The Lancaster Herald. (Lancaster, Tex.), Vol. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, January 31, 1908 Page: 2 of 8
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Complies with all requirements of the National Pure Food Law, Guarantee No. 2041, filed at Washington.
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MOUNT FUJIYAMA.
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Pilgrimage to Its Tempest &m1 H.^WHllif'Vice^re.L*} L- *’• WHITE, Pbesideni. |§TK WHlS’vSS&Sbr
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Swept S-mmit.
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To the people ofw Japan the
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Japanese
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mount ;j?
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Fujiyama D sViOivi.r .'File meaning of *
the word is •‘rhoaoraliie mountain.•' •,*.
During that brief si;; Weeks of sir inter «
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whbn Fujiyama's r/imj swept side's at’e 1?
climbable. wri;- - A 11. Edwards i.i
“Kakemono.” the x uuriiiis 'come i. |
thousands, in ton thousands. They «
dress theihaeiyes in white' front. Iwatl
to foot. M heir < arry long staves
WHITE 6cCO., Bankers,
(UNINCORPORATED)
Lancaster, - - Texas.
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a
Latest book is the most
beautiful we ever issued.
Pictures in natural colors
of 97 presents for the users
of Arbuckles* ARIOSA
Coffee. Will be sent free
to any one who writes for it.
Do you realize what a great business this
Arbuckles’ ARIOSA Coffee is? As many as
30,000 letters for presents are received here in a
day. In a year we despatched four million
individual presents to our customers — presents
that brought letters of thanks and appreciation in
return.* *
Here is one from Mrs. De
Jamette
" I appreciate highly
the beautiful -, presents sent me
6 /*
6
from you from time to time and
will say that your coffee is the
leading brand on the market,* * *
the purest, best and healthiest
coffee ever made I have been a
user of it for 25 years and will
want it as long as life lasts. The
coffee is worth three times its
present market value.”
Millions of persons in every part
of the country drink no other
Cccfae, and swell the sales of
Arbuckles’ ARIOSA until they
exceed the combined Sales of all
the other packaged coffees.
Arbuckles’ ARIOSA is the
best Coffee for you,, saves your
money, and gives, you* presents
besides. Speak softly but plainly
to your grocer man if he tries to
sell you bulk coffee. Tell him
you know.
If# your grocer won’t supply, write to
ARBUCKLE BROS.. New York City.
of
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to customers every accommodation consistent with sound Banking.
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WHEN YOU FEEI BAD
If you are bilious, languid, constipated, suffer from indigestion, sour* belching,
bloatedfeeling, bad breath, headache, wind in the bowels, dizziness, you need
PRICKLY ASH BITTERS
AERIAL NAVIGATION.
The Great System Cleanser and Regulator.
A few doses will open and purify the bowels, tone up the stomach, stimulate
the kidneys and liver and impart a feeling of strength anti vigor. It transforms
a tired, nervous, halfsick .man or woman into one of bright, ruddy good health,
energy and cheerfulness. ~x ,
. ; - Get tbe Genuine with the Figure “3” in Red on Front Label.
. y . , ■ /
A Price $1.00 per bottle.
Sale Tost
X^^rOILT ZDIES-CTCr STOIE^IEI!
s
•est and Stream
tericati Weekly Journal of
Outdoor Life.
^thirty years “FOREST and STREAM”
le reputation of being the foremost
journal of outdoor life. Its purpose
se enthusiasm of the lover of nature.
Iter, the naturalist, the canoeist, the
[camper, the yachtsman, the lover of
(dor recreative life, it not only reflects
jharm of nature, but is reminiscent
and of those to come.
to Our Readers.
fe- V" / * *
[rrangements whereby our readers
•FOREST and STREAM” on a
tavailable. The regular price of
[REAM” is $3.00 a year. Those
are not at present subscribers to
[6AM” may procure a year's sub-
ipular national weekly journal of,
lation with a year’s subscription
>th tor $3.25.
>rders to Lancaster Herald,
Read Your Home Paper.
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THE REV. IRL R. HICKS
Almanac and Magazine
Should be in
every home in
the land. His
•weather predic-
tionscanbehad
only in his own
publicati ons.
No other publisher is, permitted to
print them in any form, either with or
without credit. His 1908 Almanac ex-
cels all former editions in beauty and
value, and sells for35cents, postpaid.
His monthly magazine, Word
Works,, contains his weather fore-
casts for each month, together wit# a
vast amount of the best family read
and costs $1. a year, one almanac with
each subscription. Every earthquake
and serious .storm for 20 years has
been predicted by Prof. Hicks. You
cannot afford to be without these pub-
lications. Address all orders to
• Lancaster Herald.
No argument is needed to prove this
statement correct, you also need a
paper for world-wide general news.
You cannot choose a better one—one
adapted to the wants of all the fahiily,
than the Dallas Semi-W,eek[y News.
By subscribing for the LANCASTER
HERALD and the Semi-Weekly News
together, you get both papers one
year &>r $i.8o. No subscription can
be accepted for less than onfe year
at this special rate,, and the amount
is payable cash in advance. Order
now—d® n°t delay.
' 1908 is Presidentinl Year.
©
JGrYouT order will receive prompt
attention. Address—
?
The Lancaster Herald,
LANCASTER. TEXAS. .*
The First OLs Bag and the First Dir-
1 igibte Balloon.
On the 1st of Deeepiber, 1783, when
the first gas balloon rose from the
Tuileries, carried up by Charles and
Robert, the Marquis de Villeroy, an
octogenarian and skeptic, declared it
was tempting Go£ himself. He was
rolled in his armchair to a window of
his Chateau to witness the*impossibili-
ty of such an ascension. But the mo-
ment the aeronaut, gayly saluting the;
spectators, rose in the air, .the old man,
passing suddenly fronf the most com-
plete incredulity to unlimited faith in
the power of genius, fell upon his
knees and exclaimed; *;fe mep, ye will
find the secret of never dying! And ir
will be ttiien I am dead!”
The public, easily confounding the
atmospheric with the astronomic heaV-
ens, already hailed the day when the
aeronaut would continue ^his aerial
course to the moon, to Venus, to Mars
or Jupiter. * , y
JPierre GIffard, then Dupuy de Lome,
juried .the first dirigible brflloons. Lfiter
Captains Renard and Krebs in their
aeroplane. La France, went from Meu-
don to Paris and back at the same
time that Gaston Tissandier" was car-
rying iont his fine experiments. But all
progress was soon stopped by the
weakness of the motors compared to
their weight.
Nothing further could be done until
the arrival of the explosive motor. In
fact, it was the improvement in auto-
mobiles which won us the conquest of
the air. y
Hands and Feet.
It Is said that Disraeli was prouder
Of his small hands than of all his great
mental accomplishments. This was
presumably because they were badges
of aristocracy in their evidence that
he had not been brought up to labor,
and he worshiped aristocracy. And
small feet of the same character—evi-
dences that the possessor did not go
barefoot when a child. Generations of
carefully shod children of the nobility
developed this characteristic of those
of “gentle blood” as distinguished from
the commonalty. Bu£ such proofs of
superiority were not mpekly endured.
In due time brainy commoners discov-
ered that the “artistic hand” was not
imalil, but long and slender, and then
came the athlete multitude, who scorn
small hands and feet as evidences of
effeminacy.—Indianapolis Star.
We know your Wants, and Want yo.ur Business.
|<ikVrrtiVHVnii«!lWimrtl»VrtVEHiAWVAViWkW
s Office Phone 137, REsroENCE Phone 79
With ample resources, a stroqg individual responsibility, and com-
pare while.-wood iii>their hands, each ; jh piete facilities for-candling all kinds of Banking Business this Bank
|| '-.tes accounts f,on, Farmers, Firms and Individuals, and extends
mouiltain. jjj
Always the lender at their head, hi- ; ip
staff crowned with a tinkling ‘mass o! Dk
bells, like tiny cymbals, cha'nts ifa
hymn Fujiyama. For six short
summer weeks they come. Then the
winds rush down.- the show fa|ls, the
tempests rage, and Lord Fujiyama lives
alone. -
No hunaan being has yet strfyed' a
winter onwxis summit, and even in tb»‘
summer weeks the winds will blow the
lava blocks from the walls of the n/si
houses and sometimes the pilgrim from
the path.
Fujiyama stands alone, not one peak
among a- range, but utterly alone. Ris
ing straight out of the sea on one side
and from the great Tokyo plain on the
other, his 12.365 feet in ta^ long curv-
ing lines of exquisite grace rise up and
up into the blue, and not an inch of
one foot is hidden or lost. It is all
there, visibl^ as a tower built on a tree-
less plain. It dominates the landscape.
It can be seen from thirteen provinces,
and from a hundred m|les at sea the
pale white peak of Fujiyama floats
above the blue.
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FT. 1 >. JORDAN,1
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Fire, Life. Aecident, Live Stock and
Tornado Insurance^
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3 YOFJR BUSINiKSS SOLICITED
?C*f WW,» ,W#AW PMPPfA •M**W W WWM MW W# *
a
Resolutions of Respect.
We, your committee to whom
3
was referred the 4utv of drafting
resolutions on the death of Br,o.
Geo. S. Pavden, beg leave to re-
port the following: *
Whereas, On the 14th of Janu-
ary, 1907, our Heavenly Father
saw fit to remove from earth to
Aeaven our beloved Brother
George Hayden, who died at his
late residence, Lancaster, Texas,\
at the age oi 53 years and 4
months, having been a member
of Lancaster'lodge, No. 200,1. O.
• -v
O. F./' for fffe past 22 years.
Therefore be it,
Resolved,That Lancaster lodge
No. 200. I. O. O. F., has lost an
honored member, and be it,
^Resolved, That the lodge ten-
der wife and daughters our heart-
felt sympathy and condolence,
and be it further resolved that a
page on our book ojf records be
set apart for these .resolutions to
be recorded, and l>e it further1
resolved that a J[copv of these
resolutions be sent to his family
and relatives, and a copy sent to
the Lancaster Herald for publi-
cation. J. F. Lott, „
* G. N. Williams,
^.JW. Mitchell,
Committee.
11
DALLAS, TEXAS.
MW
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The oldest and best equipped derijr
tal parlors in the state. All modem
work at moderate prices. 'Painless
textraction of teeth. 264 Elm St
_........ ~ | , y , •' .;*
ISfiAEL DREEBEN,
| LAWYER
Abstract Examination, Land, Title and Commwr-
^ cial and CorDuration Law.
Money to Loan on Real Estate
L«ndore Lein Notes Extended. '
0C6-SO6 Slaughter Bnildlng
Dallae. Texas.
PhoM UU
'-'J
__
Harry P. L^wther,
Attornev-at-Law. *
Practices in all Courts, state and Federal. —
Rooms 217-18, ^Slaughter Building.
Phone 2478. Dallas, Texas
[wEi
The Farm and Ranch says:
’Trachoma the dreaded dis-
ease of the eve, has been found
in a number of schools recently.
At Fort Worth, Waco and other
cities the children of poor par-
ents have been attacked by this
deadly and insiduous disease.
John L. Young.
Attorney-at-Law. •
Telephone 1255. .
iff!
^3
til
Slaugnter Bldg. Dallas, Texas
M.
aft
Walter H. Walne,«
Attorney-at-Law,
Rooms 215-218 Ndrth Texas Bldg*
^Phone 143, Dallas, Tex.
a General Civil Practice, f
Chas. F. Clint,
Lawyer.
Office MS Main Street.
Special attention given to Lend unties, 4
Probate Wills and other Civil *
4®
1 > Jl
Dallas.
Texas.
disec
follow
The Rev. Irl R. Hicks 1908 Almanac
Is ready for “delivery and ex-
cels all former editions in beauty
and value. The cover is a beauti-
ful design in colors,. the entire
book is full of fine halftones,
astronomical engravings and in-
teresting matter. It contains tihe
Hicks weather forecasts complete
for the whole vear, finely illus-
trated. The price bv mail is 35
cents, on news stands 30 cents.
Word and Works, the Rev. Irl
R. Hicks, fine monthly magazine,
contains all his weather fore-
casts from month tof month, to-
gether with a vast amount of the
best family reading. The price
is $1.00 a.year and one almanac
goes with each subscriotion.
Address Word and Works Pub-
lishing Company, 2201 Locust
street, St. Louis, Mo. Write for
rate on almanacs in quantity.
Agents wanted.'*
Gray Hairs In Wall Streat.
“It seemed to me down In New York
the other day,” remarked a Cleveland
er who had just returned frdm the me-
tropolis, ‘Jhat one might almost rec-
ognize Wall street and the financial
region by the number of gray haired
young men you see. I had occasion to
be In several offices on Wall street tlye
other day, and I honestly believe more
than half of the young men I saw had
gray hairs I noticed the same thing,
along the street. It may have bet:,
just a coincidence, but I couldn’t hyip
wondering if they, would* have beer
gray just as soon jff they had. been at
some other game for the last few
years.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
.Stupid Fellow.
“Mary said No' to me last night.”
sighed I\ster Sloman, “but I don't bo
lieve she could honestly, tell why she
did it.”
“Oil, yes, she fould.” replied his
cousin Kate'. “She.told me.”
“Did Fhe?” - '■ - ,
“Yes; she said she dwln't ‘think you'd
take ‘No; foi' aii answei.'’j--I’hilade,;i>lii t
Press. *
Alarm and surprise have followed
the discovery of this, the vforst
disease of the eye known to the
human family; and on account of
which this government has de-
ported from our shores many
immigrants to this country.
Tbe situation is truly alarming.”
« A Core for Misery
“I have found a cure for the
misery malapfa poison produces,
savs R. M. James, of Louellen,
S. C. It's called Electric Bitters,
and comes in 50 cent bottles. It
breaks up a case of chills or a
bilious attack in almost no time;
and it puts yellow jaundice clean
out of commission.” This great
*; *1
tonic medicine and blood purifier
•gives’ quick relief in all stomach,
liver and kidnev complaints and
the misery of lame back. Sold
under guarantee at The. Lyorf
Drug store.
J
-■" A|
For the best
GLASSES
;o Properly Fitted
Goto
MMimm men to.
297 Main St. Dallas. Texas*
V K TTC Jno. R. Dickey’s Old
r A\J 1 UReliable Eye Water*
rap
It cures sore eyes or grabulated lids.
It strengthens weak eyes.
It cools and soothes a sore eye. ' 1;
Refreshes and strengthens a tirede
It don’t hurt when applied.
It feels good—children like it. •
More than a million cures back it.
The genuine always enclosed
red folding box, For chronic sore
eyelids, styes and a diseased condi-
tion of the roots of eyd lashes, use
Dickey’s Old Reliable pye Salve—
bpth guaranteed under the pure food
I4w [No. 1421]. Sold W
Rome's Gormandizing. *
Tim do* :iUe of a nation commoin os
wiion gormandizing begins, Homo's
collapse was well miller way \yhen
plaves wer^ thrown into the eel pits to
Increase the' grimy flavor of the eejs
when they came upon the table.
The February number of l/n-
cle Remus’s Magazine is on our
desk. Uncle Remus discourses
in rhyme in this issue.
Success has a great tendency to con-
ceal and throw a veil over the evil
deeds of men.^Demosthenes.
-
Lancaster Drug Co.
Catarrh and Head
m
It Does the Business
Mr. R. E. Chamberlain, of
Clinton. Maine, says of Bucklen’s
Arnica Salve: “It does th$ buis-
ness. I have used it for piles
J *
and it cured them. Used it for
chapped hands and it cured them.
Applied it to an old soVe and it
healed it without leaving at scar
behind.” 25c at The Lyon Drug
Store.
Mrs. Z. E. Goforth, 12119 Holly
street, Kansas City, Ml
‘After using a sample tfottle and
two 25b bottles of Hunt1
ing Oil, I am almost w(
tarrh. It .stops my
t is the best medicine
and I just can’t keep hi
la
>*.*
ever saw
out it.” She is right.
>use with- j
Read the advertiseml|nts.
Jk
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Hulbert, Elbert Monroe & Tufts, Minnie Wetmore. The Lancaster Herald. (Lancaster, Tex.), Vol. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, January 31, 1908, newspaper, January 31, 1908; Lancaster, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth543145/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lancaster Genealogical Society.