The Grapevine Sun. (Grapevine, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 46, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 14, 1903 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Grapevine Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Tarrant County Archives.
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Adopted School Books for Sale or E
change at J. H. Webb’s Drugstore. I
TIT
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(A 1 IN
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J. D. KEELING, Editor and Proprietor.
The best thing that ever was said—"
sure you are right, then go ahead.” ‘
ESTA BLISIIED 1895.
VOLUME VIII.
GRAPEVINE, TEXAS, SATUR
AY, NOVEMBER 14, 1903.
NO. 46.
*s . 0=. 0 - a c 0 . 0222 * . . 0% .
09009032 2 2 227 D2272 22225:
THE TRAGEDY GP LEARNING.
COLLINS & YATES’ GREAT
(Selected.)
When Jim come home fum college.
Why, you ort a looked at Dae;
His face was like a funeral
And Ma looked orful sad.
MILL REMNANT SALE
W
CA2
Fer Jim he was the oldest boy—
Dad was so proud o' him.
An' all his fondest hopes an' aims
Wus centered right in Jim.
And Ma had cried and Dad had blinked
One that momentous day
When they had packed his trunk an'
grip
And sent their boy away. •
Commences Saturday Morning, Nov. 14, 1903,
O’clock and Lasts 10 D
W And now he had come back again,
01 A CA% As he was due to come,
€ C — W And cause his clotsing wus so glad
Was why Dad felt so glum.
ays.
CAZ And cause his trousers wus so loud
WP Was why Ma kept so still.
Kn With grief, O grief unspeakable !
e A 0
NO
--o—o---~----W
The Greatest Sale of the Greatest Stock of Merchandise W
ever priced to the buying public of this p art of the country. W
The store will be closed part of Friday
Friday night getting stock ready for th
necessary to mention
and will work all
e Sale. It is only W.
An' sorrow fit to kill.
Fer when a boy dons duds like them
He's lost beyond recall;
To think—the child—they reared and
loved—
And thus to end it all.
Too much, too much, in silent woe
We et our tasteless meal.
And Jim he joked, and Dad's sad eyes
Up towards his hair ‘ud steal.
Fer it was long an' parted down
The center of his head.
And that was why, with sob and sigh.
Dad mourned for him as dead.
Emory Mill Remnant Sale,
507
And you will know it is the Bargain eV
ent of the season
which is hand.
0
• 40
WE Offer you remnants from the leading casteru mills, shipped to us by mill agent, W. T. Emory, WO
who will be here himself and hold the sale.
+ cease to grow better, decay begins.
Progress is the law of life. When things animate 8.
The store which stands still is dead. The good store of yesterday C07
To do
is commonplace to-day and out of date to-morrow. Eternal effort is the price of progress.
% better to-day the thing done yesterday, to serve better to-day the public which we served well yes- %
• A®
/ terday is the day-by-day labor that makes this store popular and attractive to our welcome custom- &
Forget that in addition to this great assortment of Remnants put on at this sale we offer W
many lines of our regular goods at Mill Remnant sale prices. This is not a sale for one day but for %/
Ten Days, but the first to come get first pick. Come every day and you will find good priced goods W)
R83 that cannot be matched by any house in this vicinity or any other part of the country. Look for the W
4a Green Ticket and you will see radical reductions.W
ers. Don't
MILL REMNANT SALE COMMENCES
%/
Saturday Morning, November 14, 1903. .
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And after supper Dad remarked,
• —Get off them ran ran'togs,
I want to see if you still know
Enough to feed the hogs."
Well, Jim he took a sack of corn
And climbed into the yard:
The pigs run up and bowled him down
And used him pretty hard.
Then Dad cried out, "The worst is true;'
And Ma her hands did wring;
"I knew it when I saw his hair;
He doesn't know a thing!"
"Why, Jim," I said, "why didn't you
Jump back out of the lot?"
"Why, can't you see," said Jim," that I
Was rooted to the spot?"
------04.-----
A Remarkable Case.
One of the most remarkable cases of
a cold, deep-seated on the lungs, caus-
ing pnemonia, is that of Mrs. Gertrude
E Fenner, Marion, Ind., who was en
tirely cured by the use of One Minute
Cough Cure. She says: "The cough-
ing and straining so weakened me that
I ran down in weight from 148 to 92
pounds. I tried a number of remedies
to no avail until I tised One Minute
Cough Cure. Four bottles of this won-
derful remedy cured me entirely of the
cough, strengthened my lungs and re-
stored me to my normal weight, health
and strength." Sold by J H Webb and
Z T Wall.
-----*---
An anxious inquirer, says an
exchange, wants to know why a
newspaper is like a woman. The
various answers given are: Be-
cause it has to have some one to
run it. Because both have to be
known to be appreciated. Because
both are good advertising me-
diums. Because both have to be
pressed. Because it occasionally
changes its dress and tells tales.
The correct answer is: Because
every man should have one of his
own, and not be running around
after his neighbor's.
--0-G-0---
From Cleburne, Texas.
Jas. A. Bradshaw, with the Ameri-
can Express Co. at Cleburne, Texas,
writes: "For the past few years have
been troubled with indigestion, very
severe at times. Had to be very care-,
ul as to my diet. After nsing abot t
four bottles of your preparation known
as Kodol Dyspepsia Cure have not
been troubled since. I consider it an
excellent remedy for disordered stom- -
achs." Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests
all classes of food, tones, s rengthsus
and heals the stomach. Sold by J H
Webb and Z T Wall.
The Fort Worth Sami-Weekly
Record and Grapevine Sun, one
year for $1.50. Now is the time te
subscribe:
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Keeling, J. E. The Grapevine Sun. (Grapevine, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 46, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 14, 1903, newspaper, November 14, 1903; Grapevine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1660359/m1/1/?q=Birth+of+a+Nation: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Tarrant County Archives.