Cherokee County Banner. (Jacksonville, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, September 6, 1901 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages: ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Prices Will be quoted here Next Week.
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HORSES OR CARRIAGES. '
BANKERS.
Palestine, Texas. Cherokee Drug Co.
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Foley's Honey and Tar
cures colds, prevents pneumonia.
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Dyspepsia
Digests what you eat.
It artificially digests the food and aids
Nature in strengthening and recon*
structing the exhausted digestive or-
gans. It is the latest discovered digest-
ant and tonic. No other preparation
can approach it in efficiency. It in-
stantly relieves and permanently cures
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea,
Sick Headache, Gastralgia,Cramps and
all other results of imperfect digestion.
Price 50c. and 11. Large site contains 2% time*
smaH site. Book all about dyspepsia mailedfree
Prepared by E. C. DeWITT A CO., Chiecge.
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Waco, about Sept. 20.
D. J. Price,
G. P. & T. A.
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Wi handle Fruit Exchange at par for our
Customers,
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CHEGKUJE
the expenditure of money on
LIYERY
LIVERV 8 BOARDING
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Contract Signed.
The contract for the Jennings
avenue steel viaduct at the Texas
We shall be pleased to meet
them. We promise to do right,
and satisfy our promises by our
performances.
L. D. BYRD,
Jacksonville, : : Texas.
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j Fleager & go.
"I had a running sore on my
leg for seven years,” writes Mrs.
Jas. Forest of Chippewa Falls,
Wis., “and spent hundreds of
dollars in trying to get it healed.
Two boxes of Banner Salve en-
tirely cured it. ” Beware of sub-
Stibutes. Cherokee Drug Co.
We Want Your Business.
Ulcers, open or obstinate
Potato Raising.
"Can a farmer plant a crop of po-
tatoes now and raise a good crop by
the time frost comes?” A reporter
asked Judge W. T. Cutler of Gray-
son county, who has had consider-
able experience in all kinds of farm-
ing branches. "I should think a
crop could be easily raised,’” he re-
plied. “There are several farmers
out my way, east of the city, who
think so, and have planted big
crops of potatoes. I have a good
9
We have put prices where
they please—down. We have
for hire every style of vekjcle
that is fashionable, and can erq
tainly suit you. Let us kndw
your wants in the way of ]
sores, scalds and piles, quickly
cured by Banner Salve, the most
healing medicine in the world.
and Jacific crossing at Fort Worth
fall crop planted, and they will be was signed by the contractor, L. S.
S
14
JHK
Leversedge, and the city through
Mayor Tnomas J. Powell and City
Secretary John T. Montgomery. As
before stated, the contract provides
that the steel structure is to be
completed within six months from
the date of the contract. It is to
cost the city about $67,000.
A Little Known Fact.
That the majority of serious
diseases originate in disorder of
the kidneys. Foley’s Kidney
Cure is guaranteed. Be sure to
get Foley’s. Cherokee Drug Co
(E
A Pitiable Sight.
What is more pitiable than to
see a puny, delicate little child
abso utely dying from neglect.
There are many little ones, whose
eyes would grow bright, whose
flesh would be plump and pretty
if only the worms that are
knawing at their vitals were
removed, which is easily effected
with Mother’s Worm Syrup, so
nice to take that child ren ask for
it. Also a cure for tape worm
in grown people. Try a 25 cent
bottle.
wanted to see him on very particu-
lar business, and was almost obliged
to see him alone, as he had some-
thing he wanted to get. Jailer Gil-
more told him it was against the
rules to grant private interviews,
and that he would have to see him
in his presence, but that if the
preacher had anything he wanted
and was willing to give it to him he
had his permission to take it. The
Detroit negro told the jailer he
might think it foolish, but that he
wanted a bunch of hair from the
temple on each side of his cousin’s
head and one from the back of his
neck. When admitted to the jail
the preacher consented for him to
have the hair and backed up against
the iron bars for him to clip it
After cutting it he carefully wrap-
ped it in a piece of paper and put it
in his pocket. The supposition is
that he wanted the wool to put in a
hoodoo bag.
I. & G. N. Excursions.
Buffalo—May 1- November 1.
Pan-American Exposition. Tick-
ets on sale daily.
Louisville— All Year Round
Excursion Tickets from I. & G.
N. points at rate of one and one-
third fares—World Famous Hot
Well, Natural Sanitarium and
Health resort.
Cleveland, O. —Annual Meet-
ing Grand Army, September 7-
8.
Indianapolis-Sovereign Grand
Lodge I. O. O. F.—Palestine and
points North, September 13-14,
South and West, including Fort
Worth division, 12-13.
Norfolk. Va. — Concatenated
Order of Hoo-Hoos, Sept. 5, 6
and 7.
San Antonio--Sons of Her-
mann and German War Veterans
September 16, 17, 18 and 19.
San Antonio—International
Fair Association, opens October
19, closes October 30.
Cincinnati— National Colored
Baptist convention — Palestine
and North, September 9-10,
South and West, also Fort Worth
division, 8-9.
Mart, Texas—Town Lots for
sale—Tickets on sale September
4-5. Mart is located in the heart
of the far-famed Brazos Valley
north of Marlin. On the return
trip of tickets purchased for this
occasion stopover will be allow-
ed in Marlin, Texas.
Note—Passenger train service
on the Ft. Worth division will be
in operation to College Station
(where is located the Agricultur-
al and Mechanical College of Tex-
as) on or about Sept. 10, and to
up in a few days, and I think they
will make a fine rop. A crop of po-
tatoes should be raised in less than
seven weeks, and when the farmers
can sell them at $2 a bushel, .they
are worth more than cotton at 30c.
a pound. I seems to me that if po-
tatoes are so high now, they will be
worth more later on, and that the
farmers of north Texas may make
fortunes out of them. Potatoes
and Mexican June corn are good
crops for this country. There is a
good deal of June corn in the coun-
try, and aside from its value to fur-
nish roasting ears, it is going to
make a fine yield of corn, and some
farmers will save themselves from
the damage the loss of their corn
crop would have done them by •
planting June corn.” i
No Relief For Twenty Years.
| “I had bronchitis for twenty
years,” said Mrs. Minerva Smith
of Danville, Ill., “and never got
relief until I used Foley’s Honey
andTar which is a sure cu4sdr
throat and lung diseases4s
okee Drug Co. fl
h,
Good Man Gone.
Capt. John Skinner Eubank died
it Waco, aged 70, and was interred
at Oakland cemetery. The deceased
sas a traveler of note, having wan-
dared over a large portion of the
globe. He was personally ac-
quainted with most of the great ex-
plorers and left among his papers:
emblems of intimate friendship
with several great military com-
manders. His remarkable personal
resemblance to King Edward VIL.
when the latter was Prince of
Wales, caused a ludicrous mistake
on the part of the entertainment
committee at Cincinnati, O., when
the prince visited the United States
in 1860. Capt. Eubank at one pe-
riod of his career was an actor and
acquired distinction. He was on
the stage with Booth, Forrest and
other celebrities. During the civil
war he served in the hospital corps
and freely risked his life on battle-
fields in giving succor to the
wounded of both sides. He was a
noted collector of curios, but his
generosity kept down his collection,
as he gave away valuable articles to
visiting friends. His skill in va-
rious' crafts enabled him to earn
good wages all his life, yet he died
poor, having made it the rule of his
life to give away everything above a
mere living to the poor and help-
less. He had remarkable powei
over the brute creation and was
able in a short time to educate birds
and beasts, training them to per-
form wonderful feats. A little dog
he trained was a wonder of intelli-
gence. When the dog died Capt.
Eubank built a monument over its
grave. His funeral was largely at-
tended and citizens delivered ora-
tions in honor of the remarkable
man, who never in his life, as far as
is known, overlooked an opportunity
to do an act of charity.
The Secret of Good Health.
The secret of beauty and good
health is cleanliness. Unclean-
liness breeds disease. Internal
cleanliness is even of greater
importance than external. Keep
your liver active and your bow-
A Real Bargain.
| For the next thirty days we
have the finest ploposition
tomaketea man with some cap-
ital, who wishes to make a safe
land profitable investment, that
[can be found in Cherokee or any
[other couuty. We have a well
improved farm within 300 yards
Df the depot in one of the best
little business towns on the Cot
ton Belt R. R., that can be
.bought very cheap if taken at
once. This can be cut up in 5 or
10 acre blocks and be readily
sold for twice or three times the
price that it is now offered at, as
a whole. - ■ -
It will pay well to investigate
this at once. Apply to Jackson-
ville Real Estate & Investment
Co.
Something to Remember.
When a cough or cold is long
neglected consumption almost in-
variably follows. Remember
Mexican Syrup only costs 25c
a bottle, and has.proven in many
thousand cases and absolute safe
cure for coughs, colds and con-
sumption. Takenin timeit cures
quickly. Child ren like it because
it tastes so good. Insist on
your druggist keeping it for
sale. Read the seemingly
miraculous cures it has effected,
printed on the wrapper around
the bottle
A Hoodoo Bag.
A colored man from Detroit
called at the Lamar county jail at
Paris and asked for permission to
interview a negro preacher who was
adjudged insane several weeks ago.
He said that the insane darky was
his cousin. Jailer Gilmore re-
luctantly consented. After he was
Wants County Association.
Oswald Wilson, vice-president of
the State Cotton Growers’ associa-
tion, was at Waxahachie, interest-
ing the citizens in the organization
of a county association. The or-
ganization, as stated bv Mr. Wilson,
is a mutual association of cotton
growers, farmers, bankers, mer-
chants, ginners and others inter-
ested -in protecting the price of cot-
ton from unusual and fictitious
fluctuations, obtaining a fair price
for that and other farm products,
find to promote and advance the
general agricultural' conditions c'
athe country...
Consumption Threatened.
C. Unger, 212 Maple St., Cham-
paign, Ill., writes: “I was troub
led with a hacking cough for a
year and I thought I had con-
sumption. I tried a great many
remedies and was under the care
of physicians for several months.
I used one bottle of Foley’s Hon-
ey and Tar. It cured me and I
have not been troubled since.”
Cherokee Drug Co.
gclean by taking a
21 occasionally.
822), kid-
dko. Only •5
MORRIS BUILDING
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Pinkston, A. L. Cherokee County Banner. (Jacksonville, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, September 6, 1901, newspaper, September 6, 1901; Jacksonville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538153/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Jacksonville Public Library.