La Grange Journal. (La Grange, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 2, 1905 Page: 2 of 8
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BLOOD CELLS.
1 w niin
w DIUUI
Man la a millionaire many times over ia
•a ptMtatim of blood cells Woman it
•pi quite so rich, for scientists base proven
<%el tbe normal number of red blood cells
la adult men is 6»e million; in women four
Mtd a half million, to the square millimeter.
The normal cell is not absolutely round
la health, but, in diaeaaa, becomes cs-
Ittmely irregular in shape. Beery one can
M in perfect health and possess the mil-
Mw of rich red blood corpuscles if thee
only know how to go about it. Dr R V
MM
(mo, N. V., advises eve 17 man and woman
tqprepare for a long life by observing ns
««r<
tee, consulting physician to the Inva-
Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buf
fr'm laws. In tbe first place, if your
gration is fiiultv, and the food you
egt is not taken up by the blood and assim
Mated properly, yon need a tonic and rliges
<tvc corrector, something that will increase
(he red blood corpuscles; he believes in
going about this in nature’s own way.
Veara ago, in his active practice, he found
(hat an alterative extract of certain herbs
amd roots, put up without the use of alco-
Mol, would put the liver, lungs and heart
Into fuller aud more complete action. This
Medicine be called Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery. By assimilating the
Ibod eaten, it nourishes the blood, and, in-
otead of the ill-shaped corpuscles, the per-
son’s blood takes on a rich red color and
(be corpuscles are more nearly round.
Nervousness is only the. cry of the starved
Starves for food, and when tbe nerves are
fad on rich red blood the person loses
(hose irritable feelings, sleeps well at night
and feels refreshed in tbe morning.
KNOWLEDGE IB rOWKS
If you want to know about your body,
(gad Dr. Pierre's Common Sense Medical
Adviser, which can be had for the cost of
mailing, 31 cents in one-ccnt stamps for the
doth-bound book, or si stamps for the
paper-covered volume. 1008 pages. Ad-
dress Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cleanse the
bowels and stimulate the sluggish liver.
Tbe LaCSrange Journal
B. F. HARIGEL, .....PROPRIETOR
LaGkange, Fhhruary 2, 1905.
NOT YET SATISFIED.
During the holiday week, at
Houston, one Sid Thrash, a dope
fiend or something else as bad,
committed a nameless crime upon
a twelve year-old girl, which, when
the public became informed, creat-
ed considerable excitement and but
for the request from the child’s
father that the law be permitted to
take its course, m’ght have termi-
nated in a lynching of Thrash.
Thrash was arrested and on Janu-
ary 18 found guilty and sentenced
to fifty years in the penitentiary.
This was the limit of the law, but
the Houston News isn’t satisfied,
and has the following just remarks
to make:
Sid Thrash’s miserable body
should never have reached the court
house, and doubtless itnevef would
if it had generally known that he
had been committed such a heinous
crime. As it is, the law is power-
less to prescribe a punishment to fit
the monstrous deed, the sickening
details of which are fresh in the
people’s mind, and causes every
parent to involuntarily shudder as
the fiendish demon’s damnable in-
humanity is recalled.
Fifty years to this brute for the
most horrible outrage that ever
blackened the pages of Harris
Deafness Cannot be Cured
by looal applications as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the
ear. There is only one way to cure
deafness, and that is by constitu-
tional remedies. Deafness is caused
by an inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Rustaohian
Tube. When this tube is inflamed
you have a rumbling sound or im-
perfect hearing, and when it is en-
tirely closed deafness is tbe result,
and unless the inflammation can be
county’s criminal record! What a
travts’.y on justice! What an in-
sult to virtue!
Tbe jury that tried Thrash would
gladly have applied the torch in-
stead. They did what they could
—inflict the severest penalty possi-
ble under the law.
There is no man in Houston—and
when the News says "man” it does
not mean every biped wearing
pants, but a sure enough man—who
doubts that Thrash not only merits
death, but after he deserves to suffer
the most excruciating torture, long
drawn out, that human ingenuity
can conjure and human hands in-
flict.
But there is a mighty barrier
that stands between the people and
justice—LAW. Tbe law’s mighty
mandate proclaims in thundrous
tones, as it covers the guilty wretch
with its protecting mantle, thou
shalt not kill. Justice is outraged
as it pleads for protection and as
the mother and father with bleed-
ing hearts hold the dear little one
to them and think of the brute
whose demoniacal lascivity has
outraged their home they cry aloud
in the bitterness of their anguish
and grief, let his punishment be
death.
Were Thrash possessed a million
lives and each of them were burned
to a crisp at the stake it would not
atone for his crime.
But the law’s fiat spares Thrasli,
and, instead of death, clothes and
feeds him at the state’s expense,
and sustains him in the hope that
he may some day be pardoned or
escape, and again satiate his brutal
lust on innocent childhood.
Here is a lesson for apologists of
rape fiends and the goody-goody
journals that prate of law and de-
nounce lynching.
The News believes Thrash should
be lynched.
Letter to R. T. Bradshaw.
LAGRANGE.
Dear Sir: If It took 10 gallons
to paint your house last time with
somebody else’s paint, and takes 8
with Devoe, we save you $8 to $10;
for painting cost two or three times
as much as paint.
Mr. Ezra Rathmell, Williams-
port, Pa, always used 11 gallons
of mixed paint for his house; De-
voe took 6.
But that isn’t all; that’s only
first cost; how long will it wear ?
The paint, that goes furthest in
covering, wears best too.
All paint, true paint, and full-
measure, are on one side; part
paint, false paint, and sbort-meas
ure are on the other. What can
you expect.
F W Devoe & Co
22 New York
t
P. S.—Holloway Bros, sell our
paint._
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy the
Best Made.
"In my opinion Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy is the best made for
colds,” says Mrs. Cora Walker of
Porterville, California. There is no
doubt about its being the beRt. No
other will cure a cold so quickly.
No other is so sure a preventive of
pneumonia. No other is so pleas-
ant and safe to take. These are
good reasons why it shauld be pre-
ferred to any other. The fact is that
few people are satisfied with any
other. The fact is that few people
are satisfied with any other after
having once used this remedy. For
sale by Wm. Hermes.
Looking
Enroll in tbe I. C. S. and
you will not have to look
long. The demand for tech-
nically trained men is far in
excess of the supply. Ob-
tain the technical knowledge
contained in one of our
Courses and you will soon
be one of the thousands
that owe their success to
our instruction. We can
help you qualify at home,
in spare time, and at small
expense,' for any of the fol-
lowing positions:
[Jacliaiiical, Electrical, Cieara, C!W1, cr
Mixing Engineer; Draftsman; Architect; laok-
keeper; Stenographer; Siiow-Card Wrltir;
Window Dresser; or Ad Writer.
Write TODAY, gtntlnE which por-
tion Interests you, to
INTERNATIONAL
Correspondence Schools
Box 799, SCKANTON, PA.
OB CUl 01 OCI LOCAL BErBKSKKTATITBi
E. G. CHEW, Austin, Texas.
Let the other fellow burn his
cotton. Keep yours for a time
where neither the cows, bulls nor
bears can get to it.—Texarkana
Courier.
Safe and sane advice. If your
neighbors decide to feed the fruits
of their toil to the flames you have
no call to interfere. The chances
are that they are given to foolish
things and need to let off steam.
This is a time when every farmer
should consult his head rather than
his spleen.—Galveston News.
Just stow her away somewhere
and go on raising turkeys and ta-
ters, and peas and pumkins and
such like and some day she will be
worth enough to justify you in
hauling her to town.—Brazos Pilot.
To all of which The Journal
says, ditto.
Saved Him.
"It did not kill tno but I think it
would if it had not been for Hunt’s
('ure. I was tired, miserable and
well nigh used used up when I
commenced using it for an old and
severe case of Eczema. One appli-
cation relieved and one box cured.
“I believe Hunt’s Cure will cure
any form of itching known to man-
kind.’’ Clifton Fawrence,
Helena, 0. T.
Leyendecker-Henry.
Ellinger, Tex., Jan. 18.—Robert
Lcyendecker of Houston, .Texas,
and Miss Lizzie Henry of this place
were united in marriage at the
bride’s home, Rev. R. Heise offici-
ating. The young couple will
make their future home in Hous-
ton, Tex.
Cured His Mother of Rheumatism.
taken out and this tube restored to
its normal condition, hearing will
be destroyed forever; nine cuses out
of ten are caused by catarrh, which
is nothing but an inflamed condi-
tion of muaoouB services.
We will give one hundred dollars
for any case of deafness (caused by
catarrh) that cannot be cured by
Hall’s catarrh cure. Send for cir-
culars free.
F. J. CHENEY & 00.,
Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by Drugjpst, 76c,
Hall’s family pills are the best
A Much-Needed Law.
A good law for the next legisla-
ture to pass would be the one pro-
hibiting roping contests. They are
brutal as well as dangerous. If a
cowboy sees fit to endanger his own
life and limbs it is his right to do
so, but he should not be allowed to
torture and maim helpless beasts
for his sport. A good addendum
to the same law would be the pro-
hibition of live pigeon shooting
by gun clubs.—Comanche Chief.
"My mother has been a sufferer
for many years from “rheumatim,”
says W. H. Howard of Husband,
Pennsylvania. "At times she was
unable to move at all, while at all
times walking was very painful. I
presented her with a bottle of
Chamberlain’s Pain Balm and after
a tew applications she decided it
was the most wonderful pain re-
liever she had ever tried, in fact,
she is never without it now and is
at all times able to walk. An occa-
sional application of Pain Balm
keeps away the pain sbe was for-
merly trouble with." For sale by
Wm. Hermes.
Fine Job Printing
A business man, alive to every detail of his busines is
particular about his stationery-knows the value of it.
Is our specialty. Try us with your next order. Prices
reasonable, quality of work considered---——c
There’s Wothins Better
The LaGraqge Journal
Wanamaker & Brown
T3TTTT .A OELAHIA
W. S. Roby is taking measures for this•
Old and Reliable Firm. Every thread is
absolutely all wool. Mr. Roby has had a
long experience in this line and can give
you a perfect fit. Save money and give
him an order. Will deliver in 12 Days.
t SOUTHERN PACIFIC-SUNSET ROUTE S
%
1
I
Holiday
Tickets
*
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TO THE
SOUTHEAST AND EAST
*
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£ On Sale Dec. 20, 21, 22 and 26, 1904, return limit 30 days *
! ONE FARE (Plus $2.00) ROUND TRIP
Round Trip Holiday Tickets to Southern Pacific Points in
Texas and Louisiana on sale Dec. 23, 24, 26, 26, 31 and
Jan. I, limited to return Jan. 4, 1905.
Try the
"OPER WINDOW ROUTE’
It’s the Best
If yon are going to spend Christmas at horns with tbe folks or friends, see
nearest Southern Pacific Ageat for all information relative to trip, or write
T. J. ANDERSON,
G.P.A.
LJ
Houston, Texas
JOS. HELLEN,
A.G.P.A.
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La Grange Journal. (La Grange, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 2, 1905, newspaper, February 2, 1905; La Grange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1004446/m1/2/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fayette Public Library, Museum and Archives.