The Commerce Journal. (Commerce, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. [27], Ed. 1 Friday, January 12, 1906 Page: 7 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
LTON,
FRUIT BELT.
Nam* of Your Boor.
L
Special
Clubbing Offer.
STRO>G-MINDED
Specialty
SUBSCRIBE NOW.
be First.
mo.
r
THE
TEXAS
PACIFIC
•*
RAILWAY
ent Co.
1
Low Rates
East
/ >
ST.
f
Ml
PATENTS
DSWIFT&&
TS
♦ w
Cure
it.
EARS*
HENCE
the country.
Lc 90 years
Semi-Weekly Record.
The Record is a general
During the fall and winter months there
will be several opportunities to go East at
low rates via the
tuae»
he
*■ W
NN1NG,
AW,
?EXAS.
Estate at
■est.
j
aw,
Pexar. ~
nai Bank,fend
atlonai Hank,
c. Mouth Side
:N,
ige Shop.
Never Disappoint*
'‘Many extensively advertised
r— "•
the teat.
11.75
.50
.50;
.85
PSON,
r.
Building. ’
as.
11 4 Co.,
1.
✓1
■j
j
Maims
nans
>ht« Ac.
Tlptlnn tn«,
whether *0
OD Patent*
lean.
UrvMt elr-
Trrw»». |3 a
•wedeeMra.
>t>OMd that
lnd.<MSos
siactly th*
arrh. R*.
Hanwa th*
>mach and
.thuacaoa-
instead
Cure
mucous
rotecti th*
ur Hsinja,
’digestion.
N.
oa Eat
M««*, IS.
, Com-
’S
ifuge
UITEEI
RM
EDY
TOMC.
I
up-to-date men al.o want
eral Newspaper in order
s
iry
le*
It.00
TrteJ.
forTu*
IOUB.
Workmen Want Longer Hour*.
The men employed in the Bombay
cotton mills are agitating for longer
houra. They ask for a return to the
CHICAGO. MILWAUKEE AND
PAUL RAILWAY
C. L. COBB,
Southwestern Passenger Agt.,
907 Main Street.
KANSAS CITY, MO.
---r'%
I
I
PassengerService
-TEXAS.
4 IMPORTANT GATEWAY* 4
"No trouble to uinr questions.•
2 FAST TRAINS DAILY 2
to St. Louis, Chicago
and the East....
' SUPEBB PULLMAN VE3TIBULED SLEEPEM,
Bmedy
CMSh.
f* h A m hp r I a i n * e Colic. Cholera and
vnamoeriain S Diarrhoea Remedy.
Never fails. Buy it now. It may save life.
$1.0) —
DeWitt’s JO Salve
For Piles. Burns, Sores.
...Dest...
The soothing and comforting
effects of DeWitt's Witch Hazel
Salve, when applied to piles,
sores, cuts, boils, etc., subdues
pain almost instantly. This salve
draws out the inflammation, re-
duces swelling and acts as a ru-
befacient, thus circulating the
blood through the diseased parts,
permitting or aiding Nature to
permanently remove the trouble
entirely. Sold by C. O. Hill.
nants. But each season Dundee
sends her whaling fleet to the
Arctic. So few are "right" whales
within the circle now that the
Dundee experts know them all,
it io mid. Wags aver that the
Dundee harpooners have names
for each on; of them. , \
M. F. SMITH.
Commercial Agent,
201 Slaughter Building,
DALLAS, TEXAS.
ran have access to books more
than two hours out of every twen-
ty-four. The system under which
the two main reference libraries,
the Astor and Lenox, and the
thirty-four circulating branches in
Manhattan, the Bronx and Rich-
mond are now conducted makes
practically inaccessible to the
great mass of workers the 650,000
volumes of these twq main li-
braries.
■ and TRADE• MARKS promptly obtained
■ ail countrirt, or no We jbteuu p. TE N T- ■
■ THAT PAY, advertise them thoroughly ® ■
■ expense. and help you to »u.ee*,. ■
■ Send model, photo or sketch for FREE report ■
■ on patentability. W yrarw’ practice, SUR-I
■ **»«'NG REFERENCES For free Guide ■
■ Book on Profitable Patents writ* to ■
■ SO3-BO5 S.vonth Stre.t, ■
1 WASHINGTON, D. c. I
Certainly Fair
Of all troubles humanity is
subject to none perhaps causes
more acute distress and more
frantic efforts for relief than ma-
ny forms of itching skin troubles. |
We will tell you a remedy that
rarely fails—Hunt’s Cure. One
box only is absolutely guaran-
Hed to cure any ona case of itch-
ing trouble—no matter the name.
If it fails, your money cheerfully
refunded.
Might Harr Bern
f. Wben .Shakespeare said; “Aye{covered, and there was a fall”in
for certain he was thinking of
the iteh. But one thing wo do
know—and know it twenty year’s
worth—Hunt's Cure will abso-
lutely. infallibly and immediate-
ly cure any itching trouble that
ever happened to the human cu-
ticle. It’« guaranteed.
]
—--- ♦ • ■*- - ——— a
Indigestion D easily overcome |
by the use of Kodol Dyspepsia
Cure, because this remedy di- !
g''8ts what you eat and gives the
stomach a rest—allows it to re 1
cuperate and grow strong again.
ing of gas, sour stomach, heart- i
burn, etc., and enables the di-
gestive organs to transform all
foods into the kind of rich red
blood that makes health and 1
strength. Sold by C. 0. Hill. >
Corporation Director*.
Chauncey M. Depew is a direct- ■
or in seventy-four corporations. I
James H. Hyde, formerly vice
Assurance Society, was a director
p’0‘r i "/ forty-five different corpora-I
.* tions. Gcori-e I- P.-ik-pr r.rpc,/L',.f |
the First Nat; nal bank, i> in
‘ J forty-four corporations, while
i Janies Stillman, president of the
: National City hank, is in fifty-
efeller, brother of John D. Rock-i
ations. George J. Gould
, ! corporations.
brother, Frank Gould, ii
twenty.
If you desire to be kept posted regarding
these, and will mail me the date and desti
nation of your trip, complete information
about rates, routes and train service wiii.be
sent you free
THE SOI "PH WEST LIMITED between
Kansas City and Chicago is the train that
took first place in its first year and holds
it. Ijeaves Union Station, Kansas City. 5.55
p. m.; Grand Avenue, 5.07 p. m., arrive
Union Station, Chicago, 8.20 a. m.
stockraiser and the artisan.
The colored comic pictures
printed in the Friday issue are a
rare treat for the young folks.
Its market news alone is worth
the money.
Xouwill surely be a constant
reader of the Record once you
try it, and the favorable clubbing
offer made below is an opport-
unity not to be missed:
Semi-Weekly Record 1 year $1.00
The Journal 1 year ...
Both papers 1 year ...
Semi-Weekly Record 6
I mo. ...
Both papers 6 mo. ...
Subscribe at this office.
Had to Leap Too.
The European “resident" of a
government station in Java is an j
important person, held in great!
honor by the natives. A story is
told of one resident who was
thrown out of his dogcart while
descending a hill. He had barely
recovered from the stunning fall
when he caught sight of his sec-
retary. who had been following in
his own carriage, coming bound-
ing down the steep road tike a
big India rubber ball, rolling over
and over in the dust. "Hello! I
Have you been upset, too?" asked
, the resident. "No. resident,” (
sputtered the fat little secretary, 1
scrambling to his feet again, “but
I thought if the resident leaps, I
leap, too." I
; HANDSOME NEW CHAIB CABS (S.«U Fwu7 ’
FASTEST TIME TO NEW ORLEANS
(oomfaxi »»«oui.cs).
ONLY LINE RUNNING THB0UGH COACHBH
AND SLEEPEBS WITHOUT CHANGB.
INCOMFAWABLC FULLMAN aLCCFCR AN*
TOURIST CAR *CRVICC TO
CALIFORNIA.
POSITIVELY NO CHANGE.
Bm!U1u< Chdr Cert <S»U Free) Daily to
ST.LOUIS, MEMPHIS«oELPASK
| S«e any Ticket Afanl. or writ*
1. F. SDSRIS, tw. raaaaapt n.
U *. TH0SNK, B. r, TtrXXEB.
Iastata.il.1lp. ttaltaalifURtsL
British isles that owns whale-
ships. Toward the end of the
century before last nearly all the
east coast ports had whalers of
their own. London had thirty-
four ships. The falling oflf of the
industry is due chiefly to the
scarcity of “right" whales: but
the turning point of the decav
was taken when coal gas was dis-
. „ - ------------- ------ ,.i
there a the rub,” we do not know j the importance of oils as ilhimi-
f-------. __ - - —
the iteh. But one thing wo do
Journal.
It is not the province of your
correspondent, at this time, to
indite a homily on the nature and
causes of social phenomena, or
the forces that prompt voluntary
human action; but viewing
relation to the world from a bach-
elor's angle ot vision we cannot
help seeing ourselves badly and
sadly out of joint with society in ;
general and its better half in par-
ticular. Hence this plea for a
more harmonions social adjust- i
ment in our case.
Old Bachelor.
: _______-J I .t . r .L Iiuura. inc ash ior a reitim to tne
they ^re prov.ded with two of these old thirteea-honr day in place of the
present day of twelve hours, with ex-
tra payment for the additional hour.
.r-------- The But Papers
growing demand in The papers you want are the
Want Libraries Open Lat*.
There is a (,
New York city that the public li- papers that will suit your entire
brarics be kent open after 9 family beet. A combination that i
o clock at night, so that those w;n
whose days are filled with work requirement ie
can have access to books more l”18 PaPer an<^ the Fort Worth
Nam* of Your Beer.
Captain John Quinton has in-
| vented a pencil that writes on the
. . foam of beer. The other day in a
Broadway cafe a dozen booh com-
re panions ordered beer. An alarm
” | of fire called them to the side-
famous for walk. When they re-entered the
, resort each man found his name
I on his collar—that is. on top of
I the foam in his glass. The work !
could not have been better done
by an engraver. Amazement sat I
upon the faces of the "boys,” and
all watched the handwriting on
the “wall until the collar wilted
and the beverage grew stale. This
is the prettiest trick I have seen
in years.
An Editor 90 Year* Old.
A. B. 1". Hildreth, of the Charles
City (la.) Intelligencer, is the old- ,
est editor in the Hawkeye state
and possibly in the country. In
four months be will be 90 years
old, but is still in good physical
and mental condition, not having
had a day's sickness in the past
half century. He was born on
the 29th day of February and,
Editor Journal:
Who can tell what is the mat-
ter with us old bachelors out here
in this famous “cross-timbers’ ’
section—a section as f
its grand old bachelors as it ever
has been for its prehistoric
mounds, its matchless soil and
climate, it- gushing springs and
babbling streams, its gurgling
brooks and rippling rills, its fine
orchards and gardens and vin -
yards, its n< ble wives and lovely
daughters, and its loyalty to every
interest of home and state?
Infinite Wisdom decreed some
six thousand years ago that “It
is not good that man should be
And the question arises,
be
we
we
are we to find out where 1
are and let them know where we
are? How are we to get their
names and addresses and give land,
them our names and addressee?
In short, how are we ever to
know anything about each
other?
Since writing the above a
friendly benedict kindly suggests
the propriety of draftin an omni-
bus advertisement setting forth
the merits of bachelorship in gen-
eral, giving the name and address
of every’ mother’s son of us, and
having it published in the ample
colums aur favorite and widely
Where Metal Does Not Rust.
Meta! does not rust in Lake Titi-
caca. South America. A chain, an
anchor, or any article ot iron, if
thrown in this lake, and allowed to re-
main for weeks or months, is as bright
when taken up as when it came fresh
from the foundry.
•S!
Z-
Ji
JI
The Record is a general news Me™. Sn?
paper of the beet type. Ably b*^*1'®* l>r gets H < nt!Wg
edited, splendidly illustrated, it g«niw£™X,n 'roui “ ,hat he c“
carries a news service which is
the best that knowledge and ex-
periece can suggest. Special
feature of the Record anneal to uP',,o’,,I‘,e ,Iien »Ih> «ant a Good Gen-
, , e,al newspaper in order to keep in
the housewife, the farmer, the touch with the outride w<,ii,t. >u«:h a
1 ’MIXAS SEMI-WKhK-
L1 NEWS. A Combin.iiuii of THE
COMMERCE Jol'itNAI, and THE
DALLAS SEMI-WEEKLY NEWS is
>ist what Hie farmers of this section
need in order Cn keep thoroughly post-
ed upon Local News, Home Enterprise,
lersoi.al Items, state News. National
Adairs, Foreign -Matters. In short, this
Combination keeps the farmer and bis
family up to the times on information.
tor $1.75 we will send the two papers
?'^Jre-ir_715C..eopi,‘.8- The FARMERS’
IORLM in The News is alone worth
the money to «ny Intelligent Farmer or
btockmnn of thia locality, to aay noth-
Ing of other SPECIAL FEATURES.
Minister Learn* Stone Cutting.
Rev. J. A. Dixon, pastor of the
Methodist church in Hardwick,
Vt.. in order to get acquainted The Journal 6
with the laborers of the village, " “
and thereby be I ettcr enabled to
reach rhem through the pulpit, has
donned the apron of a stonecut-
ter and with mallet and hammer
is learning the trade of granite'
cutter in, the shops of the largest
concern in the village. Previous
to entering the ministry Mr. Dix-
, on was a sailor. He begins at
1 the bottom, doing onlv the very
simplest of work, but expresses
the hope that some day he mav
be competent to do tine lettering
and can ing.
alone,
if we _old bachelors would
better off with a mate than
are without one, why don’t
get married?
Yes, in view of the fact that we
are all good-looking, robust in
body and mind, industrious, en-
ergetic, economical, honest and
trustworthy, have good homes of
our own, and sensibly realizing
our need of woman’s companion
ship and love—I say, in view of
these facte and many others that
could be mentioned, why don’t t
we all get married?
We must find out if there are
any’ marriageable maidens and
widows in North Texas wanting
good husbands. This point gained,
we desire, in some way, t-» come
in tDuih with them. But how is
the desired result to be reached?
Can any r ader of the Journal
suggest a feasible plan?
We very sensibly realize the
fact that on every moment of
time is written “eternity," as it
hurries by to immerge itself in
the great ocean of the past, and
that “procrastination is the thief
of time, and that our single
blessedness should give way to
something more blessed. Yea, )
we fully believe that there are to
be found, somewhere in this wide,
world, loving hearts tuned to vi- '
brate in unison with our own.
But question again arises, how !
are these hearts to be brought to- ;
therefore, has bad but few birth-
days. Mr. Hildreth has been a
printer or editor for over seventy
year. The first issue of the paper
he now owns appeared on the 31st
day of July, 1856.
It invigorates, strengthens and
builds up up. It keeps you in
condition physically, mentally
and morally That’s what Hol-
lister's Rocky Mountain Tea will
do 35 cents, Tea or Tablets.
Sold by C. O. Hill.
_ I remedies are failures when put to
ciroulathd paper, the Commerce the teat. Hunt's Lightning Oil,
is an exception. Confidence in it |
is never misplaced—disappoint- - . " ■-
ment never follows its use It is Equltabl,e Life |
surely the grandest emergency I • T
, remedy now obtainable. ~ For {orty flve c =
cuts, burns, sprains, aches and “P"?’ George F. Baker, president
pains I know no equal.” Geo.; r * , 1‘irst National bank, is in
our E. Paddock, Doniphan. ’ TOrty’four,. corP‘'r«t^us. while
. Few British Whales. .
! Dundee is the only port in the tions. Wilham Rock-
efeller, is in forty different corpor-
----r r-—j, jn jor
and his \
in about
ty-five
A Jamaican l.ady Mpaako Highly ot Chain-
brrlala’a Caagh Remedy
Mrs. Michael Harf, wife of the
superintendent of Cart Service at
Kingston, Jamaica, West Indies
Islands, says that she has for
years used Chamberlain’s Cough
Remepy for coughs, croup, and
whooping cough and has found
it very beneficial. She has im-
plicit confidence in it and would
not be without a bottle of it in
her home. Sold by all druggists.
First Human Thermometer*.
casion some time or ncmfwypcm
Pretty much every one has had
occasion some time or other to
handle, or at least see, ths modern
clinical thermometer used by phy-
sicians for finding the tempera-
ture of their patients' bodies. It
is in its case somewhat smaller
than an ordinary stylographic pen.
The following description of the
first clinical thermometers used in
the Edinburg hospitals forty years
ago was recently given by Sir
Lander Brunton. “The use of the
clinical thermometer had just
been introduced into England by
I the late Professor Aitken, of Net-
' ley. and the clinical wards of the
, ... ~ Royal infirmary at Edinburg, be-
getner and united in the bonds of ing set apart specially for the in- <
holy wedlock? And again, how struction of university students.
thermometers. To the best of my I
; knowledge there were only two I
in Edinburgh, perhaps in Scot-
1----1. One was bent and the oth-
er wcas straight; both were be-
tween a foot and eighteen inches . (
long, and I used to walk proudly
about the ward with them con- ,
tained in something resembling ,
an ordinary gun case under mv . '■. “J'. “’’•“■•8 "*“«•••
arm. But' each observation re- LJ1 \?..LndAg^t_,°2’Lbelch'
quired about ten minutes, so that
the number it was possible to
make during a visit was very lim-
ited.’
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Lyford, A. A. The Commerce Journal. (Commerce, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. [27], Ed. 1 Friday, January 12, 1906, newspaper, January 12, 1906; Commerce, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1359008/m1/7/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .