Wise County Messenger. (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, July 7, 1899 Page: 1 of 8
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DECATUR, TEXAS, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1899.
Whole No. 949.
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Messenger on Trial 4 Months lor 25c.
Send in Your
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ble conversed with Washington,
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mental
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receive
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He eats heartily in the hottest weath-
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PATENTS
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must inevitably get
this saving, but
The farmers
large share of
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ROUNDLAP COTTON BALES.
To Satisfy the Demand the Entire Crop
Will Eventually be so Baled.
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The Fench"aresvety"proud orRHMEMBHT,
to bear on the case.of Mrs. Piper. The that their cotton shall be delivered
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From the little that can
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act before and now the farmers doubt H
the sincerity of their repentance.
Lewis Carroll is not with us lo!
perpetuate this delightful canine
variation!—London Sketch.
25
Mrs. Smikers—Well, to tell you
the truth. I'm afraid of that big
dog of yours.
Mrs. Gushleigh (sotto voce)—
My goodness! And it was only
Inst week I ordered John to take
that dear darling dog out and lose
him.
of their contribusions to
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than any other, it naturally follows '
that to secure the highest prices all
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48
results in the way of spirit communi-
which have been so invariably and
conspicuously wanting in all previous
ng
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Fort WWort-T U A
For All Points
DecaturCheese Factory
And Creamery Company will be ready for business by the
25th of June.
They Want AB Your Milk
and also want to buy what Pigs you have for sale. Highest
prices paid for both. See S. G. Fullerson at Summit Hotel,
0: R. L. Lindley, Decatur, Texas.
Bia’S
Rout,
distinguished men, and both Hodgson
j and James have brought all the un.
doubted critical acumen of their minds
right to expect something more than
the vagueness r nd ambiguity which
have ever been characteristic of spir-
itualism, something which will at least
by that dignity and practical utility
1 he old compress
A New Lease for the hog. 3
Mrs. Gushleigh—Why don't you 2
• • bo bo
For once the cotton planter has an
ally among the great corporations.
For years the cotton tie ring, the bag-
ging combine and the compress
people have all lived off the cotton
grower. There was no way to fight
them and so they grew rich on their
enormous profits, which the farmers
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prove amenable to the ordinary laws COMMITTEE: AV M. Flannery, J. O.
639 •
companied by “such a wave of excite.
. ment as the world has never sec n be.
N fore,” we trust Prof. Hyslop will keep
! his promise, and if he presents us with
For this reason we have
.abAAAAL. 50 YEARS’ 4
EYDERIENCE
Mr. Marsh, we are told, talked with
Adam and Eve. with Methusaleh and
Double Daily Trains o
had to pay. Now the American Cot-
ton Company with its Roundlap bale
is in the field and it is so revolution-
izing the cotton handling business
that many of the old expenses are
the human race. Although the publi. -----------
cation of the results of his examma. rwhouePRIcKLYASIRITTERS.
. . IUKetps his Htomach, liver and bowels
non into spiritualism may not be ac- in perfect order. Sold by U. B. Gunn.
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people and the bagging and tie trust
are raising a great comm t en against
the American Cotton Company as
though they had always been
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spiritualistic investigation of the im- ,,
.... aparte. Byron and
mortality of the soul, which is remark.
communications.—Scientific Ameri.
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cotton mills of New England and of
Europe are eager buyers of this bale
because as compared with all other
bales it has many advantages covered
by broad patents, which greatly lessen
the cost of manufacture to the mill.
I his Roundlap bale eliminates two
or three processes in manufacturing
and as the cotton mills of the world are
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ever come over to see us? It's
an age since you have called.
. Duet by Mr. and Miss Williams.
be gleaned. 111 a. m Address by Judge Tankers-
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' cation, we hope they will be marked
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his reticence) no coherent account of
what he has actually accomplished.,
OUNTY MESSENGER
a host of equally
sionate. scientific standpoint,
disappointing. Even in the
the #
friends of the farmer. Unfortunately tor 94
M258aeF TR-E "ARKS
"‘VVWIIN copRGlj 4 c.
Anyone sending n sketeh an ddecEiqn
qufckly ascertai ollr i. n c«."Zethe
Invention probahi- icentabia 2mu
t ions strictly Eonnael h mlKtr^pal
sent free. Oldest Ngr rsecoree"atam
Patents taken tin at Nunn.,
spegjat notur. Withonte iree, 10 teu
Scientific Wtait
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MUNNECOsierseh
method of investigation employed (
, however, we are not very sanguine
“thFrofHysloso strongly cm- that anything new has been a ide d 10
ph** for helays great stress upon whats already known of spiritul.
the m Tetitc metho is, the care, and isn
J. B. Pope, local manager for Win.
Cameron & Co., desires to announce
that they are at the old stand ready
to extend favors in their line and
cordially invite any in need of first
class building material to give them
a call.
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The roundlap bale is the trade mark #
southern cotton must in time be put
in this R undlap form. Mr. Wm. C.
Love ring, one of the most disinguished
cotton mill men of New England says;-.
1 do not hesitate to say that the
time is coming when the cotton man-
ufacturr, all over die world will insist
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of evidence, and afford us that sensi-
ble proof of immortality, the desire for
which is coeval with the existence of
; Lumber
Blewett, W. <>. Williams, J. D.
Bowling, T. H. Greer, J. W. Den-
nis.
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huge ticket, inscribed in flaring
them in the form of a Roundlap bale.” capitals: "Smark:!" What a pity'
a ce
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e eThrough Pullman Sleeve
Free Reclining Chair Cars. / -
W. S. KEENAN, Gen’l. Pas. Akei
Galveston Texas. ,
every sort of incongruous way.
Wherever French fashions go this
word is used twenty times a min-
ute. It has even crossed the
Pyrenees, only altering its com-
he has gathered to the scientific world.
As a matter of mere courtesy and jus.
tice we should wait. But in the
meantime we cannot help remarking
how puerile and fruitless have been
the results of previous attempts, how
disproportionate the time and effort
expended. Such men as Marsh, Keb.
ble, Dr. Hodgson and Prof. James
have also attempted a scientific inves.
tigation ot spiritualistic phenomena.
Flat Rock, Friday, only 28, 1899.
9:30a.m. Song by Flat Rock class.
Song led by J. N. Elrod.
Song led by S. B. Hardiman.
Song led by Prof. A. Goodwin.
10 a. m. Address by G. B. Pickett.
Music by Alvord class.
Solo by J. W. Dennis.
N. • — The factory will be located on the south end of Lindley’s S
.. ... 2 pasture, - 1 1 one mile north of court house on Trinity street,
name given by the American Cotton 7 e ‘
Company to its round bale to distin. -4 3FULLERSON, 1
5 R. L LINDLEY, ) Proprietors.
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plexion slightly in transit. I
have just seen a gaudy parasol
in a shop window of the Rambla
at Barcelona, and on it was a
guish it from all other bales The
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VOL. XX. No.
ley.
Song led by G. S Blewett.
Recitation by Miss Ella Stapleton.
Song by J. O. Blewett.
NOON.
2 p. m. Song led by T. H. Greer.
Recitation by Turner Smith.
Song led by J. D. Bowling.
Address by Albert Walker.
Solo by S. B. Hardiman.
Recitation, Mrs. Bowling.
Song by Ralph Fullingim.
Song by Misses Elsie, Ida and Eth-
el Dennis.
Song by Prof. A. Goodwin.
Address by John Kendall.
Solo by J. W. Dennis.
Closing song. Whiter Than Snow.
Hodgson and James, they are vague,
trivial and inconclusive.
Tne many newspaper articles which
have appeared on Prof. Hyslop’s ex.
periments give us (chiefly because of
willing to pay more for this cotton “smart," which they apply in
SCIEN E AND SPIRITUAL-
ISM.
We have recently been entertained
by the daily press with accounts of a
able, not so much for the novelty of
the results obtained, as for the prom-
inent position occupied by the chief
inquisitor as a professor in one of our
foremost institutions of learning.
That Prof. Hyslop believes that he
has found in spiritualism additional
and complete proofs of the soul's im.
mortality can hardly be questioned.
He states that he has arrived at his
conclusions only after a most pains,
taking and thorough examination, in
. which all possibility of fraud was care.
A fully excluded. Indeed, it is the very
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other biblical personages. Mr.
exhaustiveness which characterize his , , ,
, , , in his spintu alistic experiments.
inquiry and distinguish it from previ- Prof. Hyslop has been associated with !
ous work in this direction. . . , ,
I,,, , , , , ,, some of the most distinguished psy-
Prof Hyslop has asked the public , , ,
, chologists and alienists, men who have
to withhold its judgment until he has , 1,
, t . ,, , , . become well known through the value
published a full account of his experi-
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The Largest Flower,
The largest flower in the world J
is the Rafliesia Arnoldi of Suma-
tra. Its size is fully three feet
in diameter—about the size of a
carriage wheel. The five petals
of this immense flower are oval
and creamy white, growing round
a center tilled with countless long,
violet hued stamens. The flow j
ers weighs about fifteen pounds,
and is capable of containing near-
ly two gallons of water. The
buds are lige gigantic brown cab
bage heads.
orders )
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them they never played the friendly 1
are very PROGRAM
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actual results, judged from a dispas.
having discovered the word
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Halcomb, N. W. Wise County Messenger. (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, July 7, 1899, newspaper, July 7, 1899; Decatur, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1581319/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .