Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, June 15, 1906 Page: 8 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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Fans
►
-<
FRISCO
•> ■> > •>
■> -> ■>
Electric Lights and
--ON OCR--
Ft. Worth-St. Louis Trains
C. W. STRAIN, G. P. A.,
♦ Fort Worth, Texas.
MAKES THE TRIP JUST RIGHT
If* Every Day in the Week.
Aid the work and benefit yonnelf by snbacribing. Send <#c. for
a year, 25c. for six montha, or a postal for a sample copy FREE.
We alto answer free of charge, inquiries from pertoot interested tn
fettling or inresting in the Southwest and furnish advertising rates on
application. Address
Aid the Southwest
Hare yon seen the new magazine. Southwest?
It is published in St. Louis (formerly the Frisco Magazine).
It is published by a Sonthwest man, contains stories of the Southwest and •»-
tides of interest to Southwest people, contributed by Southwest writers. It circulates
ir. the Southwest, and contains the adrertisernents of Southwest firms. It will aid
the Southwest in ail her aims- for more people, for more factories, for advantageous
legislation—for investment, immigration and irrigation.
Aid the work and benefit yourself by subscribing.
Southwest, 1021 FmcoBuUn*. St. Lums
Solicits
F. e CfcOtar.
i
Good Service
■.
For Comfort and Convenience
Travelby
this
YOU CAN SURELY
Afford a week's recreation yearly. This means to you a well physi-
cal being plus added energy plus n good clear brain which in all is
HEALTH. WEALTH AND WISDOM.
i 1
*. *. u KNIOHT, Vteo-Praa.
F. a MOOM. Vtaw-PranL
GUN HOOVER.
Traveling Passenger Agent,
Waeo, Texas.
R. C. FYFE,
Asst. Gen. Frt. & Pass. Agt.
Tyler, Texas.
V. D fFETSrvcnSfiT'
ODtmOB MTLLBK AaWtC*WU*v
>. H. CVMPVTOM. AaTt CaaMar.
OVER S2OO.OOOJ1
The National Bank of Commerce
Car. Om aarf Vwpdraa Mrssfiu IMI.I1. TBXM
Your Patronage
•HtSCTOM:
rjrarmu. £. a l. turn
Parlor Cafe Cars serving meals a la Carte. The FINEST MEALS
and SERVICE in tbe land for the smallest cost. Maximum seat rate
in these cars between any point in Texas is fifty cents a day.
Pullman’s latest standard sleepers and clean up to date chair cars
and coaches from Waco, Corsicana, Ft. Worth, Dallas, Greenville,
Tyler and intermediate points t?o Texarkana, Pine Bluff, Stuttgart,
Paragould, Memphis and St. Louis.
SfcE BEADEBS FOB INFORMATION REGARDING LOW BATES
Call on any Cotton Belt agent for full information regarding
your trip, or address
M. M. MORGAN.
Traveling Passenger Agent.
Ft. Worth, Texas.
JOHN F. LEHANE,
Gen. Freight and Pass. Agent,
Tyler, Texas.
RESULT OF A WEE MUT
i
*
band.—Detroit Free Press.
1
I
i
or cinders.
peases of tbe reterinariaaa are
For particulars ad-
Northern
TEXAS
TRACTION CO
aa new hulled rice an'your lipa tbe
color of them cranberries an' your
eyes as bright as a new tin kettle.
Dysr-vpsta frem Eye Strata.
Dr. George M. Gould, the Phils
delphia eye specialist, asserts that
fully half of tbe sufferers from
eye strain have some form of dys-
pepsia, partly, at least, as a con-
sequence of tbskr visual defect*.
“I will say that you’re taken
aome pains with thia order," said
the pretty cook, inspecting the
Interurban
Une ;
hrs* Who Worn Mrewt Buss.
He was a poor man, mark you,
and had to live moot economically
to live at all. They offered him
95,000 in gold—>5,000 in a country
where a stout laborer earns less
than 40 cents a day. He refused
it. To sustain the honor of Hellas
was <
he said, sad only asked that he be
given a water privilege ia bis na-
tive town of Marousai, that be be
trip.
dress,
W. G. FORBESS,
<t. P. * T. .A.
. Fort Worth. Texas.
artillery are away short of their
proper complement of men and
there should be many more com-
panies to garrison tbe defenses al-
ready provided for and man effi
ciently their guns.
DENTIST
16.00
5.00
> 1.50 up
- - w.oo
JR. G. W. FROWFN,
i
*
< 'ffh-e. ;aw> Elm Street,
“G’way,” said the cook, smiling
nevertheless.
“Now. a kind word,” urged the
groceryman; “no tellin’ what that
will do to your order to morrow,”
“You can’t jolly roe,” said the
cook.
“it’s true,” said the grocery man.
“If you hadn't smiled an' Mr. Uas
sells hadn't paid his bill yesterday
an’ tbe bo«? hadn’t directed me to
give him a little better’s usual
there’s do tellin’ what you’d base
drawn t bis morn in'.”
Weak Coast Defenses.
It has dow been discovered that have got tbe best of everything to-
approval to tbe purchase. Tbeex- :
■ [Z~ZZZZ' * 1 ’-----
j paid by the cattlemen.
■Sas Aatkcuy as hrtii—itl.
At least once in her life Busan
B. Anthony was a bridesmaid, and
that was in 1902, when her private
secretary, Miss Anna Dann, was
married at Rochester.
Although Miss Anthony tried to
instill Mias Dann with her vwn
views on woman’s proper sphere
Cupid got tbe best of tbe argu-
ment, and while plainly disgusted
when she heard of tbe approaching
event regard for her secretary won
her over, and she consented to
have it take place at her home and
to act as bridesmaid. Tbe cere
mony was performed by Rev.
Anna Bhaw.—Chicago Tribune.
goatskins in Athens and drive his
little team of bis own little village
and there sell such of tbe water as
bis own people might care to buy
of him. Tbe money? They set it
aside for tbe physical training of
tbe boys of Loues* village,—Out-
ing.
•bulla.
The idea of using snails for tbe
cure of chest complaints Is not, as
a correspondent has suggested, pe-
culiar to the latter-day Italians.
There were many believers ia tbs
nostrum In England a century ago,
and quite a brisk trade was done
in snails at Covent Garden. There
is a quaint prescription for a snail
cure in “An Old Lady’s Pharma-
copoeia,” published by Mrs. Del-
amy in 1T58: “Does Mary cough
at night? Two or three snails
boiled la her barley water, or tea
water, or whatever she drinks,
might be of great service to her.
Taken In time, they have done won-
derful cures. But Mary must
know nothing of It!” Little Mary
had to be humored, even a hundred
yearn before Mr. Barrie found her
humorous.—London Chronicle.
New Discovery:
.. fries <
50c *$1.00 ,
Free Trial.
—' - - — i
“I don't” replied the cook.
“That's what’s puzzlin’ me right
_____ „ __________now. It wasn’t because I kicked,
Tbe existing companies of coast because I’ve kicked before an’
that’s all tbe good it’s done me."
“Evelina." said tbe grocery-
man. “you may have forgotten it,
but you smiled oa me yesterday.
That there smile warmed my Deart
aa’ I thought of it when I was pick
in’ out your stuff this mornin’.
When I remembered the way you
LDAII Asflnwoi
I ■ ■ -
Runs 40 Fast Electric Gars
daily between Dallas and
Ft. Worth. No dust, smoke
Elegant ser-
I vice. Beautiful Lake Erie,
* Oak GlifT and elegant coun-
try homes along the line.
/
Fit f I 5 for the round
WingvS Spwch.
Bobby called to his mother from
tbe yard and asked her to write a
sign for him to pvt on bis new bird
house, “For Rent.”
His mother, busy with a French
lesson, said: “Very well, 1 will
write it ia French, *a lower.’ ”
“Oh, BO,” protested Bobby, j
“that wouldn't do. These are Eng-
lish sparrows." — Lippincott's '
Magazine.
___ /Consumption
F8R Ls’”'1
Surest anri 4Xuic<eul Cure for ail ’
THROAT and LTJTfGI TROUB-
LES, or MONET BACK. |
Bull nghUxg Statistic*
“1 am off for Spain,” said a pho
tographer. “The bull tightingsea
son opens in April, and I must be
there for the first performance.
‘•The season,” be said, “lasts seven
months, from April to November.
Each season there are on an aver-
age 500 fights, and in each fight
three bulls are killed, ten horses
and a twenty-fifth of a man. Tbe
aggregate season’s slaughter in
lhe ring, that is to say, is 1,500
bulls, 5.000 horses and 20 men.
Tbe chief matadors number 25.
They each earn about >9,000 a sea-
son. Tbe ordinary helpers earn in
a season only >500.”
Most Essential.
Nettie If you were fitting out looked, -with tour teeth as white
• house what would you put in
first—the kitchen or the parlor '
furniture?
Sue Neither.^ I d put in a bu» J went to work and got ont tbe
— __ best of everything in sight."
Importing •acred Cattle.
The government has undertak-
en to superintend tbe introduction
into this country of the sacred cat-
tle of India for breeding purposes.
Tbe reason why these cattle are
desired by cattlemen is that they
are immune from pleuro-pneu-
monia, which has caused such
heavy losses through infection by
cattle ticks. Tbe ticks, it is as-
serted, cannot work on the sacred
cattle. Experiments have been
carried on for years to demon-
strate this fact. Tbe introduction
of one-eighth of sacred blood in
Gold Crowns
Bridge Teeth
Gold Fillings
Net of Teeth
Painless method used
for extracting teeth.
Gas given.
Dallas Texas.
D. M. COWART,
Fa.shiona.He Berber.
• l-an shaves and fashionable hair
cuts, at iH>pular prices.
Agent for tlie famous Sherman
Steam Eaundry, that guarantees
ill work. Ship on Tuesday.
ear.
First Boy—J can. Miss Smith.
Teacher—Very well, Robert.
tion that a government veterina- Let us hear your sentence.
rian should examine every beast 1
before it was brought and give bis '
OutdeusL
Teacher -Now, boys, J want to
-------„---- I see if any of you can make a com
tbe ordinary American cattle is ' pfete gentence out of two words,
said to be eonugb to obtain im- both having the same sound to tbe
munity. Secretary Wilson agreed
to afford facilities for the importa-
tion of Indian cattle, but on condi- |
First Boy—“Write right."
Teacher—Very good.
Hecond Boy—Say, Miss Smith, 1
can beat that. 1 can make three
words of it: “Wright, write right."
Third Boy (excitedly) — Gee!
Bear this! “Wright, write‘rite*
right.”
Teacher (thrown off her gunrd)
—Wbew!—Lippincott’s Magasine.
*“°"*h L°“e* contents of the groceryman’s baa
according to the Chicago
Daily News. “That’s the bent
bunch of eelery that you’ve
allowed every morning to fill bin brought me in a long time an’
them cranberries is great.”
“Anything wrong about the po-
tatoes?” asked the groceryman.
“Ain’t them apples as fine green
lags as ever yon seen?”
“They ain’t bad,” admitted the
eook. "The last I bad weren’t fit
to throw ont an’ the celery was so
tough an’ stringy Mr. Cassells
couldn’t cat it. The eggs look pret
ty goo J, too.”
“Don’t they!” said the grocery
m.?n, picking one up and holding
it to the light. “Look at that! As
big as a duck’s egg and fresh as a
daisy. Al) of’em are. I’ll bet half
of ’em have got double yolks. If
you find or e among the lot that
ain’t as good as it might be IT
swaller it raw. Just cust your eye
on tbe butter there.”
“There were four eggs bed out
of the last dozen I bad and the but
ter was strong enough toeraek tbe
plate 1 pot it on,”said tbecook. “I
don’t mind tellin’you I advised Mr.
Cassells to change bis grocer.”
“What!” said the groceryman,
reproachfully. "And have some
other feller come around deliv-
erin’?”
“I might bare stood it," said the
cook.
“Evelina,” said the groceryman,
I solemnly, “do you know why yon
------- . - „ .. - - , „
our coast defenses are very de- day?”
fective in a most important partic- ”• r»Tvii»<t *>>•
ular. Tbre are, it is said, by no
i means enough men to man them.!
KILL th* COUCH [
«"» CURE the mrces'
i.
“AS
4-
_
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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/m1/8/?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.