The Panola Watchman. (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 46, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 26, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Panola County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sammy Brown Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
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ht imr mi a kin kot
im with grmv* content.
Oeod-nettirmllr and rheertully, which-
«W way 1 want;
ffheagh It WIN hlank and bar* and
brown. It Mhouldarad to the Ik#
Aftd took ad at in* In quiet pease whan
I wont alow If kjr;
Ba4 any huiidinc. bo M house, or tarn
plefl plot* or mart.
Wtn tar* a man with chilling hrowo
that not him tar opart.
1*0# n*v*r ooon tho *ky that ihlold*
tho eountryold* at nlghi-
Aft oboa ooltrot drapery looped up
Wtth gema of Hght-
That did not oaom to bond to mo all
friondlywloo. and blaaa
And nour a balm of comfort on fnr
heart in ltd dtatrooa:
StH whan tho otty ha* Ita night th*
glaro boat* In your *y*
Aftd mob whatever way you wilt you
cannot no tb* *ky.
road, or
word to
fw ft*v*r a*on a country
brook, or hill, or tr*o.
That did not hav* a kindly
•ftoak Of atng to mo;
They never crowd u* to one aide, they
never aneer nor frown.
Nor view u* atrangrrwl** a* do the
otreet* and wall* of town.
Aftd aomeUmo* I think that thla may
ho tne hidden flan
Vo ahow u* how much better find
could mfth* tb* world than man.
Henry bought a Morrta
chair,
Wide, and broad and
doom,
“See, dear. What I got
for you!
flow It bockon* alaepr
••! like rockera beat, doftlv"
Mary depro ated,
“But a smoker’* tablft
you
Alwaya appreciated*"
How, her huahand never amokaft
IJIlle Mary rare*,
In her Morri* chair ha real*,
(She tthea rocking-chairs).
And the atnoker’s tablet
Useful? I ahnuld aay.
Aa a little *ewlng-*tand»
It baa come to stay.
Foreign Bavaragaa.
Roosp— la a drink made In Turkey,
from barley. Probably the Americana
who want an excuse for the alaag ax
preaalon "booaa," will Ilka to lay the
blame on the “Unspeakable Turk.”
Quftah—la • ftuaslan beverage made
of bot water poured oa rye bread ua-
til It fermeata. It la cheaper than
vedka.
Bchnappa—a Dutch drink made Is
Schiedam It la a atrong gin distilled
from turpentlae. It la not at all llha
hear, nor ao widely consume*
Pulque—la a dlatltlallon of the lilse
of the agave, a apeclea of caclua It
la tha favorite beverage of the Mext-
eaia, «nd Is made hr mixing Hie Juice
whs water and auger, when It la at-
ttrtfffd to ferment.
Mr Malda to Bngtand.—It la curloua
to note that theae are selected ap-
parently with a view to having them
aa young aa poaalbte. Member* of the
cruaade agalnal aaloona la London dla-
rlosed the fact that about 90 per cent
of the bar malda In London were un-
der tf yeara old. And more than 1,000
glrta between the agee of 16 and SO
era employed In that one city ftloae.
HtW QHABOI OP PALM tWBAIL
INB AND PKRJUBV.
CftOft Bet tor October 11—Mem Bend ef
920,000 Blven WHS Seme term
tiee But One.
Aset In, Tea.—H. Cloy Pierce, accent
pan led by hie attorney*, B. B Perkin*
of Della* and Bam Canty of Port
Worth, appeared In the Fifty-third die-
trlct court Monday ta answer to tha
charga of , tala# aweartng peading
against him
Tbe Biate was represented by Dis-
trict Attorney Hamilton, Asalstant At-
torneys General McCord. Crawrord and
Llghtfoot and 0- H Jenkins of special
counsel employed by the governor to
assist in tbe prosecution.
Tha case having bebn called Dis-
trict Attorney Hamilton Bled a motion
to oolle prosse and dismiss the Indlst-
ment for tbe following reasons:
1. The Indictment In Lhia cause con-
tains many Inaccuracies and doea uat
charge that Iba defendant has been
absent from the State continuously
•Inca the commission of the alleged ef-
fanes.
I. The grand Jury at thla term at
this court has returned a new Indict-
ment, correcting the inaccuracies la
said Indictment
I. Defendant has been arrested un
day the new Indictment returned,
charging tbe same offense, upon which
tha Biate expects to go to trial.
An order dismissing tha case and ra-
leaelng tha sureties ftft Pierce’s bowd
was entered by Judge Calhoun sad
110,000 ball la tha aaw caaa was greet-
ed. A hep bead was made and ap-
proved by tha court. It was signed by
the following aa sureties: O. W. Lit-
tlefield, Joseph Nalls, Walter Tips. W.
It. Hamby. Cheater Thrasher, A. J. Mil
era and P. 1. Lawless.
Neither aide being read for trial the
caaa was, by agreement, postponed
until the September term of tbe court
and set for'October 11. Tha old Indict-
ment charged false swearing; tbe new
one charges falsa swaarlng and per-
Jury.
Whmataff Cmmmk.
-la February our daughter had tha
whooping cough. Mr. Lana, of Hart
laud, recommend*1 Chamburlalu’a
Cough Remedy and said it gave bis
customers the bast of saMafaetion.
We found It aa ba said, and mb rec-
ommend it to aayoue haying chil-
dren troubled with whooping Bough,”
save Mrs. A. Goee.of Durand, Mkh.
For sale by All Druggists.
The best people like the best
books. _*
How’s Thla?
We offer $101) reward for aay caa*
of catarrh I hut canuot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
K. J. CbetteJ & Co., Toledo, 0.
We, the undersigned, have known
F. J. Cheney for the last 15 y nrs
and believe him perfectly honorable
in all bitsiuuss transactions ami is
Huanciaily able to carrv out any ob-
ligations made by his lirtn
Wn tiling, Kiunan A Marvin,
Wholesale Drugs. Toledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cura ia taken inter-
nally, acting directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system.
Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cts.
per bottle. Hold by all druggists.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for con-
stipation.
Mtff Russia It la Illegal for a pgr*
•ob ta marry more than ivy times, *
aaid the maa phe knaws things. .
“That juat shows haw anpra-
greaaivw th* Russians are,” de-
clared tha maa from St. Louia.—
H anal on Chronicle.
The finest art
most natural.
Is always the
Qtngftrbrcad far Cottage Pudding.
Wharton's Potato Crop.
Wharton, Tea.—The Wharton Coun-
ty Irish potato crop has already
Kills to Stop the Fiend,
The worst foe for 13 years of Jibn
Deye, of Oledwin, Mieb., waa a run-
ning ulcer. He paid doctors over
$400 without benefit. Then Buck-
len’a Arnica Sslvc hilled tbe ulcer
and cured him. Cures fever-acres,
b ills, felons, sranmn, aud salt rhstim.
lrfdliblc for pib a, burn, ecalds,
cuts, corns. 35 c-u s at
All Druggists.
They are good men and true
when they are tru« men and
good.
■washes All Records.
As an all-round laxative tonic and
health-builder no other pills can. . , .
compare with Dr. King's New Life, heat business fnsnd WB have.
It pays
to buy goods at home,*' thy Lib-
eral (Kan.) Indapandant has thla
deaervad appreciatiation of tha
home merchant: .
Without any thought of senti-
ment or suggestion that we owe
allegiance to any one, the cold,
hard truth la that the retail mer-
chant of our home town ia the
They tone and regulate stomach,
liver and kidneys, pu ify the blood,
strengthen t je perre*$ cure const ip v
tiou, dyspepsia, biliousness, jaundice,
besdsebe, chills nnd malaria. 1 ry
them. 35 cents at
All Druggists.
Bis Portion of Chlcksn.
“Oo-oo!” tried the first little
boy at tbe Zoo, pointing at a
•wan, “ain’t that a fanny bird?
What is.itr
“O 1 know,” replied the other
little boy, who lived in a board-
ing-house. “It must be a chick-
en; look st all tbe neck it’s got.”
^-Philadelphia t’-oaft.
Tha Moat Common C .use cf Buffering.
Rheumatism causes more pain and
suffering than any other disease, for
the reason *bat it Is the most com-
mon of all ills, and it is certainly
gratifying to sufferers to know that
Chamberlain’s Linitrent will afford
relief, and make rest and sleep po«-
sible. In many cases the relief from
pain, wnich ie at first temporary, has
become permanent, while iu old peo-
•»lo subject to ebrooic rheumatism,
ofit-u brought uu bv lUmpuns or
changes in tbe weather, a permanent
cure cannot be expect»d; the relief
from pain which this liniment affords
is alone worth many times its cost.
35 and 50 cent sixes.
For sale by ail Druggists.
This Is a cheap and simple dessert, reached the stage where art Immense
or It may he eaten without sauce, like , y|eig practically guaranteed, tbe dry
the plain, old-fashioned gingerbread. or no( toe wet spring and other weatb-
To a half cap of sugar, add a eup of i4,f «.ondltlorj« having been all that
moiaaaes, one-half of butter, and a ebnU) be d„,rM, b, ibt. pouto raisers, i
teaspoon each of different spices Dte Th(. har^M)n| ^ th<. irttp „ evl.
dence on all of the farms, and the po
tatoes will shortly be ready for tbe 1
market. The first wagon load has Juat
Hi
$1.26 per bushel, and the prevailing
price I* ft per bushel, f. o. b. cars at
Wharton.
solve two teaspoons soda In a cup boil-
ing water and add wtth two and a half
evps flour ftefore baking, die laat
slowly.
x»v ’ ‘
The Famous Racine Buggies
ARB NOW FOR SALE BY °
1. T. TThoinpMon
They wear longer and cost less.
TM
A striking exemplification of the
whifftgtg of fortune la that white at
«M thne tho wicked city folk sold ivld
Bricks and green goods to tbe honest
ommtryman, now the honest country
laaa sell* caatatuupes to the wicked
(fifty folk.
Tbe cawtaleepe Is a small, round,
wrtohled vegetable, and it la a cross
Between ft Dead flea apple and
ffaard, aa a general thing.
Early la the wmnxuer It to brought
tafo the markets. At that time
hafrx a perfemo that te sweeter than
A Mead of oM-faehloned rooes and
early vtetet*. Recaese ft costa ao
■Nteh to perfame tho eaotahmpe (hoe.
tts price IS aft tha way from S* cent*
te n oawte each
ft Is estimated that enough money
te wasted annually la thte couatry to
m§ the cnaal across Fanama This
saoney Is wasted la Honor and efgara
If ww wmtM compile statistics of the
money thrown away on enntotonpea
we sheetd And that with the added
emw wo noted doahtedeeh the Panama
aaaaf and have a xwtictent sum left
te tones all tha CamegJe libraries to
Ite hrfnh.
The ooareatlonai way of serving a
to to cat H to halve* and
tho tonne works on th* Inside
White yon are doing this the raeta-
tosrpe send* forth txnvfaKxtng. appetlt-
tng flavors, and your Ifpa begin to
twitch la expectancy and you wish to
pumr heart that you had stolen into a
earner hack te a bfTThowrd and eaten
(to thing tel by yowreelf. Nevertbe
^ ~ m ^ ^ m <1 ft« fy. • J « f ; r. ,y • n
IFM frWI pfFpMrr FI ff'. Filing, ftewit
fmm sigh, and tmptee a hire on year
fork or spoon Darn R h to your
your note stoke within yon and
the ttase yon ate (he
' at tho April fool party
Year sahwegwete remarks are not
ash as CnwM he printed in (bis gov
packinghouse te
TMff THING BXFCCTCD.
Car te Onions.
Flatonla. Tex.~ Dusek A Bittner
loaded sod chipped a car of onlona to
the east Saturday Tbe stock was un-
usually fine and brought a good price.
A great deal of cotton was sold on our
streets last week on account te the
raise In prhe. The crop Is about all
out of the hands te Ibe farmers.
**************************
* asavaasc me iss cicaram nnuDiav #
IPS NANrr Ot.DFIKLD
always my*
And doe* tho thing **-
period.
She see* a auds-t, and
she asy*;
“A sketch would ba ra-
t-clad
If M ware half as vivid;
wte
An artist but would
shrink.
Prom painting clouds Sr
fiery red.
As Nature—don’t fWft
thtftkr
0h# any* ah# "cannot As
n thing ____
Wtth newly shampooed
bnlf."
Aed one* lb* cfHnaa seemed in sight.
When, showing dimple* rare.
Pbe gar* m* that oM Story (dM
This cut and-dried Mia* Nancy).
Of how ah* loathed plain rooutng, Bui
l.tked making dtahas fancy"
0b* go** not in for gnffmg*.
But. M her soft, rownd In**.
There cornea s emit* serapMe,
"Home I* tb* woman's pines "
In short, thla maiden alwaya do«U
And aa ya lb* fhtnga e» pec ted.
That's why I marveled much Whan
My proposal she rajaatad'
72
Dimmit County Vefsd $30^100 Bends.
Csrnto springe. T*x.—An election
was held this week to decide whether
or not Dimmit county should Issue
fSb.bOfi road and bridge bonds. It waa j
a very quiet affair, ns there was prac-
tically no opposition. Tbe vtee. so
far om heard from, stands 5V for to
4 against tbe Issue.
Irrigate Orange Nursery.
League City, Tex.—Mr. P. f. Gill ef
ffatsumn orange fame. Is busy Install-
ing a gasoline machine nnd pump for
the purpose ef irrigating his nursery
garden. Mr. Gill believes firmly In
the orange future te tb* eeaat coun-
try and an* planted quit * largely te
this fruit thte year, besides owning
ode te tbe largest and oldest orchards
IN thte section
*
*
+
+
4
♦
*
*
*
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#
*
*
•Prom Minute te Minute."
Not only ' from day to dav." but
from "minute to minute” Is tbe advice
of a certain woman ta very buftv cffy
woman i. which accounts for the vaet
amacumt of work she is able to accom
ptlsh. She Is a housekeeper, a rrnwie
teacher ami writer, beeldes finding
time for club work and her children's
amusements
T never could do if tf I looked one
minute ahead." she said T *howld be
swamped f am on ir>y way to tbe
deny st now *
"And after that?" 1 asked.
She smiled "1/et me see: ye*, if I
- ^ ... stop to think. I have temch for th*
Jy _7 children; lesson* all the afternoon.
m Bwteteff u* *n* aorta F* *m «a ^ men dinner to prepare. Thte
evening f have a class in nautical
history. *wd bwf don’t make me think
so far ahead I am to catch this car
to# *** *** dPMtef# now, and that te
.*WV • ' " . . . enough to pm my mtnd on tor the
FuwXlxIW^uff V^e
MY0 F™I*PIIT. mWVI xffP TmMw pwjlj
The coaeentratiow te effort on the
(Mag to bond te rhw on’y secret te
Granted, te
id some planning, the *exf
is strict atrenflow to tbe
gftd im m thing to bend The duties piling up
before yow nee not
(radon on the
the day rofl om like a dear
K nnd vision ta ctewr aud duties n
Cartead Bbipmeof* te Cwcsmtocfft.
Missouri City. Tex.—The rota Maw-
day Will perhaps prove an Injury to
some crops, us there was alraady a
good nenson In the growad It will
likely delay potato digging as most te
the farmer* expected to commence thla!
week. Prospects are for a fair yield.
Carload shipments te cucumbers will
gfart in a few days by (he farisers
along the fingarland railroad. Cattle
Shipments la and out are henry. All
classes of cattle are in fine condition
and bring put on the market rapidly.
Itasca voted 936.000 School Benda.
Itasca, fex -At Did election Status-
day oa tbe proposition to icswe >33,-
fififi school building and equipment
bonds rbe n*u* wan earned by a vote
te IS# to 76 On (he subjevf of a
maintenance tax the teawe was carried
bp a vote te 13# to 76
OMTNME IOC MO ELCOTMO COBPMV
is prepared to supply your needs, with ice and
Electricity, and proposes to give satisfaction.
You fwgfiggp npofi«otf «$• b$$4 |mf **«t-
FIBB|g. Let’s work together to our mutual
welfare. We keep the best LAMPS of different
sizes, Irons, Fans, Shades, and in fact, are pre-
jiared to take care of your wants in everything in
the Electrical line.
NrTICK CITY DELIVERY ICE HOURS.
From d a. m. to 11 a. m. From 2. p. m. to ti p. m.
The interval from 11 to 2 is necessary that we
make shipments of Ice by freight and express,
and to feed teams and eat ourselves. Bv placing
your orders for Daily or every other day delivery,
you can be served more promptly, as when the
_ teams start on the regular rounds, they can serve
you as they go, but if your order comes in after
they are gone, you cannot be served until one re-
turns. No ice delivered Sunday after 11 o’clock.
Now. let’s be systematic and work to each other’s
interest and we will get more and better satis-
faction all round. __ Yours,to serve, ______„
Phone*91. OARTHAHE IOC A ELECTRIC I
Jno. C. Whitney, President and Manager.
The retail merchant conducts
a school of commerce for our
education —and the tuition is free.
Every man, woman and child
getB the benefit of seeing in the
home t<»wn about anything that
is of real importance. He pro-
tects us against fraud and de-
ceit. He stands for the square
deal.
fyu never ordered a 910 light-
ning rod from your home mer-
chant and then found your note
for a thousand dollars in the
bank next day as a result You
never paid him $60 for a range
that warped out of shape in six
months—without your wife get-*
ting the money back. He never
charged yo« 876 for a trailer
buggy that you found out could
be bought anywhere for 160.
No, the home merchant is just
like you. He lives where he
does business and his success
depends on making a friend of
you and your neighbor. Like
you he has to “make good."
The retail merchant is now the
one great factor in our commer-
cial system and this Is true sole-
ly because he renders us better
service than we can get else-
where. 1 Take him away and our
town is gone; take pur home
town away and we deprive our
children of the retail store, which
is the greatest single educational
factor In modem life, No, It
cannot be. The retail merchant
will continue to abide in our af-
fection so long as we value our
homes, because the average citi-
zen trproud of his town (tie al-
ways tells how close his farm is
to it.) and he secretly despises
the method of peddlers—and the
peddler system is now known to
be the legitimate father of the
catalogue houses.
£ “When in doubt, don’t,” is an
J excellent business maxim, but
J “when there is no reason for
RFI doubt, do.” should be coupled
jV with it. _________
*
♦
(KILLth. COUGH I
m* CURB th* LUNC8
■Dr. King ! I
New Discovery
|tORC8fSf JSZL
ABB All TttWOXT XWfi tUWSTSOUStM.
Iarantkxd satisfactory
; MONEY REFUNDED.
0EL
I OB
«IW. V. TV m l ITU, rrcBiwm ami inoiiasri, ^ 1 3L|~NJU3
j**##**#### a^**#**#**+##*+| ffygyg
mm ffluea yam. Warn fhto
Crop* »n Seed Sfiag*.
Jewett, Tex—Farmers report atop
pro-p<-rt« very good, near te grass
and to growing rendition.
W. A. 'Bellamy
Merchant Tailor
I reaton wa »g* yod to buying I
I ia he caretol to get the guamtoft— |j
^ BUa-'KSiarr
\rn UmMtOdm
Cleaning. Pressing. Mending and Altering.
Hats cleaned, blocked ami brimmed for
$1 no
Sack suits cleaned and pressed
91 73
Skirts cleaned and pressed
75c and up
Pants cleaned ami pressed
50c
Coats cleaned and pressed
91 00
Vests cleaned and pressed
26c
Orders taken let high grade, km cost
perfect fitting clothes.
For Weak
Kidneys
Twd Tnsnseed Bwriri
Sour Labe. Tex.—The Ransom OM
rompnay well oa lot « hi htoeb 3 te the
Merchant addlttoa cast* to as a gath-
er Monday afternoon nnd Sewed for
more than on hour at the rate te 16ft#
barrel* te «U per day.
□Fresh milk and hotter delivered
day in the week. 1 mm
have a phone in my reside^H
Call me vp. and all orders will
receive prompt attention.
41 $# J R Rak^r
In. w
A Week’s
Trial For 35c
rsa«
for
Cfteppere Get Geed Morey.
Hamre*. Tex —CeaetderaM# i
was ptod out by the farmers far
(hopping the pant week, and (he
name to tod» aarnrdap add
boy one anywhere
than you
you
you.
to
91.76,
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Park, R. M. The Panola Watchman. (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 46, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 26, 1909, newspaper, May 26, 1909; Carthage, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth895983/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sammy Brown Library.