The Meridian Tribune. (Meridian, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 17, Ed. 1 Friday, October 5, 1906 Page: 6 of 8
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A KENTUCKY WOMAN
How She Gained Fifteen Pounds in
Weight and Became Well by Taking
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills.
Women at forty, or thereabouts, have
their future in their own hands. There
will be a change for the better or worse,
for the better if the system is purified by
such a tonic .as Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills.
Mrs. D. G. Wedding, of Hartford, Ky.,
writes as follows concerning the diffi-
culties which afflicted her:
“ I was seriously ill and was confined
to my bed for six or eight months in all,
during two years. I had chills, fever,
rheumatism. My stomach seemed al-
ways too full,-my kidneys did not act
freely, my liver was inactive, my heart
beat was very weak and I had dizziness
or swimming in my head and nervous
troubles.
“I was under the treatment of several
different physicians but they all failed
to do me any good. After suffering for
two years I learned from an Arkansas
friend about the merits of Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills and I decided that I would
try them. The very first box I took
made me feel better and when I had
taken four boxes in ore I w as en ti rely wel 1,
weighed fifteen pounds more than when
I began, resumed my household duties,
and have since continued in the best of
health. I have recommended Dr. Wil-
liams’ Pink Pills to many people on ac-
count of what they did for me, and I feel
that I cannot praise them too strongly.”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills restored Mrs.
Wedding to health because they actually
make new blood and when the blood is
in full vigor every function of the body
is restored, because the blood carries to
every organ, every muscle, every nerve,
the necessary nourishment. Any woman
who is interested in the cure of Mrs. Wed-
ding will want our book, "Plain Talks to
Women," which is free on request.
All druggists sell Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills, or they will be sent by mail post-
paid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per box,
six boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams
Medicine Co., Schenectady, N.Y.
Farmers’ Co-Operative Union
============ Of America ===============
You have no right to stay away,
from the meetings. If you can't learn 1
anything, you can teach something; if |
you can learn something, you should
go out and get the benefit of your
neighbors’ knowledge and experience.
These 'nights are getting long
enough for quite a decent programme
to be carried out at your meetings.
See to it that your meeting is interest-
ing, and that the members are anxious
to attend. Keep something doing all
the time.
There is nothing coming to the kick-
er. He is one of those elements which
happen sometimes to do good by stir-
ring- things out of a comatose condi-
tion. He sometimes keeps people
from going to sleep. Just be good to
him, and when his kick does happen
to be in the right direction, help him.
If you sell your cotton at the price
the other man names, that is your
fault; if you make him pay your price,
it isn’t anybody’s fault, but. it would
be nothing more than any successful
business man would do. You will have
to put some business sense into your
business, or else it will not be busi-
ness at all.
Plenty of good reading matter will
keep you out of the. tpils of the fakir.
Moral: read the newspapers.
MERCURY'S MUSINGS.
Regardless of what the present crop
may be there is money, good money
| for cotton growers in keeping their
cotton of the market till the minimum
price is obtained.
In 1906 we exported 250 million
pounds less of cotton than in 1905.
Yet we received 21 million more dol-
lors for it. This is one of the results
of the Farmers' Union holding cotton
till the demand made a satisfactory
price.
, Are you doing your part toward
building the organization?
talking organization? If not, better be-
One Cause of Wrong.
What some men owe worries them
much less than what they would like
to o we.
A Desirable Animal.
"Nussah," replied old Brother Bun-
, kum. "Dar wa’nt no nigger festival
uh-gwine on over in dat direction yis-
te’day atternoon. De repo’t come to
us dat a cullud man's mule had done
whirled in and kicked de cullud man’s
vailah wife on de p’int o’ de chin, uh-
causin’ of de lady to bite off an inch
and a half of her tongue. And—uck!
•—de puhsession yo‘ seed was imposed
of mar’d culled men uh gwine over
dar to price dat ’ar mule. Yassah!—
dat’s what ‘t wuz.”—Puck.
Say, for goodness’ sake get your
tools and vehicles under shelter this
winter. All over the country wagons,
buggies, plow’s, reapers and so on, are
standing out in the weather. Any man
who has no more sense than to let
such things go to ruin, ought to be put
on the feeble-minded list and have the
benefit of a guardian—he needs a
guardian badly.
The Two Great
Commandments
Sunday School Lesson for Oct. 7,19C5
Specially Prepared for This Paper.
LESSON TEXT.—Mark 12:28-3-1, 38-41.
Memory verses, 30, 31.
GOLDEN TEXT.—"Thou shalt love the
Lord thy God with all thy heart.”-Mark
12:30.
TIME.—Tuesday, April 4, A. D. 30.
PLACE.—The - temple court' in Jeru-
salem.
Thoughts on the Lesson.
“The commandment which Jesus
cites to the scribe is peculiar to re-
vealed religion. That is only to say,
in other words, that it presupposes
redemption. We could not imagine
such a precept in the religion of
Greece, or of Rome, and, of course, we
do not find it. Who can ‘love,’ in any
conceivable sense of the word, Zeus
or Poseidon, Here or Athene? Neither
the place they hold in the universe,
nor their characters and relations to
Are you each other, nor their attitude to men,
Don’t Be Stubborn.
A few people are so headstrong they
keep right on having chills-growing
thin and yellow, when we guarantee
one bottle of Cheatham’s Chill Tonic
to cure any one case. Don’t be one of
that class. Get a bottle.
Time to meet now and do some
planning for the year of 1907. “The
wise man foreseeth danger and hideth
himself,” and he also provideth him-
self for the coming need. You are go-
ing to plant something. Go get to-
gether and plan to plant and market,
together next time, and you will be
sure to make more money than you
ever have made, and do it with less
vorry.
gin now! Never too late to commence
doing a good thing, you know.
It is necessity rather than choice
which drives so many thousands of
farmers’ wives and daughters to the
| fields. This is certainly the general rule
notwithstanding there are individual
instances to the contrary.
The Farmers’ Union aims to make
farming sufficiently profitable that
there will be no strong temptation—
| much less a necessity—to force women
into the cotton patch.
| Attend your local regularly. Be on
time. Bring wife and daughter along.
Devise plans for quickening the in-
terest among your members and
among outsiders. Enlist the ladies
and this can easily be done.
The farmer’s relation to the markets
bears points of similarity to the dar-
key’s bear trap, which was set to
catch "a-comin and a-gwine." When
the farmer buys the other fellow does
the pricing. When the farmer sells
the other fellow does the pricing. The
farmer is caught in the commercial
trap "a-comin’ and a- gwine."
inspire any such emotion. It is often
said that love cannot be commanded,
but that has only a limited truth.
Granted certain relations between per-
sons, and love is demanded by the
very nature of the case; if it is awant-
ing, its absence is the graves of
moral faults, and brings innumerable
others in its train; till it comes, lit-,
eraily nothing can be right."—James
Denney, D. 1).
Why is this the first and greatest
commandment?
1. It is greatest in its nature, being
the highest and noblest act of the
soul.
2. It is the sum of the first table of
the Law.
3. It has the greatest value, being
the fountain and source of all virtue,
of all love to our neighbor, because it
is the consecreation of self to the
Father of all good, and all men. Her-
bert Spencer says, “By no political al-
chemy can you get, golden conduct out
of leaden instincts.”
4. It is the act, the outgoing of the
whole nature of man.
ive.
5. It is the most
It is all-inclus-
difficult of all
QUEER TRICKS OF ANIMALS.
Seemed to Find Pleasure in Washing
of Odds and Ends.
Beckmann gives a delightful account
of a coon which used to amuse itself,
by washing various odds and ends in
a bucket of water. An old pot handle,
a snail shell, or anything of the sort
would do.
i But the thing he loved best of all
was an empty bottle. Clasping it in
his fore paws he would waddle slowly
to the bucket with the bottle clasped
close to his breast and then roll it
and rinse it in the water. If anyone
ventured to disturb him he was furi-
ous and threw himself upon his back,
clinging so tightly to his beloved bot-.
tie that he could be lifted by it.
| Groos says that bears will do the
same sort of thing. He relates the
case of a polar bear which used to
roll an old iron pot to and fro in his
tank, and then, lifting it out, rub it
up and down in a trough of running
water. He stood on his hind legs
and used his fore paws exactly like a
washerwoman washing clothes.
Because you have to look close after
your rights as against some people
don’t get the idea into your head that
all the people are rascals. There are
just whole cowpens full of good men
and women still on earth, and there
will be some of this sort here all the
time. Just hunt them out and make
them your friends. It is one of the
sweetest things on this earth to have
a number of friends whom you can
trust to the end of the earth. Get you
some of this sort, and then get busy
with your distrustful self and become
worthy of such friendsli p as you
crave. There are plenty of ’em all
over the country.
SOUTHERN FARMER SAYINGS.
Now that the crops ‘are all fin-
ished and “laid by," of course the
plows are all safely housed.
“Will you walk into my parlor,”
is the song sung by cotton gamblers to
catch the farmers. “Prettiest little
parlor," Oh my!
The producers have the right to
price, their own products. When they
do this they will take a long step for-
ward to financial emancipation.
When the producers of cotton de-
mand that gambling in futures of
toeir staple crop shall cease, it will
be done, and not till then. .
The most important element that
goes to the making of large crop yields
is the farmers’ brains. To attain uni-
form success in farming requires
broader and more practical knowledge,
more enterprise, and sound judgment
than is possessed by the average mer-
chart or banker.
Died in Westminster Abbey.
Henry IV. died in Westminster Ab-
bey in 1413. It is claimed, that from
that time to this no life has ended
there, except that of a minister named
Shepherd, who dropped dead in the
famous old sanctuary, just as he fin-
ished a speech, at a meeting recently
held under the charmanship of the
Dean of Westminster.
The spread of the Union is now on
throughout Illinois. Let ’er spread,
for if there is a people that do need
organization it is the farmers of Illi-
nois especially. The move is on from
the corn lands of "Egypt," down about
Cairo, to the “Land o’ Murphies,”
along the great lakes, and the corn
raisers need some co-operation, and
they need it right now. The bug po-
tato raisers have always been the vic-
tims of the commission merchants,
and until they organize along lines of
selfhelp, they will continue to feed the
commission men along Water street,
while the public pays full value for
all the “Murphies” they get.
RIGHT HOME.
Doctor Recommends Postum
Personal Test.
from
No one is better able to realize the
injurious action of caffeine—the drug
in coffee—on the heart, than the doc-
tor.
When the doctor himself has been
relieved by simply leaving off coffee
and using Postum, he can refer with
full conviction to his own case.
A Mo. physician prescribes Postum
for many of his patients because he
was benefited by it. He says:
I wish to add my testimony in re-
gard to that' excellent preparation-
Postum. I have had functional or
nervous heart trouble for over 15
years, and part of the time was unable
to attend to my business.
“I was a moderate user of coffee and
did not think drinking it hurt me. But
on stopping it and using Postum in-
stead, my heart has got all right, and
I ascribe it to the change from coffee
to Postum.
“I am prescribing it now in cases of
sickness, especially when coffee does
not agree, o'r affects the heart, nerves
or stomach.
“When made right it has a much
■better flavor than coffee, and is a vital
sustainer of the system. I shall con-
tinue to recommend it to our people,
and I have my own case to refer to.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read the little book,
"The Road to Wellville," in pkgs.
“There's a reason.”
CO-OPERATOR COGITATIONS.
If you would be a Co-operator, nev-
er be a dumper.
Let’s never let the procession pass
by us. Let’s keep up with it all the
time.
That perfect understanding will
make us free. All producers should be
brethren.
We are all now on the main track
and are bound for the same depot of
profitable prices.
Eleven cents is the price. We have
only to stand firm and this price will
be realized. Never sell for less.
Success, this year means success for
all time to come.. Failure this year
would set us back many days. We
will succeed.
Scientific marketing alone will save
the producer. Congested markets
mean our undoing. If the law of Sup-
ply and Demand is to govern let’s
make the Supply and Demand equal
at all times.
Will the producers stand idly by and
The New.State Farmer, published by
our friend, A. T. Evans, at Sallisaw,
I. T., has reached our desk. This copy
before us, Number 2. is all right, a
credit to our great organization and
also to our friend Evans. May it live
long to battle for the great cause.
We are for just and reasonable
prices and never for gamblers’ prices.
These just prices can be had only by
an understanding of the producers
themselves.
The great National meeting put ev-
ery body on the main track. Some
had been on sidings before. The sid-
ings are never safe. Never be side-
tracked again. Stay on the main track
and the race will soon be won.
Wealth should belong to him who
creates it. Have the creators of
wealth ever received their just re-
ward? Never. And they never will till
they take charge of their affairs and
have an understanding. It is up to
them.
Do not sell on a declining mar-
ket.
No one is really defeated until he
surrenders.
One of the best preventions of bee
moths is strong colonies of bees.
Parched wheat is one of the best
curative agents for fowls of all kinds.
It takes off the profit to be unkind
to the poultry or frighten as surely
as it does to abuse the cow or the
horse.
Flour of sulphur used freely upon
cabbage is said to destroy the cab-
bage worm. Begin to dust the heads
as soon as the white butterfly ap-
pears. When the dew is on or im-
mediately after a rain is the best
time.
Too much of one kind of grain
things. Love is not a mere sentiment,
a general good feeling toward God,
when all things go right with us; but
it is a devotion to God and His cause
when that devotion makes us mar-
tyrs; that enables us to trust Him in
the darkest night, and say with Job.
“The Lord gave, and the Lord hath
taken away: blessed be the name of
the Lord,” and “Though He slay me,
yet will I wait for Him.”
Reasons for Loving God Supremely.
(1) He is supremely good; He is the
sum of all good. He that loves God
loves all that is good, and hates all
that is evil. (2) He is not only good,
but lovable. His goodness is attrac-
tive; it is worthy of love. (3) All we
have and are we owe to him; and the
only way in which we can make any
return is to love him and obey him in
love. That is all that is ours to give;
to withhold it is unutterably mean.
(4) “The best thing in man is love,
and God wants the best.” (5) Such
love not only honors God, but elevates
man. Love is the most ennobling act
of the soul; and the nobler and higher
the object and the more intense the
love, so much the more is the one who
thus loves ennobled, purified, enlarged,
exalted in nature. (6) In Him are
found all that ought to move the high-
est affections of men.
Suggestions. 1. Love is the greatest
thing in the world. For an unfolding
of this great fact see 1 Cor. 13, and
read Prof. Drummond’s booklet, "The
Greatest Thing in the World.”
2. Love is the fulfilling of the second
table of the Law. Compare "The Spec-
trum of Love” in Drummond, illus-
trating the description of love in 1
Cor. 13, and his “Programme of Chris-
tianity,” which is stated in Christ’s
own words (Luke 4:18), the fulfill-
ment of the Prophet Isaiah’s words
(Isa. 61:1), the soul of the Old Testa-
ment, and exemplified in Christ’s mes-
sage to John the Baptist (Matt. 11:
3-6).
3. By loving our neighbor we can
test and express our love to God. This
is more effective than even prayers
and songs of praise, though these help
to inspire and cultivate love to God.
So St. John says, "If a man say, ‘I
love God,’ and hateth his brother, he
is a liar; for he that loveth not his
brother whom he hath seen, how can
he love God whom he hath not seen?”
(1 John 4:20).
4. Love to God and love to man
transform earth into heaven.
Compare the conditions given in the
twenty-fifth chapter of Matthew,
where the good deeds enjoined are not
substitutes for faith, and prayer, and
love, and honesty, but they are the
proofs of a right heart, from which all
virtues grow.
Not the Amount of the Gift, but the
Spirit of Sacrifice.—Ruskin in his
Seven Lamps of Architecture. “The
Lamp of Sacrifice,” in speaking of the
expense lavished on the tabernacle,
says that “the covenant of God with
his people was marked and its ac-
ceptance signified by some external
sign of their love and obedience and
surrender of themselves to His will.
The Measure of the Gift.
The measure of a gift lies not in
sce John D. Rockefeller and his asso-should not be fed. It takes away the
ciates get into control of all? That relish for food. A variety keeps the
is certainly the fate which awaits us appetite keen.
if we do as we have always done. Let
us be up and doing.
Are you pushing your young men to
the front? If not, you are not doing
your full duty. This is a great school.
Let's teach the youth of the land, not
only the dignity of labor, but teach:
them how to get the proper reward for
labor
Fall pigs, bred the following spring,
make the best brood sows. They ac-
quire the necessary age, size and
strength to make good mothers.
The gizzard of a fowl is made tc
grind its. food. Poultry will do better
if fed unground grain, after they are
i large enough to swallow it.
the largeness of the gift, but in the
largeness of the love and sacrifice it
expresses; not the size of the gift, but
the cost to the giver; not the number
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AND
leWorlds be
Sold by Leading Dealers
Everywhere
Prefer Cash to Religion.
Some people never seek religion as
long as there’s a dollar in sight.
Drinking Customs.
Society is soaked in drink. The cus-
toms of Europeans in India are all
anti-teetotal. It is even regarded as
unpatriotic to be a total abstainer, be-
cause the government has a direct in-
terest in the sale of drink. It is a
fact that when Indians become Christi-
an it is necessary to have a temper-
ance society", which as heathens or
Mohammedans they did not require.
This is due to British drinking cus-
toms.—World’s Women’s Temperance
Bulletin.
THE HOUSE THAT BAKER BUILT.
CHAPTER 1.
The Spaniards found chocolate in
common use among the Mexicans at
the time of the invasion under Cortez,
in 1519, and it was introduced into
Spain immediately after. The first
intimation of its use in England ap-
pears in public print 130 years later.
The price was so high at that time
that only the rich could afford to use
it. It was first made in this country
in 1765, and the plant then estab-
lished in Dorchester, Mass., came into
possession of the Baker family in
1780, and the business has been con-
ducted under that name ever since.
The Baker Company uses more crude
cocoa in the manufacture of its va-
rious preparations than any other
concern in the world. For 126 years
its products have held the market
with constantly increasing sales be-
cause it has always maintained the
highest standard in the quality of its
goods. ____
BEES CLOSED A MINE.
Swarmed in Millions and Men Were
Unable to Work.
There are instances in great number
where mining operations were tem-
porarily suspended by a shortage of
funds or by water flooding the proper-
ty, but it remained for Mohawk, a
small station along the Southern Pa-
cific, to furnish a new cause which is
unique in the history of mining. The
company affected owns the Red Cross
mines in the Mohawk mountains.
Millions of bees, attracted by the
water at these mines and forced from
their hives in the mountains by the
drought, took possession of the water
supply, and their numbers were so
great that it was found impossible to
drive the swarms away. Consequently
the mines have been shut down until
the rainy season sets in, when it is
hoped the bees will return to their
mountain homes.—Sacramento Bee.
D on
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Is fast becoming the fruit, vegetable, grain
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HOMESEEKERS’ TICKETS ON SALE DAILY,
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Dallas, Texas.
Buchan’s CRESYLIC Ointment
is a positive necessity to every cattleman, will
quickly heal wounds and sores on all animals,
won first premium at Texas State Fairand for
40 vears has been the standard remedy for
SCREW WORMS AND FOOT ROT
Put up in 4 oz. bottles and 4 oz., 16 1b.. 1 1b., 21b. and
fib. screw-top cans. Insist on Buchan’s Cresy-
lie Ointment. Sold by druggists and grocers or
write CARBOLIC SOAP CO., NEW YORK CITY.
COE 000 00 FOR AGENTS. Pleasant
"EjowVAU work among your friends,
frequent sales, large commissions, and big prizes
for all. Address Dept. 5 X, 11 N. 24th St., N. Y. VS
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Dunlap, Levi A. The Meridian Tribune. (Meridian, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 17, Ed. 1 Friday, October 5, 1906, newspaper, October 5, 1906; Meridian, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1629658/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Meridian Public Library.