Wise County Messenger. (Decatur, Tex.), No. 240, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 21, 1889 Page: 3 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Wise County Messenger and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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The Heat Testimonial
♦
EDUCATIONAL.
Jheumatjsm
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paved. —Life.
newspapers
DETECTIVES
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w. N. U. DALLAS.
37-89
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Egyptians delight
water illy.
tiie
asking me about this prize-fight?"
v.
will be boys, you know.”
“He has no business to be with such
(ONSUMPTON.
the law, swept off the face of the earth.
the poppy. Mars the ash, Bacchus the
OWEN ELECTRIC BELT & APPLIANCE CO,
Saw
1a
U
Coat.
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?
nations had their emblematic flowers.
The special flower of the Hindoos, for
such com?
complaints
For agency and offers on “Tansill’s Punch”
5c. Cigaraddress R. W. Tansill & Co.,Chicago.
The greatest foe to progress is the lazi-
ness which self-conceit begets.—Spinoza.
n
d
Believe me, it is a noble thing to give.—
Ovid.
Talent is power, tact is skill. Talent knows what
to do and tact how to do it. If you have any tact
about you order Risido, Balloon and Mexican Com-
merce cigars from P. P. Martinez, Wholesale To-
bacconist, Dallas, Texas.
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To-morrow’s life is too late; live to-day.
—Martial.
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Business College . largest. Best ano
cheapest. Stuoents traoe ano oo a
Banning business with the Stuoents
OF THE SEVEN LeaoiNQBusiNESS COLLEGES
of the State. Fine Catalogue S Speci-
mens of PENMANSHIR FREE. ERPREUITTPnes.
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crutches. I also bad neuralgia in the head.
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THE DALLAS WEEKLY NEWS,
THE LEADING AGRICULTURAL PAPER OF TEXAS.
Send for Sample Copy Free.
Next morning when he went down-
stairs his wife handed him the paper,
saying:
“I had the curiosity to look to see
yet published for any blood medicine is the First -class physicians did
printed guarantee of the manufacturers o. "Than • in " " “ ‘
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery,
When everything else falls, Dr. Sage’s Ca
tarrh Remedy cures. 50 cents, by druggists
J
(
-a
grape leaf, Hercules the poplar, and
Jupiter, naturally, the monarch of
trees, the oak.
$237ER MEDICINE CO., NEW YORK. 5
Small Pill. Small Dos?. Small Prise.
"* *--2
Hetherington 4 Nason, 405 and 407 Elm St.
Dallas, Tex., have a 12x20 Engine and 48x12
boiler, Pipes, Pumps and all Complete,
Sinker Davis 4 Co.’s make almost as good as
new. Will sell cheap. We have a few Busi-
ness Directories and Memorandum Books
still on hand, which we will send to those
using machinery on receipt of a two cent
stamp and address.
benefit or cure in all cases of those diseases
for which it is recommended, or money paid
for it will be returned. It cures all diseases
arising from torpid liver and impure blood
and their names are legion. All skin, Scalp
and scrofulous affections, Eruptions, Sores
Swellings, Saltrheum, Tetter. Erysipelas and
kindred diseases, are among tho-e in which
the “Discovery” effected marvelous cures.
You can’t say, in the words of the
Mikado, when the morning dew evaporates,
that it never will be mist.—Philadelphia
Press.
K
________306 North Broad way, ST LOUIS, M j.
RUPTURE ’
WmwfflW
D A r;vRTrgIg If you want to secure a ;
n-JL* X O patent write to H. H. KERR 1
Solicitor, FORT WORTH, TEX., formerly an ex- |
Milliner of applications for patents in United States i
Patent Office. Washington, D. C. (Mention paper.)
R. P. Dodge, Atlanta, Ga., tays: My
wife had catarrh and nothing did her any
good. Her constitution finally tailed and ,
poison got into her blood. I placed her on
a use of B. B. B., and to my surpiise her
recovery was rapid and complete.”
W. P. McDanDI, Atlanta. Ga., writes:
“I was much emaciated and had rheuma-
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id
re
to
n
e-
ll.
at
of
er
rt
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most of all in the heliotrope; though
Rheumatism and Catarrh.
Rheumatism and catarrh are both blood
diseases. In many severe cases they have
yielded to treatment with B. B. B (Botanic
Blood Balm), made by Blood Balm Co.. At-
lanta, Ga. Write for book of convine ng
proofs. Sent tree.
(9p 3 g95AR and Whisky Habits cured at
24 $3 LS 5 a a jMi home without pain. Book of
■ 55 S III 5783 particulars sent FEEE.
Will ““ B. M. WOOLLEY. M. I>.
jdtzT Atlanta, Georgia.
%83 Office, 6512 Whitehall Street.
B•
7RG •®—
Shall I stick to the farm? You’ll have
W. H. GRIFFIN, Jackson, Mich,, writes:
“Suffered with Catar h lor fifteen years.
Halls Catarrh Cure cured me.” Sold by
Druglists, 75c.
dilated upon. and
4? g to S8a dny Samplesworth 82 15 FREE,
phe) Lines n t unde r horses feet Write Brewster
L Safe1-- Rein Holdet Companv, Holly, Michigan.
THE DALLAS WEEKLY NEWS,
THE LEADING AGRICULTURAL PAPER CF TEXAS.
Send for Sample Copy Free.
PROMPyya „PeRMANEN[
tJcgbsOib
C.BATO-MD .TheChas-A-VogelerCO’
EVERY FARMER
| living at.** lance from a physician
shoua, hhes be prepared to treat
if you are suffering from Malaria, ask
your druggist for Shallenberger’s Antidote
for Ma aria. If he don t have it, and tells
you he has something just as good, don't in
irve hom, but send one dollar to Dr. A. T.
Fballenberger, Rochester, Penn., and get
the Antidote by mail. A few doses will re
store you to perfect health. The Medicine
is in the term of pills, but is not a purga-
tive. It not only destroys Malaria, but is an
excellent tonic.
es talking about it.
W aco E"emale Col lego
4th Session Opens sept. 9, 1889. Fourteen Officers
and Teachers. Unsurpassed location, buildings and
appointments. Music. Art, Elocution, Languages,
Literature, Calisthenics, Home Life, Health. Last
Music Class 112. Has but one object in view—the
education of girls, whose every interest will be look-
ed alter. Everything under one roof. Advantages
considered, the cheapest school in the state. For
catalogue address R. O. Rounsavall, Waco. Tex.
“You talking about
, pvugmvs What company have
... ... , ! you been in? Mary (to the mother),
1 he Assyrians for ages proudly wore do you hear this boy? Do you hear him
c xn+or ill. - W’evntione diol irrht < . . • . - * ......
AATrn Agents for “Living Leaders of the
VANLU W ■ ihl." New bo ok, just out. Canvass
ers coin money withit Address A. P. Foster & Co.
Dallas,Texas. < Mention this i'uuerj
DR. ISRAEL’S 7/07
ELECTRO-GALVANIC TRUSS, Aw ith Dr.
Owen's Electric Belt Attachment. 1 S25 Thistrussis
v cm with ease and comfort. The cur- E1T2 r rout can be
made mild or strong. This is the only combined
electric truss and belt ever made. It "7 1‘ will CI RK
Rupture In from GO to 1)0 days. For full description of Dr.
Owens Electro-Galvanic Belts, Spinal Appliances, Trusses and
Insoles send He for FREE illustrated pamphlet which will be
eeat you in plain sealed envelope Sold only by the
SIGKMEAMAGHE
The Southwestern School of the Bible
DALLAS, TEXAS.
A training school for Christian workers. Evan-
gelical, unsectarian. The Bible the only text book.
Two years course. Tuition free. Fall term begins
November 1. Prospectus sent free to any address.
Address Rev. C. I. Scofield, Dallas, Texas-
1 1
y
C-SENT TO RESPOXSIBIEPARFIKSON 30 DAYS TRIAL.
p.pwE9g ELECTRIC INSOLES..
_ , rend 8c postage for FREE il lustrated pamphlet, which will be
RAre 1 sentyou in plain sealed envelope. Mention this paper, addroes
DOJ 3 OWEN ELECTRIC BELT & APPLIANCE CO.
emblems of power; the myrtle and the
rose of love; the olive and the violet of
learning; the ash of war, and the grape-
leaf of festivity.
Even the days of the week, as we use
them now, are named from deities who
had each his special flower. The sun
playmates. He never hears me speak-
ingof any such low and disgraceful ex- > -rNI nea —
hibitions. such brutalizing spectacles. ELECTRIC belt
I would have this prize-fighting
business put down by the strong arm of
John M. Davis, Tyler, Texas, writes; “I
Was subject a number of years to spells ol
inflammatory rheumatism, which six bottles
of B. B. B., thank heaven, has entirely
cured. I have not felt the slightest pain
since.” ____________________
Reject a horse that is “split up”—htta
is, shows much day-light between his
thighs. Propelling power comes from be-
hind. and must be deficient in horses with-
out due muscular development between
the thighs.
H"SLICKEReu
iIKIUSELi 2120240)
AND TRUSS,"
COMBINED.
------ -------- —I me no good.
Then I tried B. B. B., and its effects were
____ ______ ________ __________ | magical. I cheerf.lly recommend it as a
which warrants that wonderful medicine to good tonic and quick cure”
Mrs. Matilda Nichols, Knoxville, Tenn.,
writes: “I had catarrh six years and a
most distressing cough, and my eyes were
much swollen- Five bottles of B. B. B.,
thank God! cured me.”
. . .. . , , “What is that?” exclaimed the
instance, has always been the marigold. tonished parent.
The Chinese display, as their national ’ prize-fighting?
flower, the gorgeous chrysanthemum. •
FRANCES E. WILLARD'S dnmpin: AE YDr
Aut biogrraphy and history of W. C. T l'. 6.000sol
before issued; 100.GW guaranteed. Big loney fu
Solicitors For liberal terms an I territory, nrdres
U.J.8nirilAr()..!*hiiadrlphia. ACiNTS WANTED.
SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITYANLADIES’ ANNEX
Greorsetowm "Poxee.
Next sessiop opens September 1Cth with improved facilities. The rough course* in distinct schools lead-
ing to B. S., B. A., M. A., degrt e*. Book-keeping and commerciallaw taught. Strict moral discipline en-
forced. Helping ha l and cottages under a professor. Bo tr i in families 813.5) per scholastic month. LADIES
ANNEX is a large, beautiful rt ne buildin : on campus of thirty acres, ten blocks fron male college, where
young iadies board and pursue their studie- apart from the boys, enjoying hope comforts and the
consiant care and supervision of teachers; taught in Literature, Music, Art, Elocution; may receive
same degrees a ; young men. The regular expens e of University or Annex need not exceed $110
year. Tne Training School is modeled after the Webb system, and thoroughly prepares young students
for lege classes. They are responsible to tea hers for conduct in and out of school. Expenses $20 less
than University. For further information and Aalogu nddress,
•UIN W. IIEIDT. Rerent Georgetown, Texas.
’CARTER’S
WlTTLE
5 6 VER
H PILLS.
child compare with that of an adult,
and it is much sought in France for > to in this wet weather unless you get it
everything. Salary and commission to agents. Write i
for full particulars. Historica! Piib.Cu..St.Louis,Mo.
Ifl PCMTQ in p stag ‘ stamps wi!l buy a book I
U UL5 which will tell you all the points .
about a horse.
PEABODY PUBLISHING COMPANY, DALLAS, UMS.
FORT WORTH UNIVERSITY,
Fort Worth, Texas.
TEN PROFESSORS-------------SIX DEPARTMENTS.
Fine Buildings, Board Reasonable.
Send for Catalogue.
REV. A. A. JOHNSON. D. D., Pres,
(M ption this paper every time.)
s,g ar 55 {; SILDY. BoOk-keeping,Penmanshp,
• 8 29 C Arithmetic, Shorthand, etc., thor
uchiy taught by mail. Low rates. Circulars free.
BRYANT’S COLLEGE. 431 Main St.. Buffalo, N. Y
The Best 4
positively cured by
these Ltio Pills.
They also relieve Dis-
tress f rom Dyepepsia,In-
digestion an) TooHearty
Eating. A perfect rem-
edy for Dizziness,Nausea
Drowsiness, Bad Taste
tn the Mouth. Coated
Tongue,Pain in the Side.
TOlPID LIVEE. They
regulate the Bowole.
Purely Vegetable.
Price 23 Cents;
Gloves of Human Skin.
“Gloves which are sold as kid are
often made of human skin,” said Dr.
Mark L. Nardyz, the Greek physician,
of 716 Pine street, yesterday. The skin
on the breast,” continued the physician,
“is soft and pliable and may be used
for the making of gloves. When people
buy gloves they never stop to question
about the material of which they are
made. The shopkeeper himself may be
in ignorance, and the purchaser has no
means of ascertaining whether the ma-
terial is human skin or not. The fact
is the taning of human skin is exten-
sively carried on in France and Switzer-
land . The product is manufactured
into gloves, and these are imported in-
to this country. Thus you see a person
may be wearing part of a distant rela-
tive’s body and not know it.”
Then the doctor drew from a drawer
a brand new pair of black gloves.
“There,” he said, “is a fine article
made from the skin of a child. As the
hide of a kid compares with that of a
goat, so, of course, does the skin of a
“The days of miracles a-e past.” That
may be, and yet some of the mos: wonderful
things ever witnessed by the human fam ly
bate occurred within the Tastdecaae. Not
the east of these wonders is the succes s
which the agents of B F. Jchnson & Co.,
Richmond, \a., are meeting. Write them
for particu ars. They will show you how to
work wonders.
And P1sO‛S cure zor
Consumption THE
BEST remedy for
hoarseness and to
clear the throat.
but by no means simple
Diarrhoea, Cholera Mor-
VAgnag MFM Learn Telegraphy and Railrond
I vURU •EI Agent’s Business here.andsecure
good situations. Write J. D. BROWN. Sedalia, Mo
bus and Cramps.
The Best Remedy
for such disorders is Perry Davis’
Pain-Killer, which never fails to afford
relief. A single dose will do more
to drive away pain and promote the
natural action of the stomach than any
remedy you ever tried. The virtues of
PAIN-KILLER
are not confined to the human race—
it is used with equal success either ex-
ternally or internally for
HORSES CATTLE.
It cures Lameness, Sores, and uts,
while for Colic it is the best remedy in
the market.
Sold by all Druggists at
25c,, 50c.. and $1.00 a BOTTLE.
ga —c«RT,A, find that Piso’s Cure
r 2702 • 5 19,94 for Consumption not
2 81 S I I II " only PREVENTS, but
V E*-**a CUKES Hoarse
, ‘Oh!” replied the mother—mother-,
the papyrus leaf, used by the ancient j like—-I suppose he has heard some of '
Egyptians in place of paper, may also 1 his playmat
be regarded in a high sense as the ---- -
symbolic plant of the land of the Nile.
The Greeks and Romans were in the
habit of distributing the flowers in their
luxurious gardens among their gods
and demigods, just as in yet remoter
times the sweet basil and the moon
flower were sacred to Asiatic deities.
In the Roman custom, to Juno was
But the symbolism of flowers dates
lack to periods far older than the time
of the war of the roses. The acient
t .
, . . .. . . My lad. if I ever hear you talking about
devoted the lily, to Venus the myrtle anything of the kind again PH—I’ll—
and rose, to Minerva the olive and the well, you’ll vet into trouble, that’s all.”
violet, Dianna had the dittany, Ceres --
(Sunday), sunflower; the moon (Mon-
day), daisy; Tuesday (the god Tui’s
day), the violet; Wednesday (the god
Woden’s day), the blue monkshood;
Thursday (the god Thor’s day), the
burdock; Friday (the goddess Frea’s
day), the orchis, and Saturday
(Saturn’s day), the horse tail.
W e also find that in our time the
sacred days in the calendar of the Eng-
lish Church have all their flower or
plant emblems, the principal of which
are the holly for Christmas, the palm
for Palm Sunday and the amaranth for
All Saints’ Day.
Monarchs and nations have often had
their symbolic flowers. The thistle is
the emblem of Scotland and the sham-
rock of Ireland. The fleur de lis is the
badge of the royal house of France, and
the amaranth of that of Sweden. The
rose blooms forever on the royal coat
of arms of England.—Florist.
DR. OWEN S
ELECTRIC BELT
AND SUSPENSORY.
Patented Aug. 16, 1887. Improved July 30,1839.
. DR. OWEN'S ELECTRO-
.diau(E*8AL5, , galvanic eodybeli
s.MK, and suspensory •«
—31.3335 15AN 33 3, guaranteed to cure the fol
3685 ■ ***i, ... comnpiaints,
pGeney" 8
88* tiveness. Kidney Diseases
NE- Nervonaa ss. Trembling,
r A4-Ki* Se xsal Exhaustion Wasf
' st ing of Body. Diseases
cansed-by V Indiseretionz in Youth. Age, Mar
nea or Sin- 76 gleLife. Infactalldiseasesportaining
tethewomb ■’ or genital oreans of male or female.
were followed by an eloquent tribute
to the power of the press.
In conclusion. Mr. Him referred
briefly to the conflict between capital
and labor, which, he said, would never
be setled except by the immutable
lews of justice, and education would
bring that settlement about.—Chicago
Times.
$2,000 A YEAB^SSg
opportunity of maltin ; 1 times that amount. Best
books in the e ountry. Best terms. Address Hol-
loway & Co., 112 N. 6th St. St. Louis, Mo.
glove purposes.
“The skin on a man's back makes
good sole leather,” said the doctor.
“Nature has protected man’s spine by
a skin which is much heavier than that
on other parts of the body. Here is a
piece of well tanned skin from the calf
of a man’s leg.” And the doctor dis-
played a bit of white leather, strong
and thick.
In a museum in Belgium are the
bodies of six members of one family.
They were all buried in a tanyard, and
when they were exhumed years after-
ward the skin, ilesii and even the bones
were well prererved, so thoroughly
tanned were all the parts. These
specimens are in a better state of
preservation than are the Egyptian
mummies.
A few years ago General Benjamin
Butler effectually checked the tanning
of human skin in Massachassets, and
since that time the business has ceased.
The few samples of tanned human skin
now obtainable were made by scientists
as tin experiment.
Dr. Nardyz formerly possessed a fine
pair of slippers made of the skin of a
MAN IN HIS CRUDITY.
Charles H. Ham Lectures on “The
In ventive Genius” at the Princess
Opera- House.
"Whether we accept one or the
other of the theories of the origin of
the human race, it is agreed that the
first man stood naked upon the earth
and wanted nothing,” said Charles H.
Ham at the Princess opera-house last
evening
His lecture, “The Inventive Genius,”
was delivered to an appreciative audi-
ence composed of members and friends
of the Chicago Secular union. Mr.
Ham began at the beginning, pictur-
ing man in his crude and savage state
and following him through the various
stages of his development and progress
up to the present time. His first idea
of architecture reculted in the con-
struction of a dug-out, then a hut. and
his inventive genius grew as his neces-
sities broadened until architecture be-
came an art, and the elegant mansions
of to-day are a witness to the high de-
gree of perfection to which it has
grown.
Man in his first estate was a wander-
er, a hunter, with flint-pointed arrows
killing animals for food. He took a
long step forward when the thought
of domesticating the animals, and
when the thought was put into prac-
tice there became shepherds and shep-
herds’ associations, which devel-
oped into tribes and communities.
The beginning of commerce was de-
scribed by the lecturer in the rude
methods of the trade between the
tribes, and followed from century to
century in its improvement and growth.
The discovery of the uses of wool, the
art of spinning and weaving it into
cloth and of coloring it. and of the per-
fection of the machinery by which
labor was reduced in the manufacture
of woolen goods were told in detail. I he
different modes of agriculture in the
different ages, and how the inventive
genius of the present century supplied
the reaper and mower and brought
about the present advanced modes of
tilling the soil, sowing the seed, and
gathering in the products were enu-
merated in order.
The history of cotton and cotton fab-
rics was similarly dealt with. The
cotton-gin was invented in 1792. The
growth of cotton manufacture in the
United States has kept pace with that
of England. The progress of ship-
building, the invention of the steam- '
boat, and the appearance of the vari-
ous appliances and machinery for navi-
gation were brought in as evidences of
the inventive genius of man.
Iron and its uses constituted one of
the greatest discoveries of any age.
and the lecturer went though the cate-
gory of what the inventive genius had
done with iron, from the manufacture
of a nail to the invention of a Corliss !
engine and the railways, locomotives. I
and steel vessels. The invention of 1
movabie types and the printing-press
and the development of tin modern
... .. how the prize-fight came out, and it
So we may infer that among the appears Kilrain wi s whipped.”
Romans the lily and the oak were the . Whipped!” exclaimed the denounc-
er of prize-fighting, “then by jingsl’ve
lost io!"
I W-nted in every count v. Shrewd men to act under instructior
; in our Secret Service. Experience not necessary. Send 2c. nr at.
GrannanDetectiveureauCo.44Arcade.Cincinnati "
BRYANT & STRATTON Ensrness ana Nhors
THEST O R Y of RRANA is eory 1 .ouia, Missouri. 800 Students Yearly. ahaalns;
win in '■ by the famous author, J. W. Hu.1. A BOE xuccessful in Ketting positions. Send tor droalar
that the wh ol ■ world wants. .)■ n!"/ like t. b ats ;
I
son of a highly respectable citizens,
questioned his father as follows:
"Papa, who do you think is going to
win, Kilrain or Sullivan?”
— A,
)
member of the genus homo, but his
wife did not like the idea of her hus-
band literally wearing a dead man’s
shoes, and so one day they vanished.
The doctor does not say a word, but he
thinks he knows who is responsible for
their disappearance. — Philadelphia
symbols, types and emblems of human : Record.__________
combination, affection and loyalty. The I Let the cm out
reader n ed scarcely to be reminded of । It happenedin ( helsea a nd on the day
the red and white l'OseS which were i . 4, , ... j,
the badges of the Lancastrian and York , of the great Sullivan-ki Irain fight, says
rivals to the English throne. ! the Boston Courier. A little boy, the
Symbolism of Flowers.
. In all ages, and among almost every
V people, flowers have been adopted as
BAYLOR UNIVERSITY
AT WACO, TEXAS,
Is the best school for Boys and Girls in Texas. The
best faculty, the highest curriculum, the best health.
Send for catalogue to Dr. J. B. CRANFILL,
(Mention this paper.) Waco, Texas.
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Forster, William. Wise County Messenger. (Decatur, Tex.), No. 240, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 21, 1889, newspaper, September 21, 1889; Decatur, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1580898/m1/3/?q=denton+history: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .