The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 10, 1906 Page: 2 of 4
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The Batesyille Herald
A Weekly Publication.
Gko. C HERMAN. Editor
F. M. Getzendaneb, Publisher
©flicial Organ of Zavala County.
Subscription $1.00 a Year.
Advertising rates on application.
Entered in Post office of Bates-
ville, Texas, as second class mail
matter. ___
The subscription price of the
Herald is SI 00 per year.
Announcements.
We are authorized to announce Jno.
T. Briscoe, as a candidate for the
Legislature, subject to the action of
Democrat primaries. _
Announcements.
The undersigned hereby announces
himself as a candidate for the office of
District and County Clerk of Zavala
county, subject to the action of the
Democratice primaries of said county,
in case such primaries are ordered,
and in case such primaries are not or-
dered, then subject to the votes at the
general election next November.
T. H. TAYLOR.
The undersigned hereby announces
himself as candidate for re-election to
theoffice of District and County Clerk
of Zavala county, subject to the action
of the Democratic primaries of said
countv, in case such primaries are
ordered, and in case such primaries
are not ordered, the" subject to votes
at the general election next November
W. T. CHILDRESS.
Do You Itch.
If so, you know the sensation is not
an agreeable one, and hard to cure
unless the proper remedy is used.
Hunt’s Cure is the King of all Skin
remedies It cures promptly any itch-
ing trouble known. No matter what
name or place. One application re-
lieves—one box is absolutely guaran-
anteed to cure.
C. B. Neal, the Uvalde photograph-
er did considerable work in and
around Batesville recently.
Cl-arid for Action.
When the body is cleared for ac-
tion, by Dr. King’s New Life Pills,
you can tell it by the bloom of health
on the cheeks; the brightness of the
eyes; the firmness of the flesh and
muscles; the buoyancy of the mind
Try them. At All Druggists, 25 cents.
W. R. Spear has about completed
his new dwelling and the family is
preparing to occupy it.
If It Falls the Money’s Yours.
Thousands of boxes of Hunt’s Cure
are being sold by the Southern Drug-
gist daily, for the simple raason that
people are rapidly tindtng out that it
is the best cure for any itching disease
ever discovered. The first applica-
tion relieves, and one box positively
guaranteed to cure any one case.
Mr. McCulloch, a prospector from
Oklahoma, passed through Batesville
recently on his way to Zavala county.
Remember.
It’s not how you live, but how’s
your liver. If not in perfect order,
make it so by using Simmons’ Liver
Purifier,—tin boxes only. Its the
surest, safest and most agreeable aid
to that organ ever put up.
Purely Personal.
T. A. Pettus has been in Batesville
the past week.
W. T. Childress returned last week
from a trip to San Antonio.
J. B. Ross Esq. has lx*en absent
for several days on business.
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Faison spent
Saturday of last week in Batesville.
L. D. and Willie Vancleve spent
Tuesday of this week at Batesville.
.1. C. Peterson, of Devine, has been
visiting his father, W. W. Peterson
this week.
L. D. and Willie Vancleve were in
Batesville from the Western part of
the county this week,
Jim Ottenhouse, accompanied by
his brother spent one day in Bates-
ville recently.
J. H. Erskine visited Uvalde Sat-
urday last on business, returning the
same day.
G. W. Barnes and wife, of Loma
Vista, were in Batesville a few hours
on Monday.
W. J. and WTillie Barker, of Car-
rizo Springs, passed through here
Tuesday on their way to Uvalde.
D. C Pryor, State agent for the
International Colonization Company,
spent Friday last in Batesville.
E. J. Walker, of Uvalde passed
through Batesville Saturday on his
way to the Allen Harris ranch.
WT. T. Barner and Willie Clark
came over from the Western part of
county Saturday last.
Judge O. A. Mills made a trip to
Uvalde last week. This week he visited
Loma Vista in the interest of the public
schools.
J. D. Wade left last week for New
Mexico, where he expects to buy a
carload of horses for shipment to this
part of Texas.
Ed and Sam English came over
from Cometa and spent a flay at the
county seat recently. Mr. Ed English
has sold several hundred acres of his
land in the artesian belt to Milam
county farmers.
Saved by Dynamite.
Sometimes a flaming city is saved
by dynamiting a space that the tire
can’t cross. Sometimes, a cough hangs
on so long, you feel as if nothing but
dynamit would cure it. Z. T. Gray,
of Calhoun, Ga., writes: “My wife had
a very aggravated cough, which kept
her awake at nights. Two physicians
could not help her; so she took Dr.
King's New Discovery for Consump-
tion, Coughs and Colds, which eased
her cough, gave her sleep, and finally
cured her.” Strictly scientific cure
for bronchitis and La Gripep. At
All Druggists. Price 50c. $1.00
guaranteed. Trial bottle free.
Rev. C. W. Perkins, of Uvalde,
and E. Y. Z. Hubbard, of Carrizo
Springs, continued the revival meet-
ing at the Methodist church during a
portion of this week. There was con-
siderable interest taken in the ser-
vices and several accessions to the
church.
A Creeping Death.
Blood poision cpeeps up towards
the heart, causing death. J. E.
Stearns, Belle Plain, Minn., writes
that a friend dreadfully injured his
hand, which swelled up like blood
poisoning. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve
drew out the poison, healed the wound,
and saved his life. Best in the world
for burns and sores. 25c at All
Druggists.
I. S. Grandstaff, of Parker county,
was here last Friday on land busi-
ness. He is well pleased with Zavala
county and thinks that we will have
an influx of Parker county people in
the near future. He thinks a Bank
would do good business in Bates-
velle and Zavala county.
From now on, each Saturday morn-
ing, I will have choice beef for sale at
the residence of Mrs. A. T. Smith in
Batesville. Respecfully,
JETT HECTOR.
A Guaranteed Cure For Piles.
Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles,
Druggists rrluud money if PAZO OINTMENT
bkUs to cure any ease, no matter of how long
standing, in «to 14 days. First Application
gives e,«e and rest. 50e. If your druggist hasn't
Itsend 50e In stamps and it will lie forwarded
(Hist-paid by Paris Medicine., Co St. lx>uis,.Mo
For Sale.—House and 11 acres of
land, at Batesville. Land irrigable
and entitled to water privileges from
the Commanche Ditch. Apply to Geo.
C. Herman, Batesville.
For Sale.—Lot 1, Block 5, corner
of Court House Square and Leona
Alley, town of Batesville, with im-
provements. Price $150. Ay ply to
Geo. C. Herman, Batesville, Texas,
TOCURE A COLD IN ONE DAY
Take ^xative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund the money if it fails to
cure. E. W. Grove’s signature is on each
box. 25c.
Just Received—At the Lead-
er-News a big shipment of en-
velops, note heads, letter heads,
bill heads, fine paper for com
mercial printing, mourning note
heads, visiting cards, etc. Bring
or phone us yout orders.
The Plain Plucker.
If a burn or a bruise afflicts you, rub
it on.
Then before you scarcely know it all
the trouble will be gone.
For an aching joint or mussle ao the
same.
It extracts all pains and poisons,
plucks the sting and heals the lame.
Hunt’s Lighting Oil does this.
Beeson & Stiles, well-borers, have
moved their families to Batesville
and are occupying the Fatherree
place.
Teriffic Race With Death.
“Death was fast approaching,”
writes Ralph F. Fernandez, Tampa
Fla., describing his fearful race with
death, “as a result of liver trouble
and heart disease, which had robbed
me of sleep and of all interest in life,
1 had tried many different doctors
and several medicines, but got no be-
nefit, until I began to use Electric
Bitters. So wonderful was their ef-
fect, that in three days J felt like a
new man, and today I am cured of all
my troubles.” Guaranteed at AH
Druggist. Price 50.
For Sale. Good house and 2\
acres of irrigable land in the town of
Batesville. Price $.'550. Apply to
Geo. C. Herman, Batesville, Texas.
I have a few high grade Poland
China pigs for sale, cheap. Apply to
I W. T. Childress, Batesville, Texas.
The P.ninhment of the Bacno,
In former times the punishment of
the bagno (bath), one of the most
cleverly cruel inflictions ever devised
by an official of the torture chamber,
was administered in Italy, probably in
Venice, where the water of the lagoons
played so prominent a part in its penal
system. The punishment was as fol
lows: The prisoner was placed in a
vat the sides of which were slightly in
excess of the average height of a man
In order to hold in check the rising tide
of a supply of water which ran into
the vat in a constant stream the crimi-
nal was furnished with a scoop with
which to bale out the water as fast as
it came in. The respite from death by
immersion thns obtained was more or
less prolonged, according to the powers
of endurance possessed by the victim,
but imagine the mortal torture, the ex-
hausting and even hideously grotesque
efforts, the incessant and pitiless toil
by night and day, to stave off the dread
moment fast approaching, when, over-
come by sleep and fatigue, he was un-
able to struggle any longer against his
fate.
“Auld Robin Gray.”
A ballad that won instant fame
against the expectation and even the
wish of its author was "Auld Itobiu
Gray.” written by Lady Anne Lindsay
about the eud of the eighteenth century
merely for her own satisfaction to re-
place the coarse verses of an old melo-
dy that pleased her. She sang charm-
ingly. and the new ballad soon came
into favor. Great was the curiosity
aroused as to the author of this pa-
thetic song, in whose simple verses all
the elements of a heartrending tragedy
are contained, but Lady Anne, modest
and retiring by nature, preserved si-
lence for many years, smiling, no
doubt, at the controversy that raged so
hotly. In the course of it her ballad
was attribute!] by some disputants to
David Kizzio, declared by others to be
a genuine sixteenth century production
and finally made tiie subject of a
twenty guinea prize to be bestowed on
anybody acute enough to bring to light
the veritable author.— Corah ill Maga-
zine.
Ciffarn Few Cnn Afford.
“A long, low strip of land, a valley
between h’igli hills, lies five miles out-
side of Havana, and there.” said a
cigar salesman, "the best tobacco in
the world is grown. The name of the
place is Abajo. and the Vuelta Abajo
crops are always bought up two or
three years in advance of their plant-
ing. They yield only 35,000 cigars an
nually. These cigars sometimes sell as
higli as $150 a hundred—$1.50 apiece.
Vuelta Abajo cigars are only smoked
by kings find billionaires. There are
many fake Vuelta Abajos on the mar-
ket, but the real thing, once smoked,
can never be mistaken, for there is no
other tobacco in the world with an
aroma at once so powerful and so del-
icate.”—New York Press.
Ent Lean and Eat It Slowly,
Economic methods of eating are so
important and so axiomatic that it
really occasions some surprise that
more is not known about the matter.
Horace Fletcher, in his famous A B Z
books on nutrition, very wisely insists
upon the necessity of slow mastication
with abundant iusalivatiou. It is real-
ly astonishing how badly people use
the teeth nature gave them for this
purpose. Children naturally bolt their
food, so it is said, and adults retain the
habit. Not having the digestive power
of eats or dogs, which naturally bolt
their food, it results that much of our
food is undigested and wasted.
• A (,aml Bienne.
After the Duke of Wellington's vic-
torious campaigns the University of
Oxford complimented the duke him-
self and his principal officers by con-
ferring upon them the honorary and
not very appropriate degree of doctor
of civil laws. At that time the fees
were heavy, and one of the distinguish-
ed soldiers, who had gathered more
honor than profit In the wars, declined
the proffered degree In the following
verse:
Oxford, I know you wish me well.
But prithee let me be.
I can’t, alas, be D. CL L.
For want of £ s. d.
Tradition.
Wliat an enormous "camera obscura”
magnifier is tradition. How a tldug
grows in the human memory, in the
human imagination, when love, wor-
ship and all that lies In the human
heart are there to encourage it. and in
the darkness, in the entire ignorance,
without date or document, no book, no
Arundel marble, only here and there
some dull monumental cairn.—Carlyle.
Violence.
Violence ever defeats its own ends
Where you cannot drive you can al-
ways persuade. A gentle word, a kind
look, a good natured smile, can work
wonders and accomplish miracles.
There is a secret prkle in every human
heart that revolts at tyranny. You
may order and drive an individual, hut
you cannot make him respect you.—
Haziitt,
Jn«t n pin,
Proud Mother—Professor Octave call-
ed at our house today, and my daugh-
ter played the piano for him. He just
raved over her playing. Her Neighbor
—How rude! Why couldn’t he conceal
his feelings just as the rest of us doV
Hopeless.
“Torn has proposed, and asks me to
give him his answer in a letter.”
“Shall you do it?”
“No. I will lie more liberal and give
l»im his gnswer in two letters.”
OF ( poll U llli Thefp On.
There never was au angel who
wouldn’t take off her wings and cook
for the man she loved—New Orleans
Picayune,
Experience keeps a dear school, but
fools will learn at no other and scarce-
ly at that.—Franklin.
Nervous
Worn-Out
If you are in this condition,
your nerve force is weak—the
power is giving out, the or-
gans of your body have
“slowed up,” and do their work
imperfectly. This failure to
do the work required, clogs
the system and brings distress
and disease. When the nerves
are weak the heart is unable
to force the life-giving blood
through your veins; the stom-
ach fails to digest food; the
kidneys lack power to filter
impurities from the blood, and
the poisonous waste remains in
the system to breed disease.
Nerve energy must be restored.
Dr. Miles’ Nervine will do it,
because it strengthens the
nerves; it is a nerve medicine
and tonic, that rebuilds the
entire nervous system.
“Several years ago I was all broken
down. I was nervous, worn-out. could
not sleep, and was in constant pain.
I doctored for months, and finally the
doctor said he could do nothin* for
me. I began taking Dr. Miles’
Nervine, and used altogether eight
bottles, and I became strong and
healthy, and now weigh 170 pounds.”
H. C. CUNNINGHAM.
108 Ellsworth Ave., Allegheny. Pa.
Dr. Miles’ Nervine Is sold by your
druggist, who will guarantee that the
first bottle will benefit. If it fails, he
will refund your money.
Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind
I.rireiid of it Book.
A quaint and kindly legend, illustrat-
ing the sorrow devout Christians used
to feel for the paganism of their fa-
vorite classic authors, is that of St.
Cadoe and his Virgil. St. Cadoe, whose
day is Jan. 24, was the son of a South
Welsh prince, who founded several
monasteries in Glamorganshire and
neighboring regions, but was driven
away to Brittany by the coming of the
Saxons. There he was walking one
day with a copy of Virgil's poems In
his hand and wept to think that Vir-
gil ns a pagan might be in bell. An
ultra orthodox friend who was with
him severely reproved him for even
doubting the fact, and a sudden gust
of wind carried the book out of Ca-
doc’s hand into the sea. But that
night he heard in a dream a sweet
voice saying: “Pray for me; weary not
in praying, i will sing the mercies of
the Lord forever.” And next day a
fisherman brought Cadoe a fish inside
which tiie Virgil was found uninjured.
—Loudon Chronicle.
Mixed Wives.
In the early part of the last century
there lived in an old New England
town a Mr. Churcn, who in the course
of his earthly life was bereft of four
wives, all of whom were buried in the
same lot In his old age it became
necessrry to remove the remains to a
new cemetery. This he undertook him-
self, but in the process the bones be-
came hopelessly mixed. His “New
England conscience” would not allow
him under the painful circumstances
to use the original headstones, so he
procured new ones, oue of which bore
the following inscription:
“Here lies Hannah Church and prob-
ably a portion of Emily.”
Another:
“Sacred to the memory of Emily
Church, who seems to be mixed with
Matilda,”
Then followed these linos;
Stranger, pause and drop a tear,
For Emily Church lies buried here,
Mixed in some perplexing manner
With Mary, Matilda and probably Han-
nah.
—Harper’s Weekly.
The Last Versailles Boarhon.
There is at Versailles au orange tree
some five centuries old. This tree,
which was taken from Fontainebleau
of Versailles on the completion of the
orangery, was already famous under
the title of tiie Grand Bourbon. Ac-
cording to tradition, the tree had been
planted in 1421 by a Princess of Na-
varre and after several changes of
owners oipie ipto the possession of
Francois I„ by whom it was placed at
Fontainebleau. When Jt reached Ver-
sailles the king came to visit it, and
two grand Bourbons were then face to
face. The man passed, and even his
bones, torn from their tomb at St.
Denis and tossed into a trench, have
perished. Not a pinch of his dust re-
mains. But the tree lives and blooms
and bears fruit, the only Bourbon at
Versailles, serene, invincible, enthron-
ed.—Farmer’s Versailles.
In Darkest Africa.
A weird tale of witchcraft comes
from the interior pf Africa. A recent
trial at the Lilongwe court proved that
a native woman killed by a lion had
been partly eaten by another native
who was accused of impersonating the
lion. The prisoner confessed freely
that he had eaten of the woman’s dead
body, the excuse beiug that he had pur-
chased from a “witch doctor” a medi-
cine which enabled him to turn into a
lion at will—in other words, to indulge
ip cannibalism In its lowest form as
the mood took him.
A Waterspout.
A scientist says of a waterspout that
passed over a certain district in France:
“Its passage was accompanied with a
sound which is described as resem-
bling that of a battery of artillery
flrawu on the gallop over a paved
street. At tiie base of an extended
(limbus flung tiie reversed pone cbarac- !
(eristic pf phenomena of this kind. A
Strong wind wua (torn blowing from ;
the sopth southwest. The waterspout
was preceded by a storm and followed
by a shower.”
The Aantralian Native.
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, ja m/J,
Sevea Million boxes soM in past 12 months. This signature, ^
For hundreds of years, perhaps thou-
sands. the Australian black has accept-
ed the doctrine of a Trinity in heaven
and the theory of evolution. In some
respects he is far superior to his civi-
lized contemporary, but he curls him-
self around like a dog and sinks to
sleep on the bare ground at sunset. lq
the dark hie js a veritable coward,
A SABBATARIAN
Hcuit of a Doctor’. Compact With
an Insauo Patient.
Dr. A. did not believe in forcible re-
straint for the insane. Therefore, as
head of an Insane asylum where per
sonal influence was made to take the
place of holts aud bars and shackles,
lie was kept a busy man. One patient
in particular was a young boy continu-
ally complained of at headquarters be-
cause he refused to wear his clothing,
preferring to tear it into rags.
Dr. A. remonstrated in vain, then
thought out a plan of diplomacy, with
which lie approached his patient.
“John,” said he, “I find I am in need
of a boy and thought you might like to
take the positiou. I want to engage a
hoy not to tear clothes. Do you think
you could do that work?”
“Yes, I could,” said John.
“Very well. What wages will you
ask?”
“Twopence a day.”
The bargain was closed on the spot.
John’s destroyed clothing having cost
the asylum pounds where his wages
were pennies. From Monday to Satur-
day John was a model laborer, receiv-
ing at the end of each day his wage
with the other workmen about the asy-
lum. Sunday came, and with it John’s
mania. He had not a whole rag on his
back when Dr. A. was called upon to
speak to him.
“How (lid this happen, John?” he
asked. “Weren’t you engaged to work
for me? You have broken your con-
tract.”
“I have not, sir,” asserted John, with
warmth. “Didn't 1 work for you all
the week? Today's Sunday, and I’ll be
hanged if I work for any man on Sun-
day.”—Pearson’s Magazine.
CAVE OF THE WINDS.
The Vision Carved In Stone Under
the 11111m of Dakota.
The great wind cave lias the form of
an eight story house, each story, or
stratum, containing a distinct forma-
tion of its own and each containing
chambers of a size and magnificence
of decoration such as have never been
found in any subterranean cavern of
the world.
It Is a dream, a nightmare, a vision,
carved in solid stone under the green
hills of Dakota, stone as white as the
milk the hired man used to give us to
drink in the dawn of a happy June
morning, stone ns red as the heart of
the first bloodroot that you dug In the
spring when the world was all spring
to you. and stone that is blue with a
blue that all the painters who have
ever painted Venice have tried to get
for generations and have failed.
Frozen fountains are there, white
with tiie leaping foam of untold ages;
sculptured cats aud horses and great
monsters to be dreamed about o' nights
and feared in dark corners in the day-
time, organs built by the hands of
giant gnomes for a Titan to play wild
hymns of praise upon, a kitchen for
the cooking of weird dishes never
thought of up here in the sunshine, all
manner and all kinds of rooms, ninety
miles of them, down there under the
hoofs of tiie gallant little range horses
who pound the grass into hay the year
round, up there in South Dakota.—Ex-
change.
Napoleon's Ink Wiper.
Napoleon was a hero to his valet
Constant, though he sadly marred the
servant’s effort to dress him neatly.
Said the valet:
Ilis breeches were always of white
cashmere. But two hours after leaving
his chamber it often happened that
they were all spotted with ink, thanks
to his habit of wiping his pen on them
and shaking Ink all around him by
striking his pen against the table. How-
ever, as be dressed in the morning for
the whole day, he did not change his
toilet on that account, but remained in
this state until night. The whole inside
of Ills boots was lined with white fus-
tian. Whenever one of his legs itched
he rubbed it with the heel of the boot
or shoe with which tiie other leg was
shod, thus heightening the effect of the
spiiled ink.
An Axerarated Case.
Lord Justice Clerk Eskgrove, in sen
tenclng certain housebreakers, began
by explaining the various crimes of
which they hnfi been convicted—as-
sault, robbery and bamesueken, of
which last he gave them tiie etymology.
He then reminded them that they had
attacked the house aud robbed it, aud
so worked gradually up to the climax.
“All this you did, and, God preserve
us, joost when they were settin’ down
to their dinner!”—Law Notes.
A Lon* Life.
To prolong life oue should take plen-
ty of sleep and remember to sleep lying
on the right side, indulge in a morning
bath in tepid water, take daily exercise
in tiie open air, keep the wipdqw of the
sleeping room open all night, take fre-
quent and short holidays, not be over-
ate, bilious and hold oue’s temper.
Considerate Discretion,
Stranger—How long since you made
an arrest, constable? Constable Hi
Medder--Quite a conslddyrable spell.
I'm poln’ a leetle slow ’bout haulin’
’•m In jest now. We haln’t got no
piece io put ’em ’eoptln’ Cy Tedder’s
chicken coop, ini’ Cy’s got a settin’
Vn on,—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
me largest newspaper ever publish-
ed iu this or any other country was
the Illuminated Quadruple Constella-
tion, which uas issued in New York
city ou July 4, 1851). It was a 28,000
edition and was sold at 50 cents per
popy. The size of the page of this
sheet was TO by lHO inches, or almost
forty-nine square feet. It was an eight
page paper, thirteen columns to the
page, or a total Of 104 columns, each
forty-eight indies in length. It was
illustrated with good portraits of Pres-
ident Buehanau, Edward Everett, Hen-
ry Ward Beecher, N. P. Bauks, E. H.
Chapin, Horace Greeley, Elizabeth
Barrett Browning, Alexander von
Humboldt, Janies G. Bennett and sev-
eral others. The paper contained thir-
ty-six different poems entire, one of
them having as many as sixty-four
eight line verses. Among other articles
of special note was the celebrated
“Moon Iloax.” published ip 1835. It
required the work of forty persons ten
hours per day for eight weeks to “get
4‘it” this mammoth paper,.
J. G. Smyth & Co.
U^raJcle, Texas
Are headquarters for everything in
Wire, Roofing, Agricultural Imple-
ments Builders Hardware, Shelf
hardware, Paints, Oils, Harness,
FURNITURE.
Qet Our Prices Before
Buying.
The Leader-News Carries
Legal Blanks
In Stock at the following Prices:
Warranty Deeds................................ 5 for 50c 10 for 90c
Vendors Lien Notes ........................... 5 for 10c 15 for 25c
Tranfer of Vendors Lien Notes................ 5 for 30c 10 for 50c
Release of Vendors Lien Notes.................5 for 30c 10 for 50c
+ Deed of Trust (Real Estate).................... 5 for 50c 10 for 90c
f Release, Deed of Trust.........................5 for 30c 10 for 50c
♦ Chattel Mortgages ............................ 5 for 25c 10 for 40c
I Promissory Notes............................5 for 5c 100 for 50c
♦ Liberal discounts for purchases in larger quantities.
......I »H ♦4-M.++.H..M ! »+»»»++»»»»
Feed Yard
Letve your horses with me
when you go to San Antonio;
at Hotel yard on North side of
Uvalde Depot.
W. E. J>hmn Prop.
NOTICE.
Bates City Lodge No. 625 A. F
A M. meets Saturday night on
or before the full moon. All
worthy brethren are invited t<
attend.
W. T. Childress, W M. and r]
H. Taylor, Sect’y.
Geo. C. HERMAN,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Representing Garner Abstract & Land Co
Land Business a Specialty and
Correspondence Solicited.
Batesvii. e, - Texas.
DEPOT HOTEL
Rate $1.00 per day. First
class service.
Miss V. M. Amelio, Prop.
This Will Interest
Ladies Only
We are^ glvj-j- away DINNER
XI ARE SiE'XiS, lOrCHK!
RETS, GRANITE-
SKWIXJ XIAIHINER
. -- > ... v .. nr. ,, ■ - ,, < ni.ir.n
E ana hundreds of oi.her articles, ail full size for family
use, to enable us to Introduce our 6»an Raking Powder
a and Salvona Brands of Teas, Coffees and other Household
ana a.nvona nranas oi Teas, uoriees and other House!
Supplies. These are all high-grade (roods—absolui
than you are now paying for the sa
or fi
Id
irh-grade goods —absolutely
ing for the same goods,
uture orders. Consequently by glvie*
which formerly went
guaranteed as to qnality—cost no more
we depend entirely upon their merit to secure v
away free premiums we pain new customers and yon wave the profit which formerly'went
to^the dealers^ as by aealing^tfireMl^wUh^our^ousuimers^wc^save the profit of the
pruoilums and honest goods at fair prices. Because you live miles away from us—hecause*you
may never Uavo^seen us—Is m> good reason for not giving us_ a trial. Vou risk not lit
»«k pay In advunrr. W c pay
' ourplan of selling goods will
name and address.
onl:
r plan of
We have bui
: unle
inless wo ga'
Besides, the
may ne<
We do no
will bo sent you and
your name and ad
They would not patronize us
would not expect them to. Besides,
paper will tell you that we are thoroughly res pons
Write ns today—a postal-card just
giving your name ana address will do.
This Is a Chance That Does Not Happen Every Bay.
SALVONA SUPPLIES COMPANY,
1127 -1129 Pino Street, St. Louie, Mo.
ig goods
mireris •
iv<
o editor
ghl
1 ou
ijtnt. Our catulwgue of premiums
explained If y«m will only scad us»
ot giving ns a 1
r the freight*
bo fully explained if you
is of patrons whoso custom we socu
them full i
tb
Ibl
rill only Head us
tom secured by iht - plan,
full value tu*d fair treatment. We
of this
v4"M- I^|
I. (El G. N.
THE TEXAS RAILROAD
Is the most diroot line from TEXAS to the
NORTH, EAST and SOUTHEAST. Fast
and convenient schedules, Excellent Dining
Stations, Pullman Buffet Sleeping Cars,
Chair Cars and Parlor Cars. Only one night
ST. LOUIS and MEMPHIS. Making con-
nection with all the Northern and Eastern
lines. NEW LIMITED TRAIN to OLD
MEXICO via LAREDO.
: : :
For information regarding rates and routea see l. Sc G N
agents or write
J jfRICE, GEO D. HUNTER,
Gen. Pass, and Ticket Agent. Asst G. P. 8c T. A
PALESTINE, TEXAS
4* N* H’fr'I I ' I -HM I'll ; | | | | | j |j
WINCHESTER
FACTORY LOADED SMOKELESS
POWDER SHOTGUN SHELLS
Good sheila in your gun mean a good bag
in the field or a good score at the trap.
Winchester “Leader” and “Repeater”
Smokeless Powder Shells are good shells.
Always sure-fire, always giving an even
spread of shot and good penetration, their
great superiority is testified to by sports-
men who use Winchester Factory Loaded
Shells in preference to any other make.
ALL DEALERS KEEP THEM
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Herman, George C. The Batesville Herald. (Batesville, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 10, 1906, newspaper, May 10, 1906; Batesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth974735/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .