The Lancaster Herald. (Lancaster, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, February 26, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
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THE WEEKLY HERALD
-
B. M. HURLBERT, Editor and Publisher
W. R. HURLBERT, Business Manager
MINNIE-WETMORE TUFTS, Editor
X<ANC ASTER,
TEXAS
-V""-
* The flour mills of the United States
Ipttresent fixed inveBtments of about
$200,000,000*
An alligator dinner may be well
enough provided the alligator is not
doing the dining. »
What has become of the man who
used to be a skeptic about the value
of wireless telegraphy?
The value of horses in the United
States is estimated at two billions.
The auto is not king yet.
Kansas City man undertakes to prove
that whisky is not a cure for snake
bite. Mean disposition, that man has!
Oklahoma woman has 301 ways of
I p
cooking corn. And yet she may not
know of one good way to cook par-
snips.
In awarding praise for the recent
life-saving performance, don’t
forget the man who invented the war
Kg; ter-tight compartment.
In view of Marconi’s service to the
race, this would not be an opportune
time to indulge invidious reference to
the people we get from Italy.
-■■I*.......
Perhaps the wireless telegraph will
eventually be our long-hoped-for meth-
od of communicating with Mars and
ether Interesting places in this neigh-
!«
f-f
11
Apparently we are to have a revival
ef the old press stories of the stage
which have done such yeoman service.
'Another actress has tor& up a bunch
of real money in mistake.
The newspapers of Rome publish
enthusiastic praise of the heroism of
. the Russian sailors who landed at
Messina to rescue such survivors as
they could, and recommend that the
city of Rome confer medals on them.
Plaster portraits are/the fashionable
form of "counterfeit presentment” In
London. They are done in the form
bf miniature busts or bas-reliefs at the
low price of half a guinea ($2.50)
r :
apiece.
An elephant in New York seized a
pitchfork from his keeper's hands and
tried tp beat him with It. It Is to be
- feared an elephant like this will have
to be sent to Join the ranks of the
nature fakers.
n
m
The Illinois man who dropped dead
when be was whipping a colt was not
. overcome by his physical exertions,
but by his violent rage. The man who
whips a horse is invariably a man
with & bad temper, sot Under decent
control.
=======
A man in Philadelphia Is suing his
wife for divorce because she has a
soul affinity on another planet Al-
though he does not explicitly say so
fa his complaint, every one will nat-
urally infer that his hated rival is the
man from Mars.
mP
Hi I s 1
A remarkable case, unique in thf
history of all consular corps of the
world, is that of the American consul
at Gibraltar. Mr. Sprague is the third
successive generation of his family
to hold the post of consul, his grand-
father and hisr father having held it
before him. '
There is a difference of opinion as
to whether or not Menelik, head czar-
kaiser-speaker of Abyssinia, is dead.
We should think the simplest way to
“ ' out would be to ask him. Of
course, he isn’t easily approached, but
there should be some way of getting
the question to him and letting him
| settle it.
B#.
w.
Er-
fT' *
W-
yk.
M
Unlike the creations of the millinery
establishments, it fortunately happens
that the old hat on the masculine
head is reckoned just as good as aHr
by the great majority of mankind.
This will help mitigate the embarrass-
ment that would otherwise come from
a general and prolonged strike in the
hatters’ establishments.
Notwithstanding the financial strin-
gency, the Young Men’s Christian as-
sociation had ons of its most prosper-
ous periods last year. Eighty-four new
buildings, costing $10,000,900, were
opened, and work on as many more is
now in progress. As the spirit of co-
operation is growing among Christian
workers of all denominations, the as-
sociation Is likely to expand more
rapidly in the present century than in
the last
Wfc'f
HP*
Civilization will never achieve the
accidentless sea voyage, but the wire-
less telegraphy comes as near to that
end, apparently, as human ingenuity
can devise. A half century ago, such
results would have been looked on
as little less than a miracle. A couple
of centuries ago its inventor would
have been in danger of the stake as
possessed of demoniacal power. Yet
stone people still declare that the
world is steadily getting worse in every
respect.
This is the season of skating accl
dents. People ought to recognize the
well-known fact that no river is evei
safe in all parts. A skater should al
ways approach new ice carefully on
the lookout for airholes and thin
«pots.
Newsboys need not be greatly
manned lest tbe newly devised sienna
chine for selling newspapers shall in-
terfere with their business. The ma-
chine will not chase possible patrons
along tbe streets or climb after them
into street cars
EVENTS BOILED DOWN
DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN HAP.
PENINGS SERVED UP IN
ATTRACTIVE STYLE.
NOTHING GOOD GOT AWAY
Everything Important That Could Be
Confined to a Small Space is
Hers Found.
WASHINGTON NEWS.
Interest was increased in navy cir-
cles Sunday when it was learned that
Rear Admiral R. D. Evans, retired,
who gave the order under which the
battleship fleet steamed from Hamp-
ton Roads a year ago last December,
was not included among the official
guests to greet its return.
Baron Moncheur, the Belgian Min-
ister to the United States, has been
transferred to Constantinople. He will
be succeeded at Washington by Count
De Buisseret Steenbecque, recently
Belgian Minister to Morocco, whose
appointment was also announced Sun-
day.
Senator Hale stated Friday that the
rivers and harbors bill which was re-
ported to the house will not pass this
session of congress.
President Roosevelt announced Fri-
day that a call would be issued at
once for a world’s conference on the
conservation of natural resources to
b© held at The Hague next September.
Forty-five nations represented at The
Tague will be invited to participate.
By an amendment to the naval ap-
propriation bill adopted Wednesday by
the U. S... Senate the size of the two
battleships authorized is limited to 21,-
000 tons and their cost, exclusive of
armor and armament, $4,000,000 each.
The mandate in the Waters-Pierce
Oil Company case has been stayed for
thirty days from Feb. 18, the day
which otherwise it would have issued.
The order was formally delivered to
the chief clerk of'the Supreme Court
by Chief Justice Fuller in Washington
Monday.
The state department at Washington
Is considering the question of dispatch-
ing an American war vessel to Liberia,
where alarm is felt for the safety of
British and French citizens employed
in the customs service of the republic.
Any attack made hereafter on the
lock type of the Panama canal, accord-
ing to the opinion expressed by Presi-
dent Roosevelt, in a message trans-
mitting to Congress Wednesday the
report made by the engineers who re-
cently visited the canal zone with
President-Elect Taft, “is in reality
merely an attack upon the policy of
building any canal at all.”
Senator Hansbrough Thursday in-
troduced a bill in Congress providing
for a system of old age annuities de-
signed to take place>of the demand for
an old age pension for government em-
ployes, but extending to all classes.
The Senate leaders have resolved to
treat the president’s latest outgiving
on the subject of secret service legis-
lation with dignified silence for the
present at least. They promise that
later, perhaps not until next winter,
there will be a very comprehensive
report on this subject, and it will
show, they predict, that it is the presi-
dent who is ‘inaccurate and mislead-
ing.”
DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN NEWS.
A storm passed over the Bloomdale
section about seven miles northwest
of McKinney Monday afternoon, do-
ing considerable damage!
The sites having been selected and
all necessary surveys made, work upon
the International and Great Northern
Railway company’s new $50,000 stone
round house and machine shops will
begin next week in Taylor.
It is announced that an effort will be
made to have President Roosevelt sub-
poenaed when the case of Gov. Has-
kell and seven Muskogee citizens in-
dicted for conspiracy to defraud the
government comes up for trial.
Unless something now entirely un-
foreseen occurs to change his attitude
toward the appointment of negroes to
Federal offices. President Taft will not
make any such appointments in States
where they would tend to arouse oppo-
sition on the part of the people among
whom the negro office holder would
serve.
Numbers of bouses and government
buildings at Sivas, the capital of Vil;
yet of the same name in Asiatic Tur-
key collapsed Tuesday, as the result
of an earthquake. The loss of life is
not yet estimated, but reports say
thirty persons were killed and others
injured.
At a mass meeting of citizens of
Hugo, Ok., Sunday night it was de-
cided by an overwhelming vote to
construct a pipe line to the Kiomatia
River for the purpose of supplying the
town with water. It Is nearly six miles
to the river.
The sundry civil bill before congress
which provides for the authorized cur-
rent expenses of the government dur-
ing its fiscal year, will carry items ag-
gregating $137,022,070.
After passing through many strug-
gles for his life in bloody battle with
Mexicans and United States citizens
and soldiers and for twenty-two years
a prisoner of war, for the most part
upon the Fort Sill military reservation
at Lawton, Okla., Geronimo, the famous
war chief of the Apaches, 80 years old,
succumbed to pneumonia Wednesday
morning in the military hospital.
Fire in a hay barn in Sherman,
owned by W. A. Huggins, caused a
loss of $2000.
Cotton receipts for this season at
Arlington are 9,233 bales, with several
hundred bales still in hands of farm-
ers.
At an early hour Friday morning
fire broke out in Henrietta, destroying
three stone and four frame business
houses. Estimated loss is $25,000.
Sunday night, as the southbound
Houston and Texas Central passenger
train came in at Calvert, it struck
and instantly killed A. L. Arnwine of
that city.
Ed Wilson, a well known stockman
of Fort Towson, Ok., reports that cat-
tle are in fine shape notwithstanding
that the winter has been more severe
than usual.
The extra session of Congress will
be convened on March 15. This date
was definitely settled Wednesday and
President-Elect Taft authorized the
announcement.
Miss Sylvia Green, daughter of Mrs.
Hetty Green, and Matthews Astor
Wilkes, whose engagement was re-
cently reported, were married in New
York Tuesday morning.
The record of the issue of $15,000
sewer bonds for Hubbard City has
been approved by the attorney general
and work will begin on the sewer sys-
tem by the loth of March.
-A cyclone formed about 3:30
o’clock Friday afternoon in the south-
west portion of Liberty and passed
diagonally across the place, causing
death and property destruction.
Dr. J. H. Wilson of Quanah, chair-
man of the livestock sanitary commis-
sion of Texas, says that he has noti-
fied Gov. Campbell he will not consid-
er reappointment on the board.
John Scott, a young farmer of Em-
berson, 30 years old, who was engaged
in getting out timber for a saw mill
company near Antlers, Okla., was kill-
ed Thursday by a falling tree.
The annual conference of the First
District Bankers’ association of Texas
was held in Galveston Tuesday. From
the principal points in South and East
Texas delegates were in attendance.
Heavy earthquakes were felt
throughout the island of Porto Rico
Wednesday. The inhabitants were
awakened by oscillations and the
alarm was great. No damage was
done.
A great many farmers of Lamar
County will use fertilizer this year
in raising cotton and a movement is
on foot among business men of Paris
to order it by the car load to sell to
farmers ^at actual cost.
In a rear-end collision on the Fort
Worth and Denver about fifty miles
north of Fort Worth, near Sunset>
Thursday morning at 4 o'clock, three
men were injured and two cars and a
caboose destroyed by fire.
At Lorena, a town on the Missouri,
Kansas and Texas railway, twenty
miles south of Waco, early Sunday
morning a conflagration took place in
which seven houses were burned, the
total loss being $10,000.
The city council met Thursday after-
noon for the purpose of canvassing the
returns of tbe census takers, and they
declare officially a population of 5341
persons within the city limits of Dak-
hart. This will be of great assistance
in the way of securing free mail de-
livery.
After more than a month of hard
work the soliciting committee appoint-
ed at the mass meeting to raise the
$25,000 bonus for the extension of the
Marshall and East Texas railroad to
the south from Marshall has succeeded
in its purpose and raised the full
amount.
Aurelius Christian, the negro who
Thursday criminally assaulted and
then murdered Miss Mary Dobbs, the
pretty 14-year-old daughter of a prom-
inent Botetourt county farmer, at Roa
noke, Va., was Friday sentenced to die
In the electric chair in the state pen-
itentiary on March 22.
The 80,000,000 people in America
use as many faatches as the 800,000,
000 in the remainder of the world,
according to statistics of the Texas
Fire Prevention association.
The total cotton receipts at the two
yards in Mt. Pleasant up to > date
amount to a little over 6500 bales*
compared with about 500 for the sea
son of 1907-08.
The Texas and Pacific Railroad had
a wreck Sunday night at Gloster, La.,
and the engine and twelve cars were
piled up in the ditch. Two lives were
lost. ,
Saturday Galveston crossed the 3,-
000,000 mark in cotton receipts since
Sept. 1. In five months and twenty
days, including Sundays and holidays,
Galveston has received and handled
$180,000,000 worth of cotton.
Twenty-five new residences are un-
der construction in Childress and lo-
cal lumber men say that the building
boom has just commenced.
Robert W. Goelet. director of the
Illinois Central, millionaire and one
of the Harriman party in San Antonio,
was arrested Monday on a charge of
speeding his automobile.
Unless unlooked for opposition is
encountered in shape of a “dark
horse,” the candidate for the honor
of the next annual meeting of the In-
terstate Cotton Seed Crushers' Asso-
ciation will be held in Memphis in
May.
Senator Carter brought in a sub-
stitute postal savings bunk bill Mon-
day afternoon that differs so radical-
ly in its essential features from the
first bill as to have amazed many of
those who have heretofore supported
him in his effort to bring about this
legislation.
STORM KILLS THIRTEEN
FOUR COUNTIES IN EASTERN AR-
KANSAS ARE SWEPT
BY TORNADO.
ONE TOWN IS DESTROYED
All Houses Are Razed at Fisher Ex-
cept Two—Telephone Serv-
ice Affected.
Little Rock, Ark., Feb. 24.—Begin-
ning in Lonoke County and ranging
northeast through Lonoke, Prairie,
Woodruff and Poisett counties, a tor-
nado raged this morning in East Ar-
kansas and according to the best in-
formation obtainable thirteen persons
were killed and at least eleven seri-
ously hurt.
At Fisher, in Poinsett county, the
reported dead are J. S. Bass, Mrs.
Stone and Wade Freeze.
A relief train left Brinkley at 5
o'clock this afternoon for Fisher,
where it is said that all of the build-
ings in the town were blown down
save two. The storm was accompa-
nied by a heavy rain and a great deal
of electricity. At Lonoke, Lonoke
county, the new jail was struck and
slightly damaged.
.Telegraph and telephone communi-
cation has been cut off from that part
of the state most seriously affected,
and rumors are -conflicting.
NEWS FROM
OVER TEXAS
Anti-Trust Law Upheld.
Washington: In deciding the case
of the Hammond Packing company of
Chicago, versus the State of Arkansas
favorably to the state, the supreme
court of the United States Tuesday
upheld the constitutionality of the an-
ti-trust law of Arkansas. The com-
pany was fined $10,000 in the Arkan-
sas state courts for failing to observe
the law.
Youth Drowns in Weil.
McKinney: Everett Smith, a youth
17 years of age, was discovered,
drowned, in a well at the home of
his father, James Smith, near Weston
Tuesday morning. It is supposed that
some time during the night he went
for a drink, and, getting upon the
curbing to arrange the pulley, he lost
his balance and fell into the well.
Court Decision Affirmed.
Washington: The verdict of the
United States circuit court for the
southern district of New York impos-
ing a fine of $108,000 upon the New
York Central Railroad company, on a
charge of granting rebates to the
American Sugar company, was Tues-
day affirmed by the supreme court.
Petrified Skull of Buffalo.
San Angelo: The petrified skull ot
a buffalo was taken from a pit by, W.
K. Beaty Tuesday. He was at work
in a sand pit about five miles from
town and unearthed the skull, which
is fairly well preserved and shows the
animal to have been a very large one.
Miss Sylvia Green Weds.
New York: In the presence of a
few friends, Sylvia Green, daughter of
Mrs. Hetty Green, richest woman in
the world, Tuesday became the bride
of Matthew Astor Wilks, her 65-year-
old suitor.
President to Visit Missions.
Chicago: While in Africa Presi-
dent Roosevelt will not only visit a
number of missions but will make
addresses giving his observations
when he returns to this country.
Forty Lives Lost.
Buenos Ayres: According to a dis-
patch received here by the minister
of marine, forty persons lost their
lives in the wreck of the Argentine
steamer Presidente Roca Tuesday.
Choctaw Division Plans.
Denison: Unconfirmed rumors are
to the effect that the Katy purposes
moving the headquarters of the Choc-
law division to McAlester, Ok., the
first of the coming month. This will
result in the moving of about forty
families from this city.
Young Man Dies From Scalds.
1 ,»nhur Day, 23 years
tl age, died Tuesday from being scald-
ed iu a vat of boning water at the
Armour packing plant.
Five-Mile Record Broken.
Troy. N. Y . George Bonhag. of
the Irish-American Athletic club,
broke the world’s record for the five-
mile run here Tuesday. He made the
distance in 24 minutes, 58 1-5 seconds.
The previous record was held by Tim
Collins, 25 minutes, 19 2-5 seconds.
Amarillo Has Fire.
Amarillo: Fire of unknown origin
destroyed the Canadian Mill and Ele-
vator company's plant at McLean
Tuesday night. The loss is $10,01)0.
Several railroad cars burned.
Severe Storm in Colorado.
Denver: A sever storm is raging
throughout the eastern and central
portion of Colorado and while rail-
road traffic is not blocked it has been
specially severe on cattle and sheep
and stock raisers will suffer a heavy
loss. . ■
Ten Thousand Visit Laredo.
Laredo: Over 10,000 visitors is the
number of visitors now summed up
by the railroad who attended the Red
Men’s celebration of Washington's
Birthday in the city of Laredo.
There are eight applications for Con-
federate pensions pending before the
county court of Grayson.
There are three bank guaranty bills
pending in the lower house of the Mis-
souri Legislature. All have secured
their second reading
A. B. Patterson & Co., of Greenville,
the largest shippers of poultry and
eggs in the South, shipped six car-
loads of eggs to New York last week,
comprising 2,595 cases.
Five persons were killed Wednesday
and seventy-eight injured, twenty-
eight seriously, by the collapse of a
floor in a hall where lots -were being
drawn for conscription, at Valencia,
Spain.
The Southern squad of trap-shooters
who gave an exhibition in Dallas Wed-
nesday are to make a tour of the West-
ern States. From Dallas they went
to Sulphur, Okla., where they will be
engaged for a week.
Over $1,750,000 is to be expended in
the erection of eight building in Dal-
las. This represents structures rang-
ing up to eight stories in size, the ma-
jority of which are to be of steel and
fireproof construction.
Gov. Campbell Monday appointed as
Judge of the Sixty-Ninth District
Court, created by the Thirty-First
Legislature, David Bennett Hill, of
Dalhart, and to be District Attorney,
J. C. O’Bryan, of Channing.
The Kilgore State bank was robbed
Friday morning at 1 o'clock. The vault
doors were blown open and between
$3,000 and $4,000 taken. Residents
were aroused by the explosion, but the
gnng made good their escape.
Amos Taylor and Briscoe Long, ne-
groes, tried Friday in the criminal
district court in Dallas on charges of
robbery in connection with the snatch-
ing of a purse, were given twenty and
seven years, respectively.
Will A. Holford, editor of the Gar-
land News, was a visitor in Dallas
Monday and brought with him assur-
ances that the citizens of Garland, to
a man, are determined upon securing
an interurban line to Dallas.
At the town of Leuders, sixteen
miles below Stamford, there was a
pitched battle between some negroes
and Mexicans Monday night, as a re-
sult of which one Mexican was killed
and one Mexican and a negro wound-
ed.
Robert Hillmisch, a motor cyclist
who started from Paris, France, six
months ago on a tour around the
world, arrived in„New Braunfels, Tex.,
Friday, for a day’s rest. He is due in
Paris *n February, 1911, and is in the
lead of eight others.
All the beer and wbisky that was
seized by the officers in the raids at
Honey Grove some months ago has
been declared the property of the state
by the district court, now in session
in Bonham. There is about a car
load to be destroyed.
President Charles W. Elliott of
Harvard University addressed an au-
dience of 1000 persons Monday after-
noon at the Dallas high school, where,
to meet the distinguished educator,
the public school teachers of the city
tendered a public reception.
A telegram received Monday after-
noon in Dallas from Robt. Gibson,
secretary of the Interstate Cotton
Seed Crushers’ Associations, convey-
ed the intelligence that the next an-
nual meting of the association will be
held in Memphis, Tenn., on May 18,
19 and 20.
Recent investigations have proven
that there is an enormous deposit of
brick-making shale in Jacksboro. West
of the town, on the line of the Gulf,
Texas and Western railway, now
building, there are large beds of fine
fire clay.
The ladies of the Department Club
of Childress are figuring with several
contracting firms for the erection of
Bteel fire escapes on both the school
buildings in the city. The club hat;
raised the money to carry out the
work.
Isham Randolph, who accompanied
Mr. Taft to Panama, says that ships
will sail through the canal by Jan. l
1914.
Four prolonged earthquake shocks
were felt during Sunday night at
Elche, in Alicante Province in Spain
but no damage was done.
Land owners and residents of the
coast country are jubilant. They claim
that the recent cold wave which swept
along the coast was worth thousands
of dollars to them and that they are
now assured that the orange and fig in-
dustries are safe ventures.
. Spencer Vandeventer of Bastrop has
received advices from the North that
ills brother, Judge Vandeventer, of the
Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has
been tendered the place of Secretary
of the Treasury in President Taft’s
cabinet, and has accepted.
Steps to place the State of Texas in
the way of obtaining possession of the
grounds and buildings at Fort Clark
for a State tuberculosis sanitarium
will be taken at this session of Con-
gress in Washington.
The civil service commission at
Washington announces that civil serv-
ice examinations will be held at Dal-
las, Houston, San Antonio, El Paso,
Waco, Austin and Brownsville March
10 and 11 to obtain eligibles lor ap-
pointment as civil engineers in the
Philippines at salaries ranging from
$1,400 to $2,000.
HOME TONIC FOR OLD PEOPLK
Wonderful results, eventually restor-
ing full physical vigor, are obtained
from the following: To one-half pint
good whiskey, add one ounce syrup-
sarsparilla and one ounce Torts com-
pound, which can be procured from>
any druggist.' Take In teaspoonful doses«
before each meal and before retiring..
Poor Pat,
The surgeon of a large hospital was*
paying a visit to the patients when be-
come to a cot whereon lay an Irish-
man who was not bearing his pain-
very bravely, for he was groaning:
loudly.
“Oh, come, my poor fellow," remon-
strated the surgeon, "try and bear
your pain like a man. It’s no use-
kicking against Fate."
"Shure, you’re roight, sorr,” groaned
tbe Irishman, who had been severely-
kicked by a mule, " ’specially whin
they’re the fate of a mule!”—Ex>
change.
Not "Just as Good"—It’s the Best
One box of Hunt’s Cure is unfailing-
ly, unqualifiedly and absolutely guar-
anteed to cure any form of SKIN DIS-
EASE. It is particularly active in
promptly relieving and permanently
curing all forms of ITCHING known.
ECZEMA, TETTER, RINGWORM
and all similar troubles are relieved
by one application; cured by one box.
Invention of Porcelain.
At a display of porcelain in China
an exhibitor said that Chinese litera-
ture ascribes the invention of porce-
lain to a period some 25 c^ntures be-
fore Christ. Foreign experts are by
no means certain that the art existed
before the seventh century of this era.
( O Happy Beast!
Johnny—The camel can go eight
days without water.
Freddy—So could I if ma would let
me.—Harper’s Bazar.
For Colds and Grlpp—CapUdine.
The best remedy for Grips and Colds Is
Hicks’ Capudlne. Relieves the aching- and
feverishness. Cures the cold—Headache*
also. It’s Liquid—Effects Immediately—10,
26 and 50c at Drug Stores.
Each person lives best who does his
best for one day at a time, and then
refreshes himself for his level' best
the next day.—Robertson.
v x \ \
>DD
KSDMn
PM I s
SM.
Kidne*
[5 “G uar*!!!
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
-NOTHING LIKE IT FOR-
THE TEETH
removing tartar from the teeth, bendea destroying
all germs of decay and dries* which ordinary
tooth preparations cannot do.
THE MOUTH
and throat, purifies the breath, sad kills the germs
which collect in the mouth, causing sore throat,
bad teeth, bad breath, grippe, and much adma.
TUr rvrc when mNamadt tired, ache
Itlt t T tO *nd bum. may be instantly
relieved and strengthened by Paxdae.
AiTiBBU Pasture will destroy die germs
UAI AnHn that cause catarrh, tad tbe in.
Damnation and stop the discharge. It is a snm
remedy lor uterine catarrh.
Paxdae is e harmless yet powerful
germicide, driinf edtant deodorizer.
Used in bathing it destroys odors and
leaves the body andseprically clean.
PON 8ALC AT DRUG STORES,SOc.
OR POSTPAID BY MAIL.
LARGE SAMPLE FREE!
THE PAXTON TOILET OO.. BOSTON,
BILLIONS GRASS
mmm Casts Ms-Mc mimtw *m4. WBttM
I Most wonderful gimm of tha can fury,yielding from I
I» to 10 tons of hay par acre and lots of paatare be-1
I (Idea. It (Imply (rrow.jrowi. grows I Cut It today |
laadtnd weak* It looks for tbe mower again, and I
I *o on. Grows and SourUhee everywhere, on every I
I farm In America. Cheap a* dirts luxuriant as the I
bottom lands of Egypt. Big seed catalog free or I
I send IOo IB stamps and receive sample of Bill I
I wonderful era**, also of Spelts, tbe cereal wander, I
(Barley. Oat*, Clover*, Qranes, etc.. etc.,and cata>|
llog free. Or Bend 140 and we will add a sample I
I (arm eeed novelty never seen bj you Mote.
SAUER SEED CO., Bo* W, U Cr
m
Important to Mothoro,
Examine carefully eVery bottle » ot
CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of i
' mwrnm* r gy
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind Yon Have Always Bought*
The Night of the Game.
First Splfllcated Person — Doesb
thish student belong here?
Landlady (coldly)—No, all my stu-
dents were brought home an hour
ago.—'Wisconsin Sphinx.
There Has Recently Been Pieced
In nil the drug stores an aromatic, pleasant
herb cure for woman’s Ills, called Bother
‘ Gray’s AUSTRALIAN LEAF! It is theoalv
certain regulator. Quickly relieves female-
We?T°^®t*eS and Backache, Kidney, Bladder
troubles* At all Druggists or by
mail 60 eta. Sample FREE. Address, The-
Mother Gray Co., Le Boy, N. Y. ***#
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Hulbert, Elbert Monroe & Tufts, Minnie Wetmore. The Lancaster Herald. (Lancaster, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, February 26, 1909, newspaper, February 26, 1909; Lancaster, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth542753/m1/2/?q=waco+tornado: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lancaster Genealogical Society.