Wise County Messenger. (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, July 14, 1905 Page: 3 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
4
sv,
To Cure a Cold in One Day
for
COUNTY *ya CORRESPONDENCE
VALLEY VIEW.
July 11 — Everythingis looking
the boll weevil.
their cellars on account of winds
OU
[hy
slowly.
Large Bottle, 50c
Avoid All Substitutes
Bent Her Double.
SOLD AND RECOMMENDED BY
। Summar & Thomason, Druggists, Decatur, Texas
visit relatives.
Cry the Classified Column of the
Will Gose and Miss Addie Hefley
BUDGET.
This is to certify
that one botttle of
sufferers in same manner.
Respect-
fully,
E. W. Jorsey.
it
1
/
Heroine
completion. Address Tyler Com-
mercial College, Tyler, Texas.
and Jeff Buckingham were unit-
ed in marriage Sunday. We wish
stitution. Hence, no objection is
made by our business men when
they go away to open an account
with the less posted merchants
in other towns.
Three Goed and Just Reasons.
There are three reasons why moth.
ves,
use.
roll
Cures Grip
in Two Days.
on every
ii
d
siderably, is getting along nicely.
T. L. Taylor and wife- attended
the old-time singing Sunday at
Poolville.
Grady Lawrence left Thurs-
Women find quick relief in Dr.Thacher’s
Liver and Blood Syrup.
cough when other remedies fail. Sold
by Summar & Thomason.
ud •
•u
I
ire
■
Messenger when you want to buy,
sell or trade anything.
o
I
i
READ THIS
Sealy, Texas, Feb.
they will not pay their digging.
Green Horn.
cessity for anyone to notice any
advertisement of agents who pre-
pose to sell information concern
ing the State’s lands.
John J. Terrell,
Com’r General Land Office
for the purpose of getting seats j
for the church.
I Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, co,
I Seven Milion boxes sold in post 12 months. This signature, - «0-—7
There is to be an ice cream j
supper at Garvin Friday night
A Healthy Liver Makes
A Well Man
11
i
COTTONDALE.
July 7.—The people of this
I was bent
hands on j
ve
. :
ss
ch
so
■
mt
Some of our people will jour-
ney to the larger cities and pay
a price and a half for merchan-
dise that they can purchase here
tha
■
• .1 ■.
i"
you
the
The whooping cough is in our j struck by lightning Wednesday
community. ■ evening, burning her foot con-
Frank Givens, who has been better, although I had one of the
Ballard Snow Liniment Co.
St. Louis, U. S. A.
e
le
Miss Zeola Kirkpatrick and
Texas Wonder, Hall’s Great Discov-
ery, cured me of kidney troubles and
can cheerfully recommend it to other
my knees when I walked. From this
, terrible affliction I was rescued by
and Miss Erar Smith, of Cotton- Electric Bitters, which restored my
wood, were quietly married last; health and strength, and now I can
Myrtle Lawrence, who was
A Smooth Article.
When you find it necessary to use
salve use DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve.
It is the purest and best for sores,
burns, boils, eczema, blind, bleeding,
itching or protruding piles. Get the
genuine DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve.
Sold by Summar & Thomason.
For biliousness, headache, dyspepsia
take Dr.Thacher’s Liver and} Hood Syrup.
The protracted meeting will
begin next Saturday night.
ers prefer One Minute Cough Cure: sale September first. With the
First, it is absolutely harmless; second, [ list is included all necessary in.
it tastes good children like it; third, , formation about how to proceed
it cures coughs, croup and whooping . . r.
= " 5 1 to buy the land. It amounts to
27, 1903.—
NO LOTTERY.
A business education is no lot-
tery; there are no blanks. You
might forget Latin and Greek,
but no odds what your vocation
was wrecked by a storm some
over a year ago.
Yesterday we had a steady
downpour of rain lasting sever
hours.
Mrs. L E. Powell started to
Alabama to visit the bedside of
her daughter, Mrs. Tom Smith,
last Tuesday; but the news has
come that death came before
K Mrs. Powell arrived.
ever heard of. It weighed fifteen
pounds at two days old. It is
fully developed and doing well
now. It is fine blood Durham.
The fellows who advised the
farmers to plant potatoes as a
A TEXAS WONDER.!
One small bottle of the Texas Won-
der, Hall’s Great Discovery, cures all
kidney and bladder troubles, removes
gravel, cures diabetes, seminal emis-
sions, weak and lame backs, rheuma-
tism and all irregularities of the kid-
neys and bladder in both men and
women; regulates bladder troubles
in children. If not sold by your drug-
gist it will be sent by mail on receipt
of 81. One small bottle is two months’
treatment and seldom fails to perfect
a cure. Dr. E. W. Hall, sole manu-
facturer, P. O. box, 629, St. Louis Mo.
Send for testimonials. Sold bv all
druggists.
— vaadsmam
A PURELY VEGETABLE COMPOUND and the MOST PER-
FECT LIVER MEDICINE KNOWN. Do not fill your system
with Calomel. Arsenic or Quinine. HERBINE. is a guaran-
teed cure for all diseases produced by a TORPID LIVER
and IMPURE BLOOD. It will cure MALARIA without leav-
ing any of the deadly effects of many drugs used for that
purpose. One bottle purchased today may save you from
a sick spell tomorrow. Quickly cures Biliousness, Con-
stipation, Dyspepsia, Malaria, Chills, and all Liver
Complaints. Used and recommended by the medical pro-
fession generally.
A PROMINENT PHYSICIAN'S
ENDORSEMENT
Dr. A. J. Hannah, a leading physician of Umatilla,
Fla., says: “I have been using Herbine in my prac-
tice and am well pleased with the results. I always
keep some on hand, and think it a grand medicine
for Biliousness and Liver Complaints."
about six million acres, and
ranges in price per acre from $1
up, one-fortieth cash, balance on
forty years time, with three per
cent interest. It is all the land
in many counties, but is only
about one-third of what the State
has remaining unsold. In many
of the extreme western counties
where much is leased, that only
is given which is thought to
more probably be first in de-
mand. The Printing Company
promises to deliver the printed
GENERAL LAND OFFIOE.
Austin, Texas, June 15.—I
have delivered to the State Print-
er a list of the tracts of the land
that will be on the market for
Buy It New.
Now is the time to buy Chamber-
lain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy. It is certain to be needed
sooner or later and when that time
comes you will need it badly, you will
need it quickly. Buy it now. It may
save life. For sale by City Drug
Store, south side square.
The pills that act as a tonic and as
a drastic purge are DeWitt’s Little
Early Risers. They cure headache,
constipation, biliousness, etc. Early
Risers are small, easy to take and
easy to act—a safe pill. Mack Ham-
ilton, hotel clerk at Valley City. N. D.,
says: “Two bottles of these Famous
Little Pills cured me of chronic consti-
pation.” Good for either children or
adults. W. H. Howell, of Houston.
Texas, says: “For years I have used
Little Early Riser Pills in my family.
No better pill can be used for consti.
pation, sick headache, etc., than these
famous pills.” Scores of testimonials
prove their worth. Sold by Summar
& Thomasen.
at home. Add to this the rail-
road fare to and from the city
and it is readily seen that the peo-
ple are wofully deficient in the
primary lesson of economy, not
to mention their lack of appre-
ciation of the results that come
to the town by patronizing home
institutions. But as Editor Ty-
ler hints in last week’s News we
have a few citizens who seem to
think that the very thought of
going to Dallas and Fort Worth
on a "shopping tour” is suffic-
ient returns for the high prices
paid the foreign merchants.
That contingent of our citizens,
rightly dubbed by our esteemed
neighbor as "narrow - brained
dudes,” are in some degree ex-
cusable for going away from
home for their fin de siecle sup.
plies. First, that toggery nec-
essary to equip these shining
marks of Noodledom is not us-
ually carried by our merchants;
and second, the ranks of this
element of our citizenship are
made up most entirely of the
class who think they are too
“cute” or too "smart” to work,
and without work the dude must
as you use anything. It is worth
making a sacrifice to get. Add
shorthand and telegraphy to
the knowledge of bookkeeping
and business training and assure
success.
You run no risk. The busi-
ness world needs more thorough -
ly trained business men, book-
keepers, stenographers and tele-
graph operators, and will pay
you a good salary as soon as you
have finished our course. We
will see that you get a position if
you will finish our thorough,
practical and extensive courses
of bookkeeping, business train-
ing, shorthand, typewriting and
telegraphy.
Any student not satisfied at
the completion of the course that
the Byrne Simplified Shorthand
and Practical Bookkeeping are
all we claim for them can get
every cent of his tuition back
simply by presenting to the of-
fice a written statement to that
effect.
These courses are worth mak-
ing a sacrifice to get. If you are
willing to make it, write us to-
day for large illustrated free
catalogue giving full particulars
regarding time and cost requir-
A Surprise Party.
A pleasant surprise party may be
given to your stomach and liver, by
taking a medicine which will relieve
their pain and discomfort, viz: Dr.
King’s New Life Pills. They are a
most wonderful remedy, affording sure
relief and cure, for headache, dizzi-
ness and constpation. 25c at Man
& Simmons’ drug store.
Sunday, Bro. Oscar Helm oficiat- walk as straight as ever. They are
ing They will make their home simply wonderful.” Guaranteed to ■ them long and happy lives.
J cure stomach, liver and kidney disor-
at Sycamore. | ders; at Man & Simmons’ drug store.
Miss Baggett, of Archer coun- ; Price, 50c.
ty, is visiting kinfolks here.
We have the smallest calf we
To the Parmers' Unions.
Decatur, Texas, July 11, 1905.
To the Members of the Farmers'
Unions—I take pleasure in in-
forming you that H. G. Niblo,
one of the leading men of the
Union, will deliver public ad-
dresses followed by secret ses
sions of the Unions at the follow
ing times and places: Boyd,
Monday, July 24, at 1 p. m.;
Bridgeport, Monday nirht, July
24, at 8 o’clock; Chico, Tuesday,
July 25, at 1 p. m.; Alvord, Tues-
day night. July 25, at 8 o'clock;
Decatur, Wednesday, July 26, at
1 p. m. Please use your best en-
deavors to notify everybody and
secure as large an attendance as
possible. R J- Jamison,
County Business Manager.
attending school at Childress for best doctors I could get.
several years, is again at home. double and had to rest my
Mr. Trube Gage, of Sycamore,
ed to finish the course, and kind be a financially embarrassed in-
of position you may expect on
fine now. Some complaint of community have been hunting
Be”
in life may be, this business .
training will b^ worth ten times
Hope of the Nation.
An Illinois editor, who is close
to the heart of the farmer and
1 appreciates him at his full worth,
immortalizes him in prose and
verse. This is what he sings
and he gets pretty close to the
1 truth:
“In May the horny handed
' farmer humps himself. Mr the
year s supply of hog and hominy
depends solely upon his efforts.
If it wasn’t for the farmer there
wouldn’t beany wheat to corner,
no corn or rye for the distilleries,
no barley for the brewers, no
sugar-cured hams, no cattle upon
a thousand hills, no potatoes, no
cotton, no sheep, no pumpkin pie
"The teamsters strike for
shorter hours, the miner wants
more pay, the mason and the
carpenter demand an eight hour
day. The section hand throws
up his job, the factories are clos-
ed, and everybody else, it seems,
to work is indisposed. But still
the farmer never kicks, he plants
and sows and plows, he works
till dark and than goes home and
milks ten head of cows. He nev
er asks for shorter hours, he
stops not to complain, he’s up at
four o'clock next day and milks
the cows again. Then to the
field he hurries forth and sings
his merry tune and wonders
what the price of hogs will be
along in June.”
list by July first. Then it will
be ready for free distribution to
every one who will ask for it.
These lands are for those want-
ing homes on them. The terms
of sale are easy. Every home-
less person with a few dollars
will have an equal chance with
those of greater possessions. I
am determined that this informa-
tion shall reach those most de-
sirous of taking advantage of the
State’s liberal terms. To that
end you are asked to kindly give
this a place in your paper, and
suggest that all your exchanges
publish it for the benefit of their
readers. In addition to this ef
fort I shall mail copies to every
county and precinct officer and
postmaster in the State. It has
been and is yet my purpose to
bring reliable information from
the Laud Office as close to the
people of the State as is possible
through every available means.
If any reader wants a list just
write me a card or a letter to
that effect. As a medium for
disseminating (reliable informa-
tion newspapers have no com-
petitor, hence their co-operation
is asked in this effort in behalf
of their readers. The public
ought to know more about our
public lands, how they are dis-
posed of and where located. This
information being given free by
this department there is no ne-
Lawson Reeves and family and 1 ”1 knew no one for three weeks, day morning for the Nation toj
. , r . „ " when I was sick with typhoid and kid-1
his father. Uncle Ben eeves, ney trouble,” writes Mrs. Annie Hun -
of Oklahoma, are vising here. ter, of Pittsburg. Pa., “and when I got
,...!
.
ve
to
ap-
money crop missed the mark, as its cost. You will use it as long
RU8H BRANCH.
July 9 —Last Wednesday af-
ternoon a severe wind
storm came up from the
northwest. It blew down
corn, damaged orchards consid-
erably by blowing off the fruit
and more or less wreckirg the
trees. It blew the Rush Branch
church off the foundation; also
Alex Hambleton’s house was
blown off the blocks His house
The high wind on last Wednes- and storms.
day evening blew down quite a A large number of our people
lot of corn. attended the picnic at Bridge
Mrs. Cundiff’s brother, of port Tuesday and Wednesday.
Crockett, is visiting her for a George Matheson’s two little
few days. girls are very sick with typhoid
Mrs. El Mattix left Sunday fever.
for a visit to her sonin eastern Henry Bridges, who is working
Texas. I in the tax assessor's office, is
Mrs. Arledge, who has been spending a few days with his
sick for some time, is improving I wife at Cottondale.
■Ui
III.:
' iu
11. •
l a
a.
I i
* : t
w ft
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Halcomb, N. W. Wise County Messenger. (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, July 14, 1905, newspaper, July 14, 1905; Decatur, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1560978/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .