es chills and fever.
It is Strange
that some people who say they
never read patent medicine ad-
vertisements will be found lug-
ging home every now and then a
bottle of some favorite remedy
of theirs. We don’t bother you
with much reading but just ask
you to try a bottle of Dr. Cald-
well’s Syrup Pepsin for consti-
pation, indigestion and stomach
troubles. 50c and $1.00 sizes.
At Ambrose Johnson’s.
Pale, Puny, Children.
If a child has a bad smelling
breath, if it habitually picks it’s
nose, if it is cross and nervous,
if it does not sleep soundly, if it
is holloweyed, if it has a pale,
bloodless complexion, if it is
growing thin and lifeless, give
it Mother’s Worm Syrup and
you will remove the cause of its
distress quickly. Then will its
little cheeks get red and rosy,
its appetite and digestion im-
prove, and its health be better.
Price only 25 cents. No other
worm-killer so effective.
Corn-huskers' sprained wrists
barbed-wire cuts, burns, bruis-
es. severe lacerations and exter-
nal injuries of any kind are
promptly and happily cured by
applying Ballard’s Snow Lini-
ment. Price, 25 and 50 cents.
are the most fatal of all dis-
eases.
CAI CV’C kidney cure is i
iULl I • Guaranteed Remedy
or money refunded. Contains
remedies recognized by emi-
nent physicians as the best for
Kidney and Bladder troubles.
PRICE 50c, and $1.00.
For Sale by Cherokee Drug Co.
Ike L. Weil, who for 10 years
has represented Hirsch Bros. &
Co. of Louisville and Pittsburg,
writes as follows: “I have been
traveling for ten years and, like
most traveling men, I contract-
ed a severe case of indigestion
and constipation; at times would
have a severe headache. On the
recom mendation of a friend of
mine, I tried Dr. Caldwell’s Syr-
up Pepsin. After taking two
bottles I found that I was com-
pletely cured. I cheerfully rec-
ommend it to all my traveling
brothers. At Ambrose John-
son’s.
There are thousands of people
suffering untold torture from
piles, because of the popular
impression that they cannot be
cured. Tabler’s Buckeye Pile
Ointment will cure them and the
patient will remain cured. Price.
50 centsin bottles. Tubes, 75
cents.
Pain Can be Cured.
Why suffer pain? Pain is try-
ing to kill you. Why not kill
pain. Nothing kills pain, either
internal or external pain, so
quickly and so effectively as
Gooch’s Quick Relief. Cures
cramp and colic.
Jacksonville COMPANY?|$
arsenate of lead, use ene pound of
it first well dissolved n a gallon of
water and then added to 100 gal-
lons. Spray the infested crops well,
and you wll destroy the worms by
the million.
For those who cannot spray, the
followng wlil be a valuable and im-
portant manner of attack: Take
the Paris green or London purple
and mix one pound of it well with
ten pounds of flour, and then sim-
ply dust the crops being injured
well with this mivture while dew
is on. Any of the poisons and
preparations mentioned will kill the
pest by the millions and will help
i reduce their numbers so this season
\ that their appearance next season
‘ need not be feared very much. I
shall be glad to hear of all of those
farmers who have lost crops from
\ their attack, and also report on the
results obtained from the applica-
tion of any of the ways and means
and remedial measures above indi-
cated.
In this connection it may be well
to call attention to another mat-
ter. It is important that this de-
partment finish its investigations
and tests of remedies and ways and
means of successfully fighting the
“green bug” of wheat, but our
funds are exhausted and we are
waiting for the present legislature
to either give us those funds or
discontinue the work. It will be
largely as the people wish it, and if
the wheat growers and other farm-
ers in north Texas will speak up
and write their members in the
house and senate to liberally en-
dow this department with enough
funds to continue this work it will
mostly be well provided for. It is
important to act at once, as the
appropriation bill is being dis-
cussed in the house now, and there
must lie quick action if any good is
to be done by your writing and re-
quest.
G. A. Fischer in the Engineer-
ing Department of the Mexican
International Railroad, Ciudad
Porfirio Diaz, Mexico, says:“The
medicine is just as recommended
and has benefitted me verymuch.
I am recommending Dr. Cald-
well’s Syrup Pepsin to all of my
friends in this community and
others who wish an invaluable
remedy for the cure of Dyspep
sia or Constipation. Ambrose
Johnson.
Our Big Flood Sale with a grand selection of new and up=to=date dry goods at the Lowest prices we
have ever been able to offer you. Owing to the rush of trade we have not had time this week to quote
you prices, but you will find during this sale some of the most surprising bargains ever seen in our store!
Aregt.Bergainsrdu- Staple Dry Goods, Outings, Ginghams, Calico, Black Dress Goods. Hadies'an dgCpit drensehoes.
Be Not Deceived.
Don’t think you can neglect
your health and reach old age.
The way to longevity is to be
kind to nature and then nature
will be kind to you. Constipa-
tion. inactive liver, etc., are foes
to nature Mexican Root Pills
help nature. Try them. They
cure by cleaning and strength-
ening.
A Complete Cure.
When you take Gooch’s Sar-
saparilla you find it a complete
cure for bad blood.
_________ •______
Preacher Protects Pelicans.
“Why should pelicans be killed
near Cleburne or near any other
place?” asked Rev. Hudson Stuck
of Dallas. “The News announces
this item upon its ‘sporting' page,
as though slaughter of these
fine and curious water fowl, our
only native, piscivorous, natatorial
birds were something to be proud
of. It takes neither skill nor cour-
age to shoot pelicans. Any one
who can hit a barn door can hit a
pelican. They are never eaten, ex-
cept by starving explorers. Why
should our waterways be forever
cleared of these most interesting
creatures, the last straggling com-
pany of the winged battalions that
once thronged their banks?
“The great wading birds, the
stork, the crane and the heron,
perhaps the most picturesque crea-
tures that can grace a landscape,
are rapidly being exterminated. The
splendid flamingo, gayest of all
sub-tropical fowl, is disappearing
from the coast, though less than
ten years ago I have myself seen
them rise in such numbers that
they made a pink cloud in the sky.
It will not be long before the last
‘unhappy flamingo’ will cry, in the
words of the rhyme, ‘They have
shot me, by Jingo.’ The pelican is
rare upon any inland waters and is
becoming none too common at the
coast. The local sportsman, with
his item in the News, will make the
pelican as extinct as the dodo in a
few years. And one would ask, to
what advantage? The country will
be distinctly a less interesting
country when all its curious great
birds are destroyed. The lover of
nature will find half his pleasure
gone, beside the ‘reeking tube’ and
his ‘No. 7 shot,’ and his brave boast
of the blood of harmless birds.”
Prof. Mally has this:
This office has had a great many
complaints the past few days con-
cerning some worms which are at-
tacking everything green in the
fields and eating it bare of all foli-
age, etc. Reports indicate that it
has stripped or eaten the foliage of
sorghum, June corn, turnips, crab
grass, early sown wheat, cow peas,
as well as many other grass and
weeds. From some speciments sent
me I find that the pest in question
is the fall army worm, called lap-
hygma frugiperda. These worms
when full-fed and full-grown enter
the ground to transform into the
third or chrysalis stage. From this
they emerge again as moths or
“'millers” and deposit their eggs.
Each female deposits anywhere
from 300 to 700, and hence their
rate of increase is simply astonish-
ing. In Texas there are two and
sometimes three broods or genera-
tions. The outlook for north
Texas is that there may be a brood
thimseason yet, following the pres-
ent one. The fact that the worms
go into the ground to transform
makes it important to do a great
deal of winter plowing this year, so
as to break up their cells and de-
stroy the pupae or chrysalis. It
will also be best to follow infested
lands this season with some cultiva-
ted crop next spring, in order that
the pupae may be broken up and
destroyed before the moths have a
chance to hatch out for the next
season.
It will also be important to make
a determined fight on the pest now
by poisoning the crops and plants
they are attacking and feeding upon
now, in order that another out-
break may be averted another sea-
son. Those having spraying ap-
* paratus may use the following:
\ Take one pound of paris green,
make a paste with some water ; then
add to 150 gallons of water and
mix well; then take one pound of
quicklime and slack in water and
strain; then add this lime water to
the poisoned water and spray the
plants thoroughly. If you have
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Pinkston, A. L. Cherokee County Banner. (Jacksonville, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, October 4, 1901, newspaper, October 4, 1901; Jacksonville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538157/m1/6/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Jacksonville Public Library.