Wise County Messenger. (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, January 13, 1911 Page: 8 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Wise County Messenger and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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23%.
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A.
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♦
A PHYSICIAN S DIAGNOSIS Of
KIDNEY TROUBLE.
THAT ARE TOLD
WHY RENT?
“‘I’d be wrong 1'! be wrong.' Black
lug on along Broa I ■■ b m in ■ "I
days.
\
I
or to —
4
3
A
A Few of the Waggoner Farms
On the Denton--Wise county line, 50 miles northwest of Dallas.
\
ITS EFFECT ON THE HEART.
the people on the lawn getting ba k to
bad,
t he
book
‘Your horse ran third'
He Takes the *jn.
A
k
r
L
A
'..
p ■
on a Country Bumpkin.
Sold by druggists.
Price $1.00.
Sold by C. B. Gunn
8
INSURANCE (&
J. E. BOYD,
REAL ESTATE
The Farmer's Ideas.
Office now at Courthouse with County Treasurer.
Canat
DEAL” is my motto.
qualifications for vot ng: Const t at on
of United Stat s
in Uniied States, of all United States
m 't:
Still of the Same Mina
Resd car great offer on 1s* page.
__ ...
I
i —
*j
.♦fo,
W5
\
aeria! navigation, growth of the Umited
States, universities and colleges; posit
NO. 5.—173 acres, about like No. 3; $30 per acre.
NO. 6.—188 acres, about like No. 3; $30 per acre.
fluence will build up the weakened kid-
neys and urge them to a better perform-
all
and
Lloyd C. Griscom, chairman of the
New York Republican county commit-
f
i
"The aviator is not a selfish man.”
"‘Cause he doesn’t want the earth?”
There is so much of beauty.
So many wondrous things.
Yet round one stmple picture
My fondest memory clinga.
arm es
Panama
" 'Too
maker.
the liver and stomach toned up and the
digestion improved.” e
Prickly Asb Bitters is a remedy that
answers these reqnirements completely.
! returaed I said:
| “‘Well. how did yos like Pinto ?
J “ ‘Fust rate!’ the farmer answere
‘I see he's got some of my ideas.’
Chicago Post.
Ing up ignorance, like the watering cart
man. eh?
“A watering cart man was drivin
slowly on a hot day through a dusty
street when an old chap from the coun-
try shouted to him
” ’Hey. mister, yer cart’s leakin'!’
"The watering cart man glanced back
at the streams spurting vigorously
“in what way is the heart affected from' nEeko ToU Do" ovEuLOKED that
gHh
Li
everybody should keep a bottle at home."
Get the genuine with the figure
“3” in red on front label.
HAWSE or MISK?”
am! watched it gallop in on the bit at
V
kidney trouble?”
"In all cases the heart is disturbed,
NO. 3.—149 acres east of and adjoining No. 2; same soil, but only a
few acres in cultivation; road frontage, wood, water, bottom
land and prairie; fenced on two sides; $30 per acre; easy terms.
NO. 4.—162 acres, about same as No. 3: $30 per acre.
I
/ ‛
VSw. JoHt$
(
y-
{
r
My answer It is ready:
Of all th® Joy® I know
Td rath- have "'her presence"
Beneath the mistietoel
- Boaton Hern IA
OSCE GOODWIN.
Interurban Bldg. 1316 Commerce St.
DALLAS, TEXAS
The Best Present.
What would I like for Christmas?
Quito carelessly you ask.
This picking out of prevents
is somnething of a task.
-usr•
Christmas Spirit.
The Christmas spirit.
No mistake.
Looks like a game
Of give an ! take.
—Detroit Free Press.
A severe heart throbbing and nervous
trembling is noticeable, especially aftet
a little bodily exercise; the victim fre
quently imagines he has heart disease.*
HOW TO CURE IT.
P ase:
532
1 r
525
h
r
",
' “The author of genius." said William
Dean Howells at a dinner, "expresses
the thoughts of his time He speaks
r
incorrigible.
Lawyer-Now, what did you and the
defendant tall; about?
Witness—Oi t’ink about fifteen min-
utes.
Lawyer—No, no; I mean what did
you talk over?
Witness We talked over the tilli-
phone. sort.—Boston Transcript.
suffering kidneys must be strengthened, judge, lulling. I didn’t overlook your
He Took It Home.
“Going to have a Christmas tree at
your house?”
"Sure! Don't you see the scratches
on my face and neck —Detroit Free
Press.
TAKING ADVANTAGE
lator, but its healing and restorative in- _
OF IGNORANCE.
in tact the
J l in,’ said
A Great Invention.
Vance—I think Ferdie ranks with
Edison as an inventor and benefactor
of man.
Luella - What did he invent?
Vance-He invented a device to pwe-
vent cigawette papers fwom blowing
away in a stwong bweeze.— Scraps.
own and
ance of their duties. It gives strength ---
and tone to the liver, stomach and heart
and promotes harmony of action through- City Dweller Puts a Joke Over
out the body. I '
£ 6 ’
I -.)
tnge of Ignorance. It would be show
by a person it all open mind t : tn.
' ■ h a i v few form touts
habitues hanging about ready . . d
cities of 5,000 o>
The Horseman’s Mistake.
Just because racing is almost a tb r
" the past ti ere ■ i . re ra ■ t 1 . ever agreed with me on anything?'
15 to 1, Thornby knocked down half
A Soemingiy Common Disease
which Becomes Fatal through
Neglect and which May Be
Readily Cured by Prompt At-
tention.
It is not only a system tonic and regu-
PRAIRIE LAND, in tracts as desired, $30.00 to $40.00 per acre.
FOR INFORMATION SEE OR WRITE,
FOUNT RAY. or OSCE GOODWIN.
First National Bank Building, Interurban Bldg., 1316 Commerce,
Decatur, Texas. Dallas, Texas.
"Thornby climbed up into the judges’
stand with blood in his eye. Her ach
ed around behind him as he climbed
and loesene d the old Colt, When lie
got into the stand he found the judge
meditatively playing with the hammer
of one of these new fashioned auto
mutic pistols
' I reckon you done overlooked that
hawse of mine? asked Mr Thornby
scowling
“ Not at all. Mr. Thornby.' said the
Dallas News or Fort Worth
Record and MessengerS
The 1911 World Almanac
is the archway to a storehouse of re- i from a score of holes in the rear of his
liable informat on; full details of the i cart and said blandly:
1910 census and of the most cimportant •Tat‛s an right, boss. That's to
fifty years: 10,050 facts and figures , keep the kids from gtttln on behind
about polities, labor, religion, sports. | ye know.
farn statistics. finance, trade. com- ,
merce, insurance. money and banking: I
NO. 7.—277 1-2 acres, fronting public road and adjoining school and
church; about 75 acres in cultivation, balance pasture and
woodland; deep, rich, sub-irrigated soil; the old Dan Waggon-
er home is located on this tract, being a well built house of six
rooms, together with extra good improvements in the way of
barns, sheds, water supply, etc; there is also on this tract a
second set of improvements, consisting of a good four-room
house and outbuildings; there are number of springs, and an
abundance of water—in all one of the most desirable places in
the country. Price $42.50 per acre, terms to suit purchaser.
NO. 8. —146 acres east of and adjoining No. 7, same character of soil;
about half in cultivation, balance timber land; no improvement
except fencing; 2 beautiful building sites; $37.50. Terms.
1911 World Alma ic wil tell von some-
thing about everything mi everything
about i great many things Price 25c.
zt b Qk st ores (west of Buffalo and
Pittsturg 30c ). by ma 35c Address
The New York Worid. New York.
"What is the.proper course of treat-
ment for kidney disease?”
"First, to get rid of uric acid and other
poisons in the syste m. This can be done
by stimulating the bladder and bowels
so that they will act more freely. The
cive it to ny wire ana lour children and they are tee, said in the course of an interview:
fa tie best of health, too. I (eel that Prickly Aab ' "But such a course as that suggested
Mt ter a U lhe beat remedy on earth and that would be taking too evident an advan-
I want your insurance business. List your Real Estate
with me, or let me sell you a good farm. A “SQUARE
ieformation about our
foreign countries, the
navies of the worid.
sen, g *
: 32-2.52.
Auto Suggestions.
It's a long road that has no tacks
A tack avoided is a tire repaired
The race U to tin- swift, provided the
constable doesn't telephone ahead
On an auto honeymoon love makes
the world go round, but the engine de-
mands gasoline
A honk in time may prevent a fine.
The loudest horn doesn't always be-
long to the biggest car
Motorists swear by their cars, pedes
triads at them.
It's a rare car that doesn't carry
more than one crank -Judge.
consisting of nearly nine thousand
acres of choice, tillable land, on
the line of Denton and Wise coun-
ties, 50 miles northwest of Dallas,
is now offered for sale at a low
price, in tracts and upon terms to
suit purchasers.
Por information apply to
FOUNT RAY.
First National Bank Building,
DECATUR, TEXAS.
J. E. BOYD
M. W. Burr, village blacksmith and respected
etsen of Starke, La., says: "I was troubled with
kideey and liver disorder for 18 years. I was in
couttnual misery until I began taking Prickly
Ash Bitterr which baa entirety cured me, aud I
•m now ■ strong, henithy and hearty man. I
More than two-thirds .t the annual
death rate, physicians claim, ie directly
trac cable to kidney disorders.
Interested by this remarkable asser-
tion and desiring to acquire a better un-
derstanding of the origin of the disease.
• prominent physician was recently in-
terviewed as to the symptoms of such
troubles.
“To what do you attribute the great
destructiveness of kidney disease?” was
asked.
"The hold which the disease gains in
the body before the victim becomes aware
of his true condition, and the rapidity
with which it eats its way into the vital
organs.”
"Would not the proverbial 'ounce of
prevention' check the progress of the
disease?"
"There is no doubt of it. The trouble
is that victims of this disease mistake
the symptoms for some trifling ailment
in the stomach or bowels; therefore they
do nothing to arrest the course of the
disease until it is well advanced.”
"What is the origin of kidney trouble?"
“Almost invariably bad digestion, fol-
How the Tree Was Trimmed.
Mrs. Crawford- However did she get
her husband to trim the Christmas
tree?
Mrs. Crabshaw She told him his
taste was so bad that she wouldn't
let him do it. Puck.
g 3 • " t”s 1
Notice of Final Account
No. 1438
The State of Texas, to the sheriff of
Wise county — greeting:
J. A. Spinks, administrator of the
estate of Mrs. A.A. Dallas, deceased,
havirg filed in our county court his
tins' account of the condition of the
estate of said Mrs. A. A. Dallas, de-
ceased, together with an application
for distribution and to be discharged
from said administration.
You are hereby commanded, that
by publication of this writ for twenty
days in a newspaper published in the
county of Wise, you give due notice
to ail persons interested in the ac-
count for final settlement of said es-
tate, to file their objections thereto, if
any they have, on or before the April
term, 191, of said county court, com-
mencing and to be holden atthe court
house of said county in the city of
Decatur, on the first Monday i n
April, 1911, when said account and
application will be considered by
said court.
Witness J. P. Williams, clerk of
the county court of Wise county.
Given under my hand and seal of
said court atmy office in the city of
Decaier, this 27tn day of Dec . 1910.
J. P. WILLIAMS,
Clerk county court, Wise county*
By H. M. FOSTER, deputy clerk-
A truecops, I certify: SAM FAITH,
- Sberif Wise county
72
4 1
NO. 9.—About 125 acres, 50 in cultivation, balance timber, which will
more than pay for putting it in cultivation; fine alfalfa land;
good set of improvements; a choice tract. $42.50 per acre.
Terms to suit.
..
hurriedly" — Detroit Frei
Every bar at is preslded u. answered
Press
NO. 1. —155 acres about one hundred yards from school house and
five hundred yards from church: 30 acres in cultivation and
50 acres more can be easily cultivated; this 80 acres being of
the finest rich bottom land, through which flows Sweetwater
creek—a creek which has never been known to be dry; balance
of the land is prairie. Five wire fence on three sides; plenty
of timber and EVERLASTING RUNNING WATER. Fronts
on public road: conveniently and beautifully located in a good
community. Price $32.50 per acre—terms to suit.
NO. 2.--148 acres east of and adjoining No. 1; same character of soil,
but not quite so much in cultivation, everlasting running water
in creek, besides which there is a fine spring on this place;
fenced on two sides; road frontage, wood, water, finest soil in
bottom and good pasture land: no overflow land. Price $32.50.
Terms to suit.
information, naturalization laws i-‘
j out those things that his generation
has all along been thinking. but think-
Ing silently and perhaps a little mistily.
"An author of transcendent geufus
pi pulation ot larcest . . m
cities o! the earth, of 100 largest cities speaks the thought of all time For
example, one summer at Sunnpee >
I lent a volume of Plato to a lean,
shrewd farmer. When the volume was
though in many instances the palpita-
tion does not become alarming until the 1 the betting ring to collect,
disease has advanced to a serious point.
Have you not already paid the
landlord enough to have bought a
farm of your own'
The Old
Dan Waggoner
Homestead
lowed by torpid liver and a constipated
habit."
"What are the symptoms?”
"Headache, dizzy spells, sluggish
brain, restless nights, pale or sallow
•kin, bad breath, lack of appetite, heart-
burn, sour belching, backache or tender I
ness over the kidneys, nervous weak-
ness, dark rings around the eyes, tired
feeling, too much or too little urine, and
sediment in urine-.”
6
colonel Abe Gruer a a vu • r- n ...
Saratoga paused in an eloquent
’ dress to tell a story.
“Y es, h s Hi!. ' i - se two f: ! ne
rre as inei adicably opposed as Brovr:
' and Black
Brown and E k werealw as argu
I lug Tut y i lii ilf 5 . ; Se LU J qes I
tion in the same light.
“ Erow n.' said Biack 'tie day. ‘I
wonder what would happen if yoc
horse. You overlooked me.’ ”— Cinein
I natt Times-Star.
NEW TALES
the best they can "
"Every one knows Dynamite Jim
Thornby." said Joe Iumphrey the otb
er day. He may not have made a
million in the racing game but he bad
a lot of fun out of it One time lie
had a string of horses at one of the
little western tracks it was the rule
out there to fix tin Judge before you
started a horse lhe judges expected
I' Thornby had been preparing a colt
for a long time. Finally he thought
he saw a chance and anyhow he had
to have the money He set that colt
in a soft spot, got down all hts money
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Collins, Dick & Smith, Marvin B. Wise County Messenger. (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, January 13, 1911, newspaper, January 13, 1911; Decatur, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1581358/m1/8/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .