Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, June 15, 1906 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Rescuing Texas History, 2019 and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Carrollton Public Library.
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'-A
THOUGHT TO BE SETTLED.
NEWS IN NUTSHELLS.
Tit CABROUTON ClWNICLt
JNO. T. RISIEN, Editobamb Pub.
- TRIAS.
CARROLLTON,
IK STRICT Mtn.
Ills
THE CADDY'S COMMENT.
hare
BUILDING FOOD
►
►
nnprecr-
to
FRISCO
Women Obtain Mrs. Pinkham's
Advice and Help.
him of ex-Gov. William Pinckney
Whyte of Baltimore to sucewld the
late Uniteil States Senator Gorman.
There were 1,41!) merchant.-*, 370
liquor dealers*, 65 billiard and pool
tables, 6 pawnbrokers and 108 ped-
dlers doing business in San Antonio
in 1905-06 according to the report
filed by City Collector Viilenuun.
adopting a 2 l-2c passenger rate on
the Houston and Texas Central.
for the Galveston-New York
New Orleans-New York trade,
and the small vessels now in the
trade will to graduallx retired
One That Was Not Very Complimen-
tary to a Professional
Player.
chief physician of the Vatican, Dr.
Lapponi, hrs recommended for the
Pope speuu i regimen.
The
the
Saaoa.
A COOL
MOVER
For Hot Days
4
4
Is wm SMS b* OWMBOO
»4rva wwMtoiSarvMSMS *v*W
NORTH or EAST
Writotor sartteutosu reoertovmCm
to tbe best ptoem.
c. w. avwaia. a. e. a.
Fort Worth. Ten.
*0—eejutan
strike agreed upon
subcommittee of tte
“To Texas Or Bust"
Paris: A party consisting of three
men, three women and four children
arrived in Paris a few days since by
private conveyance from Tennessee.
There were three small vehicles made
of buggy wheels and beds with cov-
ered frames built over them, and
each of the three vehicles was drawn
by a single donkey. They came from
sixty-five miles southeast of Chat-
tanooga, and had been nine weeks on
the road.
Not One.
No equal on earth has Hunt's Light-
ning Oil for Rheumatism and Neural-
gia, as well as Sprains, Cuts, Burns,
Bruises and Insect Bites and Stings.
Guaranteed.
Behind the Times.
"Janie is so mortified at her hus-
band’s illness that she won’t tell any-
one what is the matter with him.”
"What disease has he?"
"Old-fashioned consumption.”—N. Y.
Times.
Her Favorite Play.
"What is your favorite play?” asked
the girl who quotes Shakespeare.
"Well,” answered the youth with long
hair, ”1 believe I like to see a man
knock the ball over the left field fence
as well as anything.”—Montreal Star.
Keeping Her Handy.
That's a fine rope you have. Harks
er." tfinratofi the commuter with the
tawn mower and the weekly ham un-
der hie arm. "What aro you going to
do with it?"
-Use it as a tether," replied Harter.
“Ah! New eowT”
-No, new cook."—Chicago DaBy
News.
Mans* Proper Valuation.
Chicago, Ill.: Marriage has become
a mere incident in the life of woman-’
i man is but an appendage, an adjunct'
I a corollary of woman. In short, man
I is not nearly as important as he,with
i frtnous self-conceit, imagines him-
self. So speakers at the session of
the National Business Woman’s
___ Ijeague in the Palmer House declar-
tadthy ed, all the speakers l>eing women. A
husband is enlj an inridest, not a
Look to pkgs. for tte famous HMto creation.
teak, "Tte Rood to WateWto," 1
■ .<• /i..
The Senate committee has reported
favorably the Port Arthur bill, with
an amendment giving the deputy
collector at Sabine Pass the regular
collection of customs in the matter
of clearing of coastwise vessels for
foreign ports.
At the next meeting of the City
Council application will be made by
two syndicates, each desiring a fran-
chise for an electric street railway
line, traversing the principal streets
of San Angelo.
The President signed the denatur-
ed alcohol bill Friday.
Seed dealers report an unprece-
dented demand for June corn and
sorghum seed, both of which have be-
come very popular forage crops with
fanners.
The Southern Pacific railroad will
construct several new freight steam-
ships for the Galveston-New York
Products
mUe you to sraw yew mA wahost
havmg to •pend half your lime between
them ora a hot cook-dove.
AH the re nt mg ■ done m LUy’s
kseben a iutchea as dean and seal as
yow own, and drae's uodung far you
todobot'raytenmh.
IJbby'artodwst aw selertwi rara.
cooked by cooka who know bow, and
t me. m ^ora or out. try Libby a mZ
row Pata wwh Libby a Camp Saw.
Libby, McNeill B Libby, Chicago
u 4/ J
-I
Most of the cotton seed oil mills of
the state have shut down for the sea-
son. Nearly ail of them report a
volume of business for the year con-
siderably smaller than that of the
previous season.
A barn on the place of Robert Gif-
ford, half a mile from Rugby, Red
River County, was struck by light-
ning and two mules were killed. The
bam was damaged and a hog was
crippled.
The soliciting committee for the
Christian College, proposed at Corsi-
cana report $10,000 of the necessary
$25,000 subscribed. The committee
is still at work and express them-
selves as being confident of success.
- a u---—
Mrs. Roberta Hynds, aged 25
years, wife of William Hynds, of
Greenville, was found dead in her
bed by her husband, who occupied
another bed in the same room.
---- - tototo--■
The Thirteenth Cavalry squadron
Free mail delivery has been turn-
ed down at Brownwood on account
of a lack of sidewalks.
Fire of unknown origin destroyed
the plant of the Trout Lumber Com-
] any at Trout, La. Loss $5U,UUL
partly insured.
Murry Harris, a negro working
with an extra gang, was killed at 8a-
cul by falling between ears,
people live in Jacksonville.
C. T. McColinieo, who has been
City Marshall of Kerens for several
years, tendered his resignation. J. J.
Walker was appointed to serve the
unexpired term.
Goy. Warfield, of Maryland, has
just announced the appointment by
Soattereetoen District Coal Opera
tore Get Together.
Kansas City, J une 9.—The set-
tlement of the Southwestern coal
* ---1 last night by a
subcommittee of the miners and op-
erators, assisted by John Mitchell,
president of the United Mine Work-
ers of America, was ratified by the
full conference yesterday. Orders to
clean up tlie mines liave been issued
and work will be resumed June 18.
The settlement covers Kansas,
Indian Territory. Arkansas,Missouri,
Texas, and involves 32,000 men.
The 1903 scale is to prevail for two
years ami small difficulties at several
mines are to be arbitrated. The set-
tlement is yet to be ratified by a min-
ers’ referendum vote anil by the op-
erators. but this ratification will be a
formality.
Two Were Killed.
Indiana. I’a.: The new mining
town of Ernest was the scene of a
conflict lietween constabularly and
striking coal miners, in which eight
strikers were wounded, three of them
fatally.
A body of strikers headed by a
brass band marched from the Anita
mines in Jefferson County to receive
one of the mine officials expected
f torn Punxsutawney. On the way to
the station the marchers encountered
a detail of twelve members of the
State constabularly.
As they passed a member of the
band fired his revolver at the troops.
No one was struck, but the constab-
ularly immediately retaliated with a
volley from their carbines.
When the smoke had cleared eight
strikers were lying on the ground
and the others had Heil down the hill.
After the excitement had subsided
the wounded miners were removed
to a hospital. The result of the shoot-
ing was ground for the cancellation
of a mass mix-ting arranged for the
afternoon.
Sulphur Got the Buga.
Sherman: Last year on the Marton
Bruce plantation near Tom Bean
there was quite an acreage of cotton
that produced as high as a bale of
cotton to the acre, while fields all
around it on similar soil made al-
most entire failures because of the
inroad of cotton pests. When the
peats first made their appearance
they visited the above field also, but
the sulphur remedy applied, it ap-
pears successfully rid the stalk and
plant of the enemy. The sulphur was
placed in a small can set on fire and
pulled through the field in such a
way that each row got the benefit of
the fumigation. The success which
attended the effort was acknowledged
and several prominent cotton plant-
ers of that section have expressed
the determination, in the event the
pests appear again this year, to try
this method.
Must Cut Out Booze.
Chicago: If Harry Hill of Chicago
takes a drink or uses drugs in any
form lie will forfeit the apartment
building at 4930 Vincinnes avenue
which was deeded to him by his broth
er, Napoleon Hill, a Memphis mil-
lionaire. Harry Hill, who is a law-
yer, came to Chicago a few years ago
and is said to have been wayward.
Recently his brother heard that he
had reformed and decided to aid him.
Texas is in a fair way to get from
the United States approximately
♦400,000, the amount of the outlay
in protecting the frontier against
tlie Indians prior to the civil war.
TORTURED WITH ECZEMA.
Treasendoos Itching Over Whole
Bsdy ficxatchsd Until Ntod Ym-
derful Cure by Cpticura.
"Last year I suffered with a tremen-
dous itching on asy bach, which grew
worse and worse, until it spread over
tte wteto body, and only my toes and
bands were free. For four months or
so I snffered torments, and I had to
scratch, scratch, scratch, anti) I bled.
At night when I went to bed things
got worse, and I had at times to get
np and scratch my body all over, un-
til I was as sore as coaid be. and nn-
til I suffered excruciating pains. They
told me that I was suffering from ecze-
ma. Then I made np my mind that
I would use the Cuticura Remedies.
I used them according to instructions,
and very soon indeed I was greatly
relieved. I continued nntil well, and
now I am ready to recommend the
Cuticura Remedies to anyone. Mrs.
Mary Metzger, Sweetwater. O\la..
June 28. 1905.”
Texas is in a fair way to get from
the United States approximately
MOO,000, the amount of the outlay
* protecting the frontier against
..ie Indians prior to the civil war.
Arrangements may be made for a
joint debate in Dallas between Can-
didates Colquitt and Bell, if the
plans of the Colquitt men are suc-
cessful.
Judge William A. Bramlette died
at the family home in Bonham Wed-
nesday afternoon. The burial took
plate under the auspices of the Ma-
sonic lodge.
“Grandma” Ringo, aged about 70
years, was found dead in a pond one
morning last week near her daugh-
ter's home at Gordon. No cause is
known for the act.
One and a half to two cars of ap-
ples, peaches, plums and tomatoes
are being shipped from Lindale dai-
ly. Satisfactory prices are Iteing ob-
tained lor same.
of July.
Latest reports s.re that the Chica-
go packing house proprietors arc man
ifesting almost a “humorous haste
to clean up, repave and attempt to
plan for future changes.” New
toilet rooms are being provided with
additional drossing rooms and clean
towels.
One person was kilted and twenty-
two injured in a collision of the two
St. Louis-Memphis passenger trains
on the Iron Mountain Railroad, near
Mengo, 116 miles south of St. Louia
Friday. The collision occurred as
the northbound train was about to
enter a siding to allow the train
bound south to pass.
The report of Secretary Muegge
oMhe Board of Health.just filed with
Mayor Callaghan, of San Antonio,
shows that the death rate for 1905-
06, including the 257 non-residents
who died there, was only 18.8. Out
of a population of 80,000 only 1,517
deaths occurred.
ELRS
MEET IN
DENVER
IN JULY
Note Fare for th*
£25155255“%.
Santa Fe
toe toHtor tatormeUra sab tab 1
Walter J. Travis, the goiter, set up
his bell, and then made half a dozen
swishes at the shoot grass with the
driver, relates the Jew York Tribune.
"I am not in gopaform,” he said. "I
am playing like a* tfroker we had here
last week.
"This broker played once around,
making a dreadful exhibition of him-
self. Of this, though, he was not
aware. Ho was doing pretty well for
him.
"The man's caddy was an unusually
quiet, stolid iad, a boy with a freckled
(ace quite devoid of expression.
"And since the caddy never once
laughed or sneered at his bad play,
the broker took a fancy to him. And
he said at the end of the round, in
the hope of getting a compliment:
“ 'I have been traveling for the last
six months. I am quite out of prac-
tice. That is why I am in inch bad
term to-day.'
“The caddy replied, calmly:
“ Then ye’ve played before,
re. sir?’ "
I was no* cp-
I would die within six months.
~ ~ “ tab
' “_t E. Pinktam's Vegetable
tried to iidhsrsi re ma against
I sent for the medicine that same day
>egan to use it faithfally. Within Ova
days I Mt relief bo* was ns* entirely eared
■UUI aaeditfori n trail
“Year medfciae fa eertaiuiy Ora. I tore
- - ___-_2.'__Z-—1 nefabboesL. ~ ~
it and I know more than a £aen Wto Itod
anti os I *>n from using your Vaga-
Just as sorely aa Mrs. BenjhnLwas
eared, will Lydia E. Pinkham’b Vege-
table Compound cure every woman
suffering from any form of female ilia.
If you are sick write Mrs. Pinkham
for advice. It is free and always help-
fnl.
Deputy Marshal has arrested Cal
and Bert Stewart, brothers. It is
charged that the defendants shot and
killed Dr. Graham, a well-known
physician of Holder, I. T.
While wading a pond near his
home with two smaller companions,
Jesse Emenhenser of Billings, Ok.,
aged eight years, accidentally slipped
into an airhole and was drowned.
Orders have been placed by the
Texas Baptist Young People's Un-
ion and there are now in course of
manufactre in Dallas 225 tents for
use at the Palacios encampment this
year. These tents will accommodate
ordinarily three persons.
By the end of the month the Sec-
retary of State will have issued his
blanks and letters of instructions rel-
ative to holding the primaries under
the new election law. The aid of the
Attorney General’s department was
mured in framing the instructions.
The receiver of the Jasper Lum-
ber Company sold the sawmill, lands
and other property at Jasper Tues-
day at public sale to the T. & N. O.
Lumber Company. The aggregate of
the sale was about $15,000.
new company expects to start
mill running in a few days.
i n«: i mrieeiiiii cavalry squaiiron m r i t c x »
v , a;II ■ , 7 .* lhe first car of new wheat from
«lav d'rerf th ^*7 an* ’lliam«on County, was shipped
lay djreet.ng them o make an over-.Thurs<J u thc T^as Stgr M,P
land march from rort Sul to Fort-,, n i • mi- • • . j
Riley, Kan., leaving the latter part C™P»n-v; <’-lT«ston. This is intend-
- -1 ed to be the premium car at Galves-
ton. Thc test was sixty-two pounds
and it was raised by Fred Turner of
Granger.
The local organizations of thc Far-
mer’s Union in Dallas County are
actively working together for the
building of gins, to be owned in
common by the members of the or-
ganization. Two gin plants have al-
ready been started at Wilmer and
Lancaster.
It is officially announced by Ad-
jutant General Ilulen that the en-
campment of the Texas National
Guard will be held at Camp Mabry,
August 5 to 19; troops from New
Mexico and Arizona, July 20 to Aug
5; regular troops, July 15 to Octobc*
15th.
Uncle Boh Boyce, aged 65, a reti-
cent of Lake Victor, Lampasas
County, was found dead in his bed
Tuesday morning. The day before
he did a da ”
supper. L_______ __ri-------------------------
have been caused from heart failure. |lu<1 never used the food, we got some
Six hundred and thirty pounds of juice of Grepe-Nuts and milk.
* feeding him the Grape-Nuts itself and
In ( wonderfully short time he fat-
tened right up and became strong and
wen.
"That showed me something worth
knowing and. when later oa my girl
___.. came, I raised her on Grape-Nuts and
point one and a half miles north- ** ^stroag^healthy baby ^and^tas
west of Hamlin, and quite near the —
Jones County gypsum deposits,
which are yielding enormous tonnage
of gypsum.
Chairman Storey of the Railroad
Commission Wednesday filed his
opinion dissenting from the action
To Bring the Babies Around.
When a little human machine (or a
large one) goes wrong, nothing is so
important as the selection of food to
bring it around again.
"My little baby boy fifteen months
old had pneumonia, then came brain
fever, and no sooner had he got over
these than he began to cut teeth and,
being so weak, he was frequently
thrown into convulsions,” says a Col-
orado mother.
"I decided a change might help, so
took him to Kansas City for a visit.
When we got there he was so very
weak when he would cry he would
sink away and seemed like he would
die.
"When I reached my sister’s home
lay”s work and ate a hearty she said immediately that we must
His death ie supposed to recd hln> Orape-Nuts and, although I
« — * * 1 n_ a — - - - - a -s « a a ____
_______ . axsis aawwn wwu airarag, Wto 6^^ »«**><:
" I and for a few days gave him just the
' * --- " ' “. He
meat, belonging to a San Pedro, San stronger so quickly we were soon
Antonio butcher, was condemned as
being unfit for use. The meat was
destroyed.
The Texas Central will cross the
Kansas, Mexico and Orient at a
been. You wifi see from the little
photograph I send you what a strong,
ehubby youngster the boy to now, tat
he didn't look snythiag like that be-
| fore we found this nourishing food.
Grape-Nuts nourished him back to
strength when he was so weak be
couldn't keep any other food on his
stomach." Name given by Poetum
of the majority of the commission in cn.. Battle Creek, Miefa.
All children can be bnflt to a more
sturdy and healthy condition upon
Grape-Nuts and cream. The food con-
Notwithstanding the repeated offi- tains the elements nature demands,
rial denials the rumor of the ill from which to make the soft gray
health of the Pope have been confirm ®Meg In the nerve centers and brain,
ed. His weakness is extre&e and the A weB-fod tonto and strong, Mordy
nerves atoetately tosare a f
body.
It is a great
■ satisfaction for a
'woman to feel
* that she con write
to another telling'
her the most pri-
▼Bte and confident
tial details about
her illness, and
.know that her let-
ter will beseenby
‘a woman only.
Many thousanda
of cases of female
diseases eenne be-
fore Mrs. Pinkham every year, some
personally, others by mail. Mrs. Pink-
ham is the daughter in-lawof Lydia E.
Pinkham and for twenty-five yearn
under her direction and since her de.
cease she has been advising sick women
free of charge.
Mrs. Pinkham never violates thc con-
fidence of women, and every tesumon-
ial letter published is done so with
the written consent or request of the
writer, in order that other sick women
may be benefited as she has been.
Mrs. Alice BerryMll, of 313 Boyce
Street, Chattanooga, Tenn., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
“ Three years ago life looked dark to ma
I had ulceration and inflammation of the
tanale organaend was in a seriom condition.
“ My health was completely broken down
and the doctor toM me that if
erated upon I .. ■ ■ ----
1 told him I would have no
would try Lydia
Compound. Hetr
it bo
and
untd I med it for (ome time.
“Your wtedietee fe certahdy fine. Iteve
tattooed several friend* and nerghborstotake
2 I 1 2 * doom wbo had
feinale troubles and who to-day are a« well
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Risien, John T. Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, June 15, 1906, newspaper, June 15, 1906; Carrollton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1267420/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carrollton Public Library.