Texas Christian Advocate (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 7, 1904 Page: 4 of 16
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TEXAS CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE.
April 7, 1904.
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I was deaf from infan
Eminent doctors,
icy.
lists
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The True Story of the Invention of Wil-
son’s Common Sense Ear Drums Told by
Geo. H. Wilson, the inventor,
Discovery and Many Hundred Signed
Testimonials from All Parts of
the World—SENT FREE.
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g
P
Simple, Direct and Instantly
Restores Hearing in Even
The Oldest Person—Com-
fortable. Invisible and
Perfect Fitting,
I FRISCO (
‘ SYSTEM 1
Wide Vestibuled, Electric Lighted
Tralne From
iEn
GALVESTON, HOUSTON,
SAN ANTONIO, DALLAS
ANB FORT WORTH TO
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gec-1,- Newg T+ems possible food without savoring of char- more effectually than Gibraltar com- he has been able to make a record gp m m pm pg 4 4m
uULului c • ity. mands the entrance to the Mediterra- such as could hardly have been expect- ■ B El 6 E, 8Vk V
----------- Miss Anita Kelly, of New York, has nean. ed from a man whose, years had not s ■■ E EE
STATE ITEMS. been awarded a verdict of $35,000 dam- Sir Donald Currie has donated the been devoted to detective work. E EE B « EE Em “9 “
A aner published in Austin is ages and costs at Los Angeles, Califor- sum of $500,000 to University College, Bishop Derrick, of the African Meth- Am . g M m m
+LAsimpmia at the State administra- nia, against a Santa Barbara hotel London University. It is intended to odist Episcopal Church, in a sermon ■■ B ■ ifl B 81
+1 -8 omAHdy is Mailing it all company, for the loss of one of her build with this donation a school of at New York, advocated the removal B B ■ 2 B
over Texas legs in an elavatof accident in July, advanced medicine. The gift will also of the negroes to Africa. UUULU
. g.. c in ,r 1903. She sued for $50,000. enable the university to incorporate The Louisiana Purchase Commemo-
takt severer tcrtit Railroad Commis- The annual statement of the copy- the college in its system. ration Series of Postage Stamps. are ,
sinner Colauitt to run for Governor right office of the Library of Congress in a large power plant installed in to go on sale May 1 and will continue A Device i hat IS SCientiliC,
9pinst the present incumbent, The shows that the copyright business for a section of Southern India the rubber on sale until December 1.
Commissioner has a good job, and he 1903 was the largest in any one year came from Australia, the insulators Missionaries to the Congo country
had better keep it ’ in the history of the office. No less from Italy, the hydraulic plant from in Africa have asked Secretary Hay to
g" . .L Stot, are than 100,743 titles were received for Switzerland, the penstock pipes from interfere to stop atrocities on natives
Good rams throughout registration, the total fees received Scotland, and the entire electric plant and invasion of missionaries’ rights by
making the farmers and all other a-“the amounting to $70,230.50. The number from America. Belgians.
eS.8lad -on. °Wheat and oats of articles deposited also exceeded the Count Zeppelin has succeeded in se- The House of Representatives
Co, l.. and the grasses are fine, number in any previous year, totaling curing sufficient funds in Germany to passed the postoffice appropriation bill
areforwa a brightoutfook 180,527. On the entries for the year enable him to construct another air- Ling the pay of rural free delivery
e 18 ...., there were 14,060 books and pam- ship, to be tested on Lake Constance, mail carriers at $720 per annum. It
u The courtsof Erimina Dallas and phlets, 4,568 booklets leaflets,circu- Mrs. Jefferson Davis is reported se- prohibits the soliciting of business by 190 Page Book Containing a History of the
finished up its docketat -aas ‘"in lars and cards, and 7,641 newspaper rioug m at Atlantic City, New Jer- the carriers, presumably a measure in “6 8 1
moved to Austin, where it will De m and magazine articles. This speaks ,, interest of exnress companies
session the next three months, volumes for the literary activity of the seY. the interest 01 5Pes companies.
. ..______ hrosn h10 resemb- eointry . M. Roualt has found that trees may ------
. A sma 1,8rayish row as active and j a, goi » be transplanted in full foliage in May FROM THE SEAT OF WAR.
mg a house fly and fully as active ana Corot's great landscape, La Soir, , P if .
possessing the appetite of the green and Diaz's masterful “Autumn in the ° runeesWithtt eorn oinjury .the Shanghai, April 4, evening.—A let-
bug or aphis, has made its appear- Forest of Fontainbleau,” have been moving is done at ni&ht. This has bee ter received here from Kobe, Japan,
ance in great swarms in the country purchasea by a firm of art dealers in d monstrateq Frihenentireesatisration says the Japanese Government has 26 -
south of Denison. _ New York for the aggregate sum of 0 Prominent Eenen norticultunsts. 000 troops in motion and fully 60,000
It seems to be the understanding $110,000. The Corot landscape was val- The family of a dead Japanese sol- more under arms in garrisons and at
that the Texas military companies will ued at $75,000 and the Fontainbleau at dier gets, roughly speaking, one-third the depots. These numbers are ex-
not hold an encampment this year, $35,000. It is generally reported that, of the pay of his rank.. This would clusive of the third reserves, number-
but instead will visit the Pacific coast the buyer is Charles M. Taft, of Cin- give the widow of a private $125 a ing 120,000, which have not been call-
and witness the army maneuvers cinnati, brother of Secretary of War month; of a First Lieutenant, $6.25; ed to the colors. The exact number
the Taft. “Le Soir” was in the Crabbe of a Captain, $8.33, and to the widow of troops which have left Japan for
5,, ,, aer system of El Paso, collection at Brussels several years of a Colonel, $20 a month, their various destinations is not
..l6 "imes of nines is completed, ago, and both the Corot and Diaz According to the last census taken known, but the entire first army has
01rty.one now Las according to the works form a part of the Coates collec- in China by imperial order, in view been landed and has established itself
44na904 of the ‘.nerts the most ex- tion at Paisley, Scotland, where they of reassessing taxes, the total number in Northwestern Korea with its mam §
Stateme , o-lete sewer system of were purchased at a private sale. Each of inhabitants amounted to 426,447,- base at Chinampo. The Japanese gen- 5
Penssye a 4.1 ntry canvas measures forty-four by thirty- 325. The eighteen Chinese provinces eral staff still carefully guards the
its size four inches proper had 3,354,000; Manchuria, 8,- plan of campaign, but it is generally $
Rod Griffin, a wealthystocmani A anip engineer on the basis of 500,000; Mongolia, 3,354,000; Thibet, believed it will operate three armies,
merly of Hill County, W as with work done on the Chicago drain- 6,430,000, and Chinese Turkestan, 426,- each nominally numbering 100,000
of cattle en route to market and the the work doneonithethtdt-eem- 000 inhabitants. men, the second army lading west of
tram was wrecked, atRiersid was a ployment of 30,000 workmen the Pana- Taxes are paid on 29,000 dogs in Ber- the Yalu River and the third east of
GriffirwasinstantlYed ma Canal may be completed and in lin. In addition to these there are New Chwang it seems certain that
son of Dr. J. M. Griffi . good running order in eight years. 2,163 watch dogs, 221 belonging to Vice Admiral Togo s failure effectual-
R. D. Robey shipped a carload or Chicago Canal was eight years in blind and deaf people, 2,651 used for ly to dispose of the Russian fleet at ------------------------ ----------------
eggs for the St. Louismarketoreeent construction; it is 37 miles long, 20 drawing small carts and 118 belonging Port Arthur has delayed the Japanese
ly from Hillsboro, ine e885 C , feet deen and 190 feet wide it is but to the Kaiser. operations. A general thaw is now artificial appliances that ciaimfed to restore hear-
$1200, which representstenidays.wok nine miles shorter than the Panama Don't bury me on Thursday” were proceeding in Korea and Manchuria,
of the hens adjacent to Hill . • Canal, and it was constructed at a the dying words of John Penn, an Eng- rendering the country roads impassa- but their eforts were unavailing
The city election at McKinney to cost of $33,000,000, while the Panama lish member of Parliament. “There is file and making it impossible to direct Mgregsawsperrterouydearnessablehentea me.
levy an additional tax for school pur- Calal estimates float upward until the a little girl opposite who is going to military operations until the ground Daily I was becoming more of a recluse, avoid-
poses resulted in 144 votes for ana $200,000,000 figure is reached, more or be married on that day and it would hardens. anohanemng anrnessanaserlatzscnesscusea
seventy-five against, losing the meas- less. But the fact is lost sight of, be grewsome. London, April 5—From St. Peters- me. Finally I began to experiment on myself, *
ure, as it required a two t ir s ma says the Pittsburg Post, that the con- The Dublin Freeman’s Journal says burg to-day came official information sonai expense, Y perfected something that I
jority.—g ditions as to the two great enterprises that Ireland's exhibit at St. Louis will denying the reports emanating from fnandteakeaerr esonhecatnraneaenseum
J W. Maxey. Civil Engineer, ot Hou are widely different. The work on the include not only Irish pictures by great English sources that the Japanese had Drum, which i now wear day and night with per-
ton. has beeu employed to take charge Chicago Canal was done by Italian Irish painters, but portraits ot Irish entered and were operating at Man- Teemwnenrwasdi ng. "Noonncavitamreware
of the matter of constructing a dam Irish and Swedish laborers, while that celebrities and Irish beauties by the churia. The Yalu, it was added, is ing them, as they do not show, and as they give
across the Brazos River at Waco and at Panama, in a tropical country, will great masters of portrait painting, well fortified and the Russians occn- no discomfort whatever, i scarcely know it. my-
report on the feasibility, cost and be done by South Americans, Chinese, 00,, o,n ,c, ,, motive py its northern bank in force. Occu- with these drums I can now hear a whisper. I
stVle of structure, etc. West India negroes, or natives of East ine Japanese women are "-L4cE pation of Wiju by the Japanese was join in the general conversation and hear every
style UL -u-u , 52- a b : , TtSlian and strong as the men. An English P . 2 J.: . . P. .a thing going on around me. Icanheara sermon
“Father” McKav, Palestine s oldest India. One efficient Irish or Italian nTsi,1 ei+re sugests confirmed, information being added in or lecture from any part of a large church or hall.
ss„m cgieLrated his ninety-fifth laborer engaged in such work would writer on PUy 2^,^+ fL & Tokio dispatches that the town had My general health is improved because of the
Citizen, celepraled 1 ! 1 a-- , . „„ --b-L1 fnlir that this may account tor the Japs 1 , great change my Ear Drums have made, to my
birthday March 23. He has eighty de- do as much in a day as probably fou • Afte, n, has settled been deserted by the Russians when Tire, My spirits are bright and cheerful, i am
Du' living-—5 sons 29 grandchil- or five of the class who will be em- courage in war. Alter ne nas Sed it was approached by the Japanese, a cured, changed man
scendants living 7 sons, za 1d -1 M5 . Than the sanitary his domestic problems with a wife as M,w"FPe coia +. L'e dis since my fortunate discovery it is no longer
dren 41 great grand-children and 5 ployed at Panama. Then the sanitary arand agile as himself war has ■ Cossack scouts are said to have dis- necessary for any deaf person to carry a trumpet,
™tXnd Children question is one of pre-eminent impor- muscular and agile as mmseir war nas appeared from North Korea, having a tube, or any other such old-fashioned make-
great-great-granacnmarem HuenI P no terrors for him. TP1 I1. 1' u shift My Common Sense Ear Drum is built on
~. cc nf sma11nox have tance. . withdrawn across the Yalu, where the strictest scientific principles, contains no
Six new case Ii Coun- “A Japanese associates three ideas The London Daily News wants to Russia is preparing to make a cour- metal, wires, or strings of any kind, and is en-
developed at ParadiseintWisfamiies in theame a lusrian takes clearly to know■whether the Napoleon statue in ageous resistance. The French mill- S, 1“ addongtoamasceenanneshposlao,
Ind a strict quarantine is kept over formulate one. I have sat in class Washington wilOrm he designed for tary experts, writing for the Herald,
4ndd Th J old cafes are getting well, rooms beside both,” says a writer in can in the uniiorm ne aesignea wi point out great lessons in warfare to naturally and perfectly, it win do this even
them. The o -h, pj1 Mall Gazette “and the greater himself when the pear was ripe and be learned by Europeans in the pres- when the natural ear drums are partially or en-
a c Newsim Division Passenger tne ran Man azete, " ° he overturned the renublic in 1804 . a-. . .. , 1 . , tirely destroyed, perforated, scarred, relaxed or
A. G. Newsum, -Vso Tovnc Men. length of the Russian thigh bone, the he overturned tne repuDue m -° ent conflict, and particularly points thickened. It fits any ear from childhood to old
Agent of the Houston ana 1e S f weight of the Russian muscu- The municipal lighting plant of Hol- out wherein strategists may with age, male or female, and aside from the fact that
tral, who offered his resignation, ture g for just precisely nothing at yoke, Massachusetts, appears not to profit watch closely the results of ex- ttdoeanatanhousteaewethscunorhaaasartat
withdrawn it and will remain 1nns 211 Nowadavs men battle not with be the success that was expected. One periments that are being made with without removal for any cause.
old position with headquarters at Dal- orawn but with brain.” of the net results is a cost of $153 to cavalry forces operating as mounted sMjthomMattershosa nacqrreamnessinanyrpen
las. ‘naot hv a decisive maiority the city for street lights which the infantry. At Tokio Marquis Ito report- catarrh, scarlet fever, typhoid or brain fever,
Judge G. H. Goodson, an ex-mem- French Chamber of company had previously agreed to fur- ed to his cabinet that the result of his meackSrrmoarinro.,8 tErothgrngedntheear,
ber of the Legislature and well-known _ ,. ’ . +h, bill annulling nishfor$75. The profit of $7,159 in the mission to Korea was satisfactory, invention not only cures, but at once stops the
throughout the State, was injured in Deputies Pa religious orders and sub- year’s business is in effect a deficit Shanghai sends report that the whole POIr5N8 % he greatest aaurararinganswzzng
a runaway accident at Comanche. 4-eitNAfstateschools because of the loss from taxes former- Japanese plan of campaign has been world recommend it, as well as physicians of an
Both legs were broken and he sustain- stituting a system of state schoois ly levied on the concern when owned changed again because it was dis- mhaclstvondor torcanravhatnomedieine or
ed internal injuries. The application ot tne new so by private capital. closed to the Russians by a Japanese I want to place my 190-page book on deafness
—g, lawestablishing.a maximummnttr An epidemic of suicide among Iowa officer who is now awaiting trial, with glaanyseraxereedea "arsonenwnsnam
ITEMS IN GENERAL. is bringing out remarkable bankers who were driven to despera- Vladivostok, April 5.—The military raeedwisongeomsmonsenesEbspammtma
The Government announces that it 19.0 Aist/ances on the part of tion by business troubles and killed situation is quiet. There is no evi- contains bona fide letters from numerous users
has mobilized its forces on the Yalu dmpyed y the large textile themselves furnishes a theme for pee- deuce of the presence of the enemy
River Tnalctcicc 1cated throughout the de- ple who believe in suggestion as a mo- in this region. The prices of the neces- land, Tasmania, India, and the remotest islands.
The Czar expresses great pleasure partment. The socialists thought that live to action. Five managers of banks sities of life are very high on account
that General Kuropatkin has reached shorter hours would benefit the work- all supposed to be wealthy, and al of the lack of provisions. Kerosene society ladies etc.-and ten the truth about the
SsdestXon"ndPhas assumed com- the workers throughout ranking high for character andbusi is selling at $2 for a tin of twenty devrmstyb8dersdaromemmwspepeopittti6
mand of the army in the Far East. the district are organizing strikes on ness ability, having taken their own pounds. Many of the inhabitants who your own town and state, many whose names
The Empressm-cnowledges the re- the ground that they waft more pay lives this winter. All did it by blowing left Vladivostok at. the outbreak of ^^iSa^Ve^^^
-a their brains out. the war are returning. The Ussuri been solved by my invention at -ast
vipttsnfvesthcusandndolorstfoometht Asa suppled protection against Albert Cronkin, a miner of Henry, railway has resumed forwarding adornsmyvrmih walsosgbapksodaxand
^sYc^and wounded solders. comsumption,t‘is proposed to inocu- West Virginia has been rescued after freight to private consignees. Ky, D.s A.
, rx €1. AM, c‘1 in Germanv with spe- seven days of starvation in a coal London, April 5.—A correspondent
Sir Cavendish Boyle, Governor la e y in.Gerrma- bacilli on mine. He was entombed by an explo- of the Times, cabling yesterday after-
Newfoundland has been promoted to cially.preparedtuberounoinsbarthat sion in which three were killed. Cron- noon, says he has been cruising for
the Governorship of Mauritiu !: the P contract tubercu- kin was badly burned, but it is thought fifty hours in the vicinity of Port Ar-
the most important of the British co- the animal may not contract -ueni wili recover. thur and that he has seen no sign of
lonial Governorships. His promotion losis la er. g1,+ Hicony Committee has the navy of either belligerent, nor
is due to his tactful handling of French The University of Heidelberg has re- The Senate Judiciary -om scout boats but that he has seen
Shor, matters aii.a Miss Eleanor Wallot a be- reported favorably the bill to protect even scout ooais, out mat ne nas seen
nore matters. ceived from Miss Eleanor wa-L “ ” +8 precident large flotillas of junks steering north-
The committee of the House of Rep- quest of 200,000 marks, equal.to.about ward, presumably going to Liao Lish
resentatives recommended the im- $50,000, which provides the first fun Flood losses amounting to two mi in orer to land provisions for Port Ar-
peachment of Federal Judge Swayne ever willed for the higher ducatioro lion dollars was sustained by Grand thur.
of the Northern District of Florida. He women in Germany. Rapids, Michigan, recently. ------------------- /
is a native of Delaware and had lived Winthrop College, the State College Indiana experienced a severe flood «INCURABLE" STOMACH TROUBLE
in Florida only a few years prior to for women at Rockhill, South Carolina, last week, resulting in hundreds of
his appointment. has received a gift of $20,000 from An- thousands dollars’ damage; Cured With Five Bottles of Drake's
Sir Edwin Arnold, the scholar and drew Carnegie for a library building. Confederate veterans at Grenada, Palmetto Wine Costing $3.75.
author, died in London recently. He George Eastman, the kodak manu- Mississinn; passed resolutions de- Mrs. ?• W. Smith,, Maloy, Iowa, says: M B A ■ ■ | A
was born June 10, 1852 He spent facturer, has given $50,000 to the Uni- nouncing the recent lynchings in that ghreemdosh. nrsPreke f^tSo Wine W I ■ L O U I S
many years in Japan and became a versity of Rochester toward the erec- state. of constant stomach distress. Five 75-
convert to Buddhism. His best known tion of a science building for biological . , cent bottles have cured me. The best HA A AE € A e e | T A
work is “The Light of Asia.” and physical laboratories. This is in Southern cotton manufacturers are doctors ^d largely advertised med^^ Ulll
The routine of royal life was inter- addition to his previous gift of $10,000 vigorousiy protestins againstethameight h SnygiWhosomny {oo"an AN THE NORFL AND EAST
estingly broken May 24 when Queen forsthe> purpose President Rhees con »» It day now & drugast ------- EAST
Alexandra paid an informal visit to is makmo an enort to raise 2-’- • bottles of Drake’s Palmetto Wine one day e,i., 4 „4 Ci,
the Alexandra Trust, London, and for the university. Chief Wilkie will soon have com- to my friends who know what it has done Choice ef Routea via
there enjoyed a nine-cent dinner Culebra, the island twenty-five miles pleted six years as head of the secret for me. I am recommending it to all PARIS OR BENISON.
among the factory employes and the west of Porto Rico, which has been service bureau. He was appointed un- pany, Drake Building, Chicago, Ill., will Observation Dining Cars and Harvey
children of the East End of London, strongly fortified by the United States, der President McKinley. At the time send a trial bottle of Drake’s Palmetto mini u .. AII 4. w..
The aleen alwavs takes keen interest commands in the Anegada passage, of his appointment he was a Chicago Wine free and prepaid to any one who wining Halls ah ins way.
inthe institution, which was found on which is used by all European com- newspaper man and it was his newspa- stnnacha trouble anyconss W. A. TULEY,
her plan to give the poor the cheapest merce with the isthmus of Panama, per training that served him well, and prompt relief and cures to stay cured. Fart Werth, Texaa.
KA
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Rankin, George C. Texas Christian Advocate (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 7, 1904, newspaper, April 7, 1904; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1594210/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.