Van Alstyne News. (Van Alstyne, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, May 12, 1899 Page: 1 of 4
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*+***J*3?.
T -* W. T.fc
r Richardson,
REPAIR
BUGGIES
WAGONS
Blacksmithing
and Wood Work ^
Horseshoeing a Specialty
and is the only shop in
town that actually doe*
fancy horseshoeing.
Ail Work Guaranteed.
Van Alstyne News.
MI18. LAURA B. EVANS, PROP
HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLES' RIGHTS MAINTAIN, LIN AWED BY INFLUENCE, UN BP IBRD BY GAIN.’
SUBSCRIPTION, ?I
VOL. 18
VAN ALSTYNE. GRAYSON COUNTY. TEXAS. FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1899.
NO. 2.
Go Xo
Berry & Major,
FOR
First Class Wagon and
CARRIAGE
REPAIRS
Fancy
Horse -shoeing
GO SOI Til, ^ Ol NO MAN. ' moat unknown, welcoming capital
- 'and hospitality, welcoming the
When Horace Greelev first ad- inve*tor from the North, the
South l* having a wonderful i
awakening, and it require* no;
cunning eve to perceive tint it is
on the road to unmeasured and 1
immeasurable wealth. General,
Wil*on, the secretary of agricult-
ure, has just called attention to
the fact that the agricultural]
wealth of the South would !>e]
of our ever restless | vast, v lf its* Products j
w^re diver ifietl; that, favored as
vised young men to “go West,”
his advice was received with a
good humored indifference, and
not in fact until after the civil
war did the real development of
the State* bordering on or west
of the Mississippi river begin.
With the acquisition of new
territory in foreign lands the rest-
less spirits
population booking longingly to-I
ward the new possessions as more
deairable than the Uuited
State*.
We believe, however, that bet- ;
ter opportunities exist today
right here at home than Hawaii
or the Philippines can offer, and i
would paraphrase Horace Gree-
lev's celebrated advice, as a Writer
in Leslie's Weekly has done, and |
say, “Go South, young man.'’
More money has been spent in
the Southern States in the last
twenty years thau will be made in
the next fifty vears in Cuba,Porto
Rico or the Philippines, and the
chauces for money making in the
South have only commenced.
The price of iron tor the world
is now made at Birmingham. Ala.. !
and that city will shortly make
the world's price of steel. The
South’* industrial evolution. '
which begins with the develop-
ment of its iron interests, spread
rapidly to all the collateral iron --
industries, including machine Mckmney Texas April 22. 1899,
shops and foundries, stove factor- Editor News.
iea, steel plants and hardware “The Piogress of the negro in
factories. The 3,000 new indus-1 the Southern States” has been
trie* which have sprung up dur- j well described in a late article to
ing the past year include fertilizer i the New York Sun by K. H.
and phosphate works, woodwork- ■ Yancey of Tennessee. It is a
mg factories, furniture, vehicle, j plain refutation of the many mis-
agricultura! and miscellaneous representations of the aondition
works; textile, flour and cotton of the negro race in the South,
seed oH mills: gas and water He gives credit wherever is due to
works; telephone systems; elec- those northern philanthropists,for
trie lights and power, and ice anti their liberal donations in the
cold storage plants; canneries ami erection of College buildings for
hundred- of miscellaneous plants, their educational benefit. No
Nearly every Southern State has writer has yet, been able to pre-
increased it* railroad mileage dur- sent to our brethren of the north
ing the past vear. and every more visibly and accurate the
Southern harbor has largely in- many difficulties which has con-
creased its export trade. fronted the southern people m
Alabama has shipped a thousand their etforts to carry “the white
tons of iron a day, month after man’s burden.” He shows be-
montb, and the ports of New Or- yond any questionable doubt, how
leans, Norfolk, Baltimore. Peusa- marvellous is the porgre?s made,
cola. Brunswick and Mobile are iu the race, in their tutelage in
shipping American products di- slavery, since their emergence
it is by conditions of c'lmate and
soil, it can find an enormous
market in the North for its early
vegetables, spring lamb, young
chickens and other commodities
which, in this luxurious day, find
a ready sale in every city. The
canning industry can find no
better location than in many of
the Southern States, where fruits
aie raised in the greatest abund-
ance and at the lowest cost.
Fruit culture ami the culture
of ntits find their best opportuni-
ties in the Southern State*.
There is everything, in fact, in
the South to sustain a large popu-
lation in comfort and with less
hardship than must be encoun-
tered in almo-t any other section
of the world.
If you seek new fields of oppor-
tunity go South young man ?
A ruttC S«*Pl CMCAM Or TAMTAM AOVDfB
DR
w CREAM
BAKING
POWDfR
Highest Honors, World’s Fair
Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair
Avoid Raking Powder* containing
alnut- TI-cv are injurious to heaUk
COMMUNICATED.
rect and by the shortest route to
many countries. The develop-
ment of the iron industry in the
from African savagery. He says:
“They would have made greater
progress in the last thirty years it
South 19 in its infancy, and in the they had l>een left ulone to work
manufactuie of textiles that sec- out their own destiny.” In other
tiou of the country has not begun words if there had been less inter-
to take the place it will till, al-Lference with them, in their early
though last year over 330,000 enfranchised state, their advance-
apindles were added to the equip- ment would have been more rapid.
ment of Southern mills, in which
$5,000,0#0 sought new investment.
Nearly fl,00C,000 went into the
•otton seed mills—for American
cotton oil fields a market in every
civilized country—and §5,000,000
is being put in the iron and steel
industries of Alabama, and mil-
lions into those of Tennessee and
Virginia. Rich in natural re-
sources, with splendid water
powers still undeveloped and al
Northern philanthropists inspired
this mistaken notion that the
southern people would be inimi-
cal to the education of the eman-
cipated negro, and being ignorant
ofhis peculiarities and superstiti-
tions, did much to hinder hi9 pro-
gress. It was a fruitless attempt
to bridge a social chasm which
the laws of nature has for many
generations made impossible. It
Johnston’s Sarsaparilla
QUART BOTTLES.
did much towards creating to a
considerable extent a certain
alienation of the former friendly
feelings existing between the
whites and blacks. The former
would not brook any dictation in
their line of treatment towards
the latter, as to social equality.
“There is a certain race antagon-
ism existing, and those have been
occasional race conflicts; but the
general relation between the two
races is entirely amicalbe .There is
a thorough understanding of one
anothers relation, that has pre-
served this amicable relation, in
9pite of a great deal of mischiev-
ous meddling from outside.” It
is said, that the Howard Associ-
ation of London is inteDt on insti-
gating a movement to arrest the
alleged cruelty to negro* in the
South. It is a species of inter-
meddling which will work
more injujry than benefit. The
British have killed many thou-
hnchings in the South or else Tama* ese, former vice king and
where, an unnecessary puuish-1 a tool of Germany; Ma’aafa and
ment. There must be a way to j Tana*, both relatives of the late
be found which will protect our KiDg Maliet< a Laopepa.
white farmers wives, living in j The Berlin treaty, by which the
sparsely settled districts, from Samoans are governed, was *iga-
the frequent attacks of such low ®d *t Berlin, June 14, 1889, the
black fiends The carrying of rapresentives of the three nations
tire arms, should be allowed in United States, John A. Kaaeon, fees or carried on to ihe platform
all sections, where mob dangers < Wilham Walter Phelps and Geor-. ® fT8aDt‘c beetle attached to the
are most likely to be met. In the *e Germany, Coant, end or a »ort of a«nppo-t? He
days of Texas, when the
VIVID DESCRIPTION.
A short sighted and deaf old
gen ieman who was at an enter-
tainment where a professor per
formed on a big bass viol , thus
described the scene: “The pro-
early days of
wild Indian roamed at will, the
trustv rifle in the hand of the.
brave pioneers wife, saved many j *e8 Stewart Scott
from masacre. It is high time Archer ( rowe.
that the better cla»s of our negroes
join in with the whites to crush
out all such loyv degraded idle
Otto Von BfPimrk, Baron \ 0n leaned over and fond'y embraced
Holstein and Dr Kraal: Great tickling its ba :k violently with
Britain, Sir Edwin Baldwin, Char-1* *ODK comb.
black wretches, which infest our lag to nse its friendly officers tr-
beautiful South land.
Old Cottos Plants*
The spectators seemed much
delighted at this display of scien
litie affection. The beetle was
apparently quite anmoved. Tb^n
the professor gave a capital lmi-
taiou of the drunken man and the
lamp post. Be swayed rapidly
, np and down, clutching quickly
protection. This wijs arranged at pojQt8
and .Joseph
The United States acquired a
coaling • ’« 101 at Ptgo-Pago in
1872 in consideration of its agree-
ward affording the inhaditants
by Rear Admiral Meade.
The ancients believe that rhea
matism waa the worknuFa demon
within a man. Anv one who has
bad.an attack of sciatic or fnflam-
matory rheumatism will agree
that the infliction is demoniac
enongn to warrant the belief. It
has never been claimed that
Oamberlain's Pair Balm woald
cast out demons, bat it will care
rbenmatism, and hundreds bear
testimony to the troth of hie pain,
am; this quick releif which it
fords, is alone worth many times
ts cost. For sale by Dick Bond.
I consider it not only a pleasure
bat a doty I owe to my neighbors
to tell aboat tbe wonderfal care
effected in my case bytbe timely
ase of Oamberlaia'e Colic, Chol-
era and Diarrhoea Remedy. I
sand aegru* in their colonial con-j waB taken very badly with flux
quests in Africa, aDd a little of
tWir misguided philanthropy
nearei home, would be more com-
mendable. Booker Washington,
the most enlightened leader of
the nsgro race in the South, says
that tbe whites of the South are
their best friends, and it is the
part of wisdom to so act as to en-
list their aid in their present
struggle to become good useful
citizens. He urges the negro to
know and keep his place, by
acknowledging his dependence
upon the whites as a superior
aad procured a bottle of tbi*
remedy. A few doses it effeoted
a permanent care I take plena
are ia recommending it toothers
aoffering from tba^dreadfal dis-
ease.—J. W, Lynch, Dorr, W.
Va. This remedy ia sold by Dick
Bond. lm
Onut’s Lightning Ot!
Cares Catarrh, Nen-aigia,Sprains,
Cramp Colic, Diarrhoea, Cots,
Headahe. Rbenmatism. Good
for mao aDd beast. Faillng.mon
ey refunded. Sold by Moore&
Brown. lm
A woman’s character is like
postage stamp—one black mark
rains it. Mao's is like a treasury
Dote —no matter how many etaiDS,
it will pass at par. When a wo-
man falls from grace she is mined
forever. On the other band, a
man may and sometimes does
straighten np and is received
hack into society again. All of
which is too true, bat beiug true
doesn't make it right or just>*-Ex.
SAMOA ISLANDS.
Section 6 aitiele 3 of the Bef-
lio treaty, relating to tbe estab-
lishment of a supreme coart of
jastioe and the duties of the
iace, in power and in possession offioerB> BaVB:
of the wealth of the country. He ‘*in case any qaestion shall
begs
impertinence and in gratitude to lDj, lhe rightful election of king
their true triends, the southern or any otner cffief claiming au*
whites, by quitting to seek office: thorily over (he islands, or re-
but go to work in the fields, and *pecting the powers which the
places of labor with a new in- kiDg or any chief mav claim in
dustry and desire to make them- exercise of his office, such
selves useful to tbe whites. He Question shall not lead to
above prejudice and
Suffered For Three Years,
Q. W. Britnell, Leesdale, Alaba-
ma, writes: For the three years
1 have been snbjeot to constipa
lion and bilonsoess, and have
no permaaent releit until I tried
Ramon’s Liver Pills and Tonic
Pellets. I pronounce them the
bent remedy on earth for the ait
ment. for which they are recom-
mended. One of oar customers
nsed them with very beneficial ef-
fects, and said they were nnqnes
tiouably tbe best remedy known.
Sold by Dick Bond. lm
“Sometimes his tiogers quiver-
ed passionately npon one spot,
ike an ill tempered man etrng.
gling with an obstinate pair of
braces. Sometimes be rested
momentarily, as one rests after a
contest with a stiff white tie,
“Finally, lie gave a last convul-
sive tickle to tbe huge beetle,
picked himself np from the lamp
post and carried eft the unresist-
ing insect. Tbe audience ap-
plauded vigorously.
There comes a time in life to all
! of us when we feel mean and "ont
of sorts'* and in a condition to ia-
vlte disease. It is then we need
such a remedy as Dr. J. H. Mo-
leans StreDgtbeneing Cordial and
Blood Parifier. To persons ex- i
bsnsted by sickness or overwork
its invigorating inti aence is ear-
prising.promptly restoring health,
energy aDd cheerful spirits,
gold by Dick Bond. Jm
Other makers tarn oat Jeans
Pants some good, some bad-
some cheap, some high priced
We make the BUCKSKIN
BREECHES. They’re the best
Jeans Pants made. The price is
a.* low as that of common goods.
We save bv system iu the factory,
by paving the best prices for skill
ed help. The pants are never
s'lghted, thsy’re always the same
I in goodness.
An Old ldc*. | A Wondrrfal Discovery.
Every day strengthen* the belief of emi-j The !■*» Tarter of a century record*
nent physician* that impure blood is the man.v * mderful discoveries in medicine,
. cause of the majority of our diseases, hut none that have accompli®lied more for
h“ |,,0‘>le 1,1 ,,’ule ■" hereafter trite Id reepee!-* iTflSOT
Hitters. The many remarkable cures t flen.-d contain the very el ments of e>>od health.
rises
qaestion shall not lead to war.
all bat saall be presented for deci-
by this famous oldf household remedy are an'* neither man, woman or child can take
au*cient to prove that the theoK is correct. 11 without deriving the greatest benefit.
Browns’Iron Bitters 1* aold bj- ail dealer*, browns’Iron Bitters ia solJ hj- all dealer*.
m
former affiliations when in sion to tbechief jastioe of Samoa,
answer*-to some queries from pro- who shall decide it in writing,
mi nent leaders of his race iu com formablj to the provisions of
North Carolina, as to what action *bis act, and to tne laws and ens-
they should take to prevent fur- Jom0 001 lu conflict
ther danger from a race conflict: therewith; and the signatory gov-
advises “the voting of the demo- erment8 wlU ac,cePl aad ab,de b>
cratic ticket.” The negro aaoh d®°iB10D«
throngh education given him by Arlloil® 1 of the treat* 9a>'#: I
Qtaple and Fancy
w Groceries
the generosity mainly of the
white people of the South,
learning at last, that
is
he must
Tbe three powers recognize tha
independence of tbe Samoa gov-
erndtent, and the free right of tbe
natives to elect their chief kiog £
accept with perfect resigHation, and chooBe their form of govern- J
the fact that the Anglo-baxon ment according to their la vs and £
customs. Neither of the powers 1 ^
-hall exercise any separate can £
uol over tbe islands or govern-;
ment thereof, J 4,
Tbe Samoan groap consists of
China. Gla-s and Tinware, country pro-
duce bought and sold. We solicit your
patronage. Make our store your head-
qarters when in town; we will treat you
right. Jefferson street, Hunter building.
O’Daniel & Hassell.
| NEW GOODS RECIVED. j
* e • • • *
u*} One car “Baker l’erfert” and (Hidden wire. Prices low
for cash. Large stock wire netting for poultry and hog*
jP- fencing. Lower prices than ever before. Also sell the
Oliver steel turning plo^V, guaranteed to woi k equal to
J* anv plow made. Stalk cutters. |)i«c harrows with seed-
$ erattachment. <li'C drills. Rotary Dutchniaodisc plow®,
M: Steel harrows. Brown double -hovel*, oornand cotton
•a* plfmteis. The celebrated Mitchell Wagons. A general
line of Agricultural Implements, ( all and »ee us
J Louis Gar ver& Cog
> + ♦♦ + + + *.+ > + + + ♦
L. W. HUGHES & BRO,
are making Special Prices for cash on
all kinds of
PLOW GEARS.vAvsA
Agents for Johnson’s Patent Adjusta-
ble haraes. We have a full line ol all
grades of plow collars. Call on them
For Anything in their Line
+ * + + ♦
♦ *
3Welker Brothers, i
2 DEALERS IN
’ *
^Saddles. Harness & Buggies. J1
§ B
£ A complete line of hue Buggy* JK
£ Ilarne—* at tbe lowest prices. ^
Just received an elegant assortment ol Summer Pi
o Pap Robe*. ^
♦Repairing A Specialty. *
I JM
Advance
Threshers
Engines.
and
Rehandle all kinds of Farm Machinery. A full line ol
John Deer Plows and Cultivators Also, a lull line of
Eagle Plows, Cultivators aud Cotton Planters We bandlo
The John Deer Sfeel Wagons.
Also, the Moimo and New Harrison Wagons. Lowest
market prices.
C. C. McCorkle & Co
Van Alstvne, Texas.
race is destined to rule the world.
April 30, 189y chapter no. 2, must
be added before going to press;
just the day after I wrote the
above article tbe negro Sam Hose
mxsxxsmmmmmm*♦+♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦+♦
I Rent. I Ride. I Sell. j
VACRESCENT BI YCLES
They are easily repaired. They run so easy
They stay sold. ,
was burned at the jtake at New- fourteen islands, of whica niae,
man Georgia; for the brutal with an area ot 1700 eqaare miles,
murder of Alfred Cranford and or about tbe area of Dtdeware.
the ravishing of his wife. While are inhabited, tbe total oopalatioa
it was a most dastardly deed, being aboat 34,000.
which frenzied the whites to a Tbe inhabitants are pare Poly*
point of insauity, yet it would nesiaos, of clear olive color, black
been bettir if the advise of ex- tair and eyes, bright, expressive
A Most Wonderful Cure.
no% KBOPIU AND m kwm HOHKOKS-A lifb saved
A Grand 014 La47 Give* Her Experience.
Mrs. Thankful Orllla Hurd lives lu the beautiful Tillage of Brighton,
Livingston Co.. Mich. This venerable and highly respected lady was born in
tbe year 181i the year of the great war. in Hebron. Washington Co., New
York. She came to Michigan in 1S40. the year of “Tippecanoe and Tyler
too.” All her faculties are excellently preserved, and possessing a Tery re- ______ __________ ___ ________ _____ ________
tentive meiuorv. her mind is full of interesting reminiscence* of her early | ' *T. , ~~ , . | . _ ” ’ ~ ..
life, of the early day* of the State of Michigan and the interesting and re- Governor NoFthen had prevailed: countenance, and in dwipoal.ion
markable people sb-has met. and the stirring events of which sh£ was a wit- lu waiting at least until B more Indolent and pleasure loving.
ness. But nothing L-i her varit .l and manifold recollections are ~Dore mar- - ., . .. , -_____,„ _
vetous and worthy r.f attention than are her experiences in the use of humaQe execution of the brutish The majority of the na neg art
JOHFSTON S SARSAPARILLA. Mr*. Hurd inherited a tendency and pre- * negro might take place. Bishop Christian0, being SO from a belie!
disposition to scrofula, that terribly destructive blood taint which has cursed _n| ,K„._ ,_
and ia cursing the lives of thousands and marking thousand* more as rlc- Turner grys, the black ravisher is ,*ha, it will insure their comfort in
tims of the death angeL Transmitted from generation to generation, It la product of igGOiance. in- an indefinite after life.
found In neary every family in one form or another. It may make its ap- y __ ’ There i* no innn* summer an
pe&rmnce io dreadful ruauiog sore*, in unsightly swellings In the neck or t€Hiperanc6f UBfiiora lty and idl^- P Ui »
goitre, or in eruptions of varied forma. Attacklngthemncousmembrane.lt qCBJ Booker Washington «av« lum or winter in lhe island*, aud
K ^ | h. i, tbe product "of a fills, idea Oop1c.l ftod. «ieb grow, io
Speaking of her case, Mrs. Hurd says: "I was troubled for many years 1 —j0 big present untutored «rtat abundance forms their chief
with a bad skin disease. My arms an<j limbs would break out In a mass of I , , ... . ,
•ores, discharging yellow matter. My neck began to swell and became very ’ state, has the same ability to eu- articles of food.
♦ 1 Q Pil\/F fit W.H. Cave’s
: v O w/n V L-, purniture Store, j
4. Complete line of furniture and undertakers'
'J goods at lowest price*.
■Asssssxmsm&sss msssMssmmmwx
A SMALL SPOT
MAY BE CANCER.
Bryan’s New Book
REPUBLIC °« EMPIRE?
THE PHILIPPINE QUESTION
MON. WILLIAM J. BRYAN
MOST VIOLENT GASES HAVE
The greatest care should ba giv«n ho
scratch which
any little sore, pimple or 1
show* do disposition to heal under ordic-
treatment No one can tell how soon the—
develop into l ancer of tbs worst
APPEARED AT FIRST AS win develop into l ancer of tbe worst type
So many people die from Cancer simnlv be-
MERE PIMPLES.
Hom axduw (Uxsearx
ro.be, Han. Adlst A gtOTMUOO. Ei Secntwy Ou-
1. Prof. D»rid Stur Jordan. ta’I w«orW, Hob.
bor. ud otAon
unsightly iu appearance. My body was covered with scrofulous eruptions..
My eyes were also greatly Inflamed and weakened, and they pained me very
much. My blood was in a very bad condition and my head ached severely
at frequent intervals, and I had no appetite. I had sores also in my ears. I
was in a miserable condition. I had tried every remedy that had been recom-
mended. and doctor after doctor had failed. One of the beat physicians in
the state told me I must die of scrofulous consumption, as internal abcesses
were beginning to form. I at length wg* told of Dr. Johnston, of Detroit, and
his famous Sarsaparilla. I tried a bottle, more as an experiment than any-
thing else, as I had no faith in it. and greatly to my agreeable surprise, I
began to grow better. You can bs sure I kept on taking it I took a great
many bottles. But I steadily Improved until I became entirely welL All the
w ' healed up. all the bad symptoms disappeared. I gained perfect health.
' ve never been troubled with scrofula since. Of course an old lady
ia not a young woman, bat I have had remarkably good health
I firmly believe that JOHNSTON’S SARSAPARILLA la the
•orlfler and tbe beat medicine in the wide world, both for
1 spring medicine." This remarkably Interesting old lady did
than sixty, and she repeated several times, "I believe my
'OBNMTON’f 8ABRAPABILLA."
LOST, MICH.
joy the rights of citizenship as
that of the whites. He believes
A chief provides over every
usually selected
the very old men. j
village, aad is
that the negro must work out bi» ,
S from among
own desting with fear and trembl- ^ adJadjcate ]oCB, .
mg; that he must be content to Th* naliTPb DOl obl)Ktd to
occupy a subordinate position in pwy tflxe8 |d manner, shape or
accordance with the natural laws fQTm The salary of tbe king is
of inferiority which a low mheri- eqaal to aboat #160 and is gnar-
tance binds him. He evidently by the three nations ex-
i9 trying as best he can by precept cruising a protectorate,
an example to raise his race to Ihree claimant# have preae ntfd
that condition, which will make their pretentions to the throne:
With Supp4*ji»entary
Chapten from
Hem. Andrew Carnegie. Senator*
Hoar. Vest, Allan. Whit*. Gor-
7 ■»u. Bacon, Mason. Daniel.
TTrkW W T RiTi« Chi J tor., Butler, MrLaarn, Til 1-
HO».W. J.BBYAX. Money. Tumor. TeiMr.
Edmonds. Olay; Hon H. C. Johnson. Hon. Chaa. JL To ~
liais. Re?. I>r. Van Dyke, Hon. Chaa. Francis Adama, 1
Carl Schorz. Sam 1 Goapera, Prea. Am Fad. of Labor
ties»aATWN«r <E,TiRv mPHMAUSM AW AiSOtimSIl POKMWCEP.
Tarritarial £xpaasioii Imimiui* 'TIM POOL MAS'S LOAD," aad opooMd to tboCoMtUoUoB
oftboUnitod Htotas. tho iMclaration ol lodopoodoaeo. ud aU tha moat aacrad doctrine* ot ou
Republic aa handed down to oa by ou Cat hern.
THE GOSPEL OF A NICHE!) CIVILIZATION ANO BROADER LIBERTY.
THE SNLV Book •> THE SCBJECT.
AGENTS WANTED.
It la profaaal* llliHtratod. ciriif baaotifnl halftone por-raita of Mr Bryan aad the otbar tM>
tribaton, alao scenes of thrillla* interest, aboela* the exact eoaditioas aad castoma la tbe
PhiUpriHt Nothing like it before attempted ia boob pebltshinif. A eery boaaau for eceota.
tas booyhi ot booketores, it cannot be faruuhed by any other boose We are tke sole
The Snt Edition, JOO.dOO ooptoa A large octaeo book, boaotifol mm typo.
YEN FAY FREIGHT on each order amoo>it.og to ■* book* Ot MX —— ofcoo aaoh
asenmpaaisa ardor.
----------—------q
Boot Fall Haorta Bindisg^itb told txigoa_____________ g
--r-| y**-|T* Tt bi II ^gTBts l tiirioi '**"**** ***** *
TNB INDEPKMDKNCE COMPANY, PuMi»h*rsf
eraAkun binumno. onicaoo.
reuse they do sot know just whet the rlinneir is;
ihev naturally turn themsc-lves over to the doctors,
and are forced to submit to e cruel end dangerous
operations—tha only treatment woich the doctors know for Canoer The diasaaa
promptly returns. how#v *r. and is even more violent and destructive than
before. Cancer is a deadly poison in the Mood, and an operation, piaeter, or
other external treatment ran nave no effect whatever upon it The cure mnst
come ffotn within—the la.-: vestige of poison must be eradicated.
Wm Walpoie. of
blotch about tbe
Walshtown, 8. D, says: “A
site of a pea oame under my left
gradually grow ing large*, from which
tervais ran in all direcnoba.
•hooting pains
I became greatly alarmed
and on-u!ted a good doctor, who pronounced it Cancer.
eye.
at intervals
and advised that it be cut out. but this I could not con
sent to. I read in my local paper of a cure effected by
B. S 9.. and decided to try it. It acted like a charm, this
Cancer becoming at first irritated, and then discharging
very freely. This gradually grew leas and than disoon-
timi-d altogether, leaving a small scab which soon drop-
ped ff ana now only a healthy little erar remains where
bar threatened to destroy my life once held full sway."
Positively the only cure for Capcer is Swift's Spadltv-
8. 8. 8. FOR THE BLOOD
—tiers—• fk is the only rei >edy which can go deep enough to reach the root of
tbe disease and force it oi t of the svstem permanently. A surgical no an linn
does not reach the blood-the real seat of tbe disease ■ because the Mood son
not be cut asoag. Insist n;<on S H. S.; nothing can take its place.
8. S. 8. cures also any < ise of Scrofula. Ecsetna. Rheumatism, ^—tagdflB
Blnod^Potson, Ulcers, S- -s, or any other form of blood disease VahmUs
hooka non Cancer ana Bio- 1 Diaeast-s will be mailed free to any addrom bf
Swift SpsclAc Company. Atlanta, Georgia.
r&t*
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Van Alstyne News. (Van Alstyne, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, May 12, 1899, newspaper, May 12, 1899; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth880298/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .