Caldwell News-Chronicle. (Caldwell, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, October 19, 1906 Page: 4 of 8
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CALDWELL NEWS-CHRONICLE. CALDWELL. TETA* OCTOBER 12. 1<H)6.
■SB!
PEOPLE í YOU 9 KNOW
•—Bnt> VAbat Che? aw
T. F. Hudson baa been aick
several daya tbia week.
Mra. D. C. Tbarp, of Conroe,
ia tbe gueal of Mrs. J. S. Snook
tbia week.
Miái Fannie Stone apent sev-
eral daya last week with friends
in Brenbam.
W. F. Gay baa been quite
aick again tbia week, and waa in
a critical condition yeaterday.
lira. S. M. Douglaae left Sun-
for Travia, to viait her
daughter wbo ia quite ill tbere.
Mra. Wainwrigbt, of Galves*
ton, ia visiting ber daughter,
Mrs. J. A. Broaddus, this week.
Mrs. W. T. Nelson, of Lo-
meta, came in Tuesday to spend
some time with Mrs. W. F.
Gay.
Mrs. W. A. Eodins returned
Sunday from a two weeks' stay
at San Angelo and attending the
fair tbere.
J. S. Snook and D. C. Tbarp business school, coming by ship
left Wednesday morning for j to Galveston, experiencing some
Amarillo, to spend a few days
Revival Meeting Soon.
Rev. McLarty states that a
revival will noon begin at bia
church, and that just as aoon aa
poasible definite announcementa
aa to date will be made. He has
aecured tbe aervices of Rev.
John M. Neili a pastor lately
tranaferred front Montana to
Texas, to aaaiat him in tbe
meeting. Tbe paator indulgen
the hope that tbe meeting will
be aa far reaching and beneficial
to the city and aurroundingcom-
munity as tbe Birdwell meeting
of laat vear, and he earnently
aolicita tbe co-operation of tbe
Cbriatiana in all denominationa.
' PINOS YANKEES ARE LIKED.
Writer lays They Are Popular
Many Lands.
In
WCNDERt OP TWO STATU.
Pete Jackaon left Monday
night for a viait to Lampaaaa
and Dallaa before returning to
bia home in Jurilla, N. M.
Luciua Broaddua, wbo is now
firing on tbe Beaumont branch
of the Santa Fe, apent two or
three daya here tbia week.
Mra. G. W. Lee and Miaaes
Beaaie Lee and Alex Dean were
among tboae wbo attended tbe
ahow nt Brenbnm laat Friday.
Mra. W. S. Conoly returned
Tueaday to ber home in Marlin,
accompanied by Mrs. A. H.
Foster, wbo will apend some
time with ber.
Mrs. W. H. Conoly was called Csrds are out announcing the
to Taylor Saturday by the death marriage of Miss Mary Skra-
of her father, wbo has been in banek to Mr. Charles Jancik,
very low health for some time, which will occur at the residence
She will probably remain some Qf tbe bride's parents, Mr. and
time there. Mrs. John Skrabanek, of this
Don't fail to aee the new Gold
Medal Hata and pretty new
fiopa. Alao Ribbons of all kinds,
st Mrs. Mamik Wki.hoknk's.
Peruna at Gramm's, 6 bottles
for $5.00.
To be Married Santfay.
Cbas. Cade returned Monday city, next Sunday afternoon,
morning from Poughkeepsie, N.
Y., where be has been attending
rough weather on tbe
on business.
Mrs. Cynthia Easley left Sat-
urday for Gatesville and Waco,
wbers she will spend two months
with relatives.
Mrs. J. W. Matthews left
Tuesday for Houston to spend
two weeks with ber daughter,
Mrs. Womack.
W. N. Heslep left Saturday
for Dallas, to spend a week with
bis daughter, Mrs. Blackburn,
and to attend tbe fair.
pretty
way.
Little Reba Broaddus is quite
sick this week, ha -ing symptoms
of diphtheria. Sbe has been
given the anti-toxin treatment,
and is now doing- nicely, and
there is no danger of any spread
of the disease.
Many men tfive lavishly of ROld,
To build bridge* and castles and tow
era of old;
If you want everlasting fame, a bene-
factor be,
Give the poor and needy Rocky
Mountain Tea.
Chas. Uramm.
October 21, at 1 o'clock.
Both of these young people
have been raised in Caldwell,
and their circle of friends is
large, all of whom will extend
hearty congratulations in
vanee of their marriage.
Real Estate Transfers.
The following deeds have
been filed for record with the
county clerk since last report,
being transfers of real estate in
Burleson county:
E. T. Lednecky, et ux., to
George Hrtan, 78 acres O.
Perry, S1300.
James Carroll, et ux., to R.
A. Moore, interest in fifty seres,
$130.
Jesse Sama, et ux„ to R. A.
Moore, aame, $34.
Waa. and Alfred Douglnnn to
R. A. Moore, aame, $82.
G. E. JameatoT. A. Eubanka,
66 6-10 acres John Bird, $740.
J. F. Lyoo, et ux., to Robert
McCoy, 50 seres Jacob Long,
$40$.
J. F. Lyon et ui., to Som
Roberta, 74 aerea Jacob Long,
$59$.
C Taylor, et ux., to Jud Hen-
demon, lot in Lyona, $135.
The season's first cold
may be slight—may yield
to early treatment, but the
next cold will hang on
longer; it will be more
troublesome, too. U n -
necessary to take chances
on that second one. Scott's
Emulsion is a preventive
as well as a cure. Take
turn cin em
Ml i tpflLStfp
when colds abound and
you'll have no cold. Take it
when the cold is contracted
and it checks inflamma-
tion, heals the membranes
of the throat and lungs
drives the cold out.
Señé far free tsmph.
MPT ft StWNE, Cheafcts
4M-44S Peart Itrwt, Raw fork
Mdfl.eo - • • All ireggMa
R. A. Collier, et al.. to T. L.
Pbegley, 150 7-8 acres Hays Cov-
ington, $1380.
J. C. Barnett et ux., to Tbos.
Woodford, 29yt acres O. Perry,
$295.
Gilbert B.Shaw toO. R.Mason,
2 lota in Cbriesman, $6(>.67.
G. C. & S. F. Ry. Co., to O.
R. Mason, lot in Chriesman,
$33.33.
E. C. Aldridge, et al., to A.
T. Kennedy, 1200 aerea John
Teal, $6300 and other property.
A. G. Kennedy to W. F.
Spiller, 1200 ncrea John Teal,
$13,500.
Frank Mareab to Joe Kadanka,
152 aerea A. Underwood. $1400.
Blocker A Murray to Clarence
Tbomaa, 50 aerea J. P. Cole, $250.
P. M. Bird, et ux., to G. E.
James, 66 6-10 aerea John Bird,
$666.
F. Cordea to J. F. Frieda, 1
acre S. M. Williama, $250.
Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
ound at Gramm's <• bottle* for
00. 21-2t
The$5.00Graphophones are at
Gramm's drug store.
Letter te t. f. Mueller.
Caldwell, Texas.
Dear Sir: You know diamond* don't
go by «ice. So with paint.
We make paint, one gallon of which
goes aa far as two of another and
last* twice as long: that's four to one.
You know it ix true in diamonds,
they don't go by the gallon do they?
If you're going to paint your house,
you go first to ;our painter and say:
"I'm going to paint: do you want the
job? and what will it cost?"
If he happens to know, he'll say.
"Depends on the paint. I can do it for
somewhere about f 10ft or $200, which-
evei you like; $100 will make a good
job: ¿200 a poor one."
And you, if you happen to have your
wits, 'II say: "I'll take the good one,
when'll you do it?"
Painters ought, all, to know about
paint; and jewelers ought to be able
to get a good job. We do all we can
to help both.
One gallon Devoe ia better than two
of average paint, goes aa far that is,
{our house will take about 20 gallona
levoeand SO of average paint—and
Devoe will wear a long time; the life
of the average paint is very uncertain,
it may be a year, it may be five.
Why is it that painters don't know
about paint? Do jewelers know about
diamonds? They kuow more than
thtjr tell sometimes. There are paint,
•rs and painters; so there are jewelers;
so there is paint, and the least-gallons
paint is Devoe.
Yours truly,
7 P. W. Dkvsk * Co.
P. S. Btone A Hitchcock sell our psint
Everywhere thwro is a likinjr f« r
Ameritan*. which is Hatterm# to
aur national vainly. We mnki- due
tllottaucutt for the fact that thine
people, whether African or tatin or
mixed, art1 approbative and like to
My pleaaant things that thev, | er-
haps, put a higher estimate ou cour-
tesy than on truthfulness. But still
it ia significant that from all quar-
ters and many sources we Hud the
•v¡deuces that the American is dis-
tinctly popular with the common
people. How he is regarded by the
high horn I have no means of as-
certaining. Everywhere American
nionev is taken ami generally it is
preferred to any other. Only at Mar-
tinique did the hack drivers tpjes-
inn about American money, ami
hen apparently only because thev
li.l not know how to compute it*
/a I tie.
At St. Thomns one of our party
naked a little girl in the street who
ottered for sale an article if she
would like AiiK-rican money. "Amer-
ican money!" she replied. "It's the
lies! money then is." I asked iiiv
driver whom he IiIm- I besl to wov'
for the Spanish, tli Ki:¡;li*li, the
Creole (that i>. the native of for-
eign ancestry) or tin- Ameritan.
"The American," he replied.
"Why?" "|i"ii;n- t'n \ ;ir<- 1 .>•
free. : wilh tln'ir money, mil thev
have tli«' mo>t humor." Itv humor
"ie meant I iin'ure -the Vincr-
iinn would Inlk and jo! '' with him
! as with an equal.
At Kin;.'-ton I fell into coiner<a-
; tion with a sierro laic-r<t on the
he asked me to
i iiioue for a dime
and a nickel which he had. Quar-
ter* and all ahove that vver< taken,
he explained, ,ii par, bw l<*-< than
quarters wr ala • ' -rount. I
asked him the same question, which
people he liked liest. " I lie Amer-
icans." "Why!'" "Win ? A single
American gunltont will spend more
money than a whole French fleet."
Evidently his illustration was taken
from a recent e\j* rieiun>. "What
is your ambition?" asked one of our i
companions of hi- negro driver. t
"To ¡¿et money enough to go to the
elates to live." "Why so?" "Be-
cause the chances there are e<> much
better for a man." Dr. Lyman
Abbott, in The Outlook.
•d'ldoek. Presenil
give hint Kliglir
Hot-Air Reminiscences Apropos of s
Heavy Rainstorm In New York.
A Texan, a man from northern
I W isconsin and a native New Yorker
j stood looking out of the front door*
way of a Times Square hotel yester-
day afternoon in the rain.
"It gets «lark in New York in s
summer rain, doesn't it ?" olwerved
the New Yorker to the others when
the storm was at its height and thu
skies were black. "I wonder—"
"Huh." interrupted the Tesan,
disdainfully, "that's notion'. Whv,
compared with a Texan skv in a lint
w eat her storm this New York dark-
iless, my dear sir, is as the aurora
liorcalis to judgment day. Why,
down in Texas when we hav«> a storm
in summer it gets so dark the chick-
ens go to roost at nine o'clock in the
morning. The hens lay two eggs,
against the regular schedule of ono
! per d ly, at times like that, Itccausc
| they get two naps in '¿4 hours. The
; clouds arc so close you can reach out
; and grab 'em. Say, you don't know
¡Texas, do you?" continued the
southern man. growing enthusiastic.
"W hy, down in my country tlfi- hogs
are so fat we have to put them on
¡•oiler skates lierause thev can't move
otherwise. The eagles down there
are red, white and blue, an' •"
"Pshaw, that's nothing," inter-
¡e led the man from Wiscoiisiu.
"You lalk about nature's phenom-
,1.1. Yon have to ¡¿o to Wiscon* :i
i i see thai sort o' thing. Take the
ni"" |tuti> crop up around I he lake*
where the lily pads thrive. Whv. tile
j malarial bird is so thick up there
that you can go out into the wood*
| 1 i.v moonlight, ni^ht and you'll
-wear there never was a iuohm.
¡Suuil' n paddle ami it sound* a- if
1 vou'd hit a side of beef with a b-fse-
j '.ill but. ^ladi a bow '• !>i!
; tlic- Ui.rh tIn- air and it'll drip with
; .... I
"t ome on, men." interrupted the
\'t u Yorker, with a \,i\> . " >■ e
_something lictter'n that riuht
ii the house here, an' its prim ipal
ingredients ain't hot .nr. either.
'I'ilev Olllv cost three f.>r lo ullts,
straight or high, in' I'll Inn "
They adjourn d \ Y. Tunes.
WORM or PRAISE
v if
Mr. J. H. Kskfw, Chandler,
Okla., writes: "Lei me tliank
yon for whst your wonderful
curative medicino, Poruña, lisa
done for me. 1 had suffered
from catarrh for ten years be-
fore I took your medicine."
0>
M
HALF
ACTM
size.
A bargain in a new iron safe.
See it at the Nt:\vs C'iikonk i i
office and in<juire of B. F. Jack-
son tor price*. 14-tf
M is< ,\!.irle l*of: "1, fino ('ll v, M l)it .
writ« ; "I lind cat:«rrh of tin tlif nl
f >r nearly tl •• niul lim«
b-eti u-im : Hit- i-iit litad "f medi-
ría'-. wiiU'b ii me ie. : • <1. V
frnt:| ml \ i - * i rue in tali' I'rnici.
«In '.i I did, Ain' niter inhi> j two
t >' 11U . I I e.'tlllHit
liii> iintcli In it. m l o."
Hon S.\ti Medium nized iron
•safe, good as new. Call on B.
H. J «ckson, or «re tt'c *afe at
the Ni vvs-CiiKONitt.i office. 14-tf
Bills of Sale, Notes, Legal
Blank of all kinds, Blotters,
Carbon Paper, etc.. at
Join kh Pkin riNO Co.
Sub«crlhf for th«- Nkws-Ciiiiiimci r
HP
or boy, man or woman, is quickly out
of pain if Bucklen's Arnica Baive
is applied promptly. G. J. Welch, of
Tekonsha, Mich, says: "I use it in my
family for cuts, sores, and all akin ill-
juries, and find it perfect." Quickest
pilccurc known. Best healing salve
made. 25catChas.Gramm'sdrugstore.
Get s membership card in tbe
News-Chronicle Librsry and
have st your dispossl 250 booka
st 10c esch for rents).
County Clerk McCowen has
issued tbe following rasrriage
licenses since Isst report:
Nick Fain snd Miss Annie
Grant.
Gsbe Clsy snd Mrs. Emms
Cooper.
L. K. Cbriesman snd Mrs.
Sesly Moore.
Inrawsta sf latter end icreme AHeyed.
The intense itching characteristic
of ecsema, tetter and like akindiaeases
instantly allayed by applying Cham-
berlain's Halve and many severe cases
have lieen permanently cured by ita
uae, For sale by Atone A Hitchcock
and Chas. Gramm.
Subscribe for the News-Chbomcix.
Trsakls s^4 Ism fuuat u
I I ®ww^^We W®
■•w V* rial o«(.
Fill s bottle or common gluss with youi
water and let it stand twenty-four hours;
s sediment or set-
tling i nd i estes su
unhealthy con-
dition of the kid-
neys ; if it sUini
your linen it is
evidence of kid-
ney trouble; too
frequent desire
to pass it or pain
in the iMtca is
alao convincing proof that the kidneys
and bladder are out of order.
Wkat To Do.
There is comfort in the knowledge so
often expressed, that I)r. Kilmer's
Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy,
fulfills every wish in curing rheumatism,
pain in the back, kidaeys, liver, bladder
and every part of the urinary passage.
It corrects inability to hold water
and scalding pain in passing it, or bad
effecta following use of liquor, wine or
and overcomes that unpleasant ne*
ity of being compelled to go often
dnring the day, and to «el up many
times durinif the night. The mild and
the extraordinary elfect of 3wS>W"IISSt
is soon realised. It atands the higheat
for ita wonderful cures of the most dia-
treusing cases. If you need a medicina
you should have the beat. Sold by drug-
gists in fifty-cent ami one-dollar alses.
You may have a sample bottle and a
liook that tells all
atxmt it, both sent free |
by mail. Address Dr.
Kilmer A Co., Bing-
hamton, N. V. When
writing mention this paper and don't
make any mistake, but remember the
name, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and
the addreaa, Bingham ton, N. Y.
Bigger
and
Better
AT
DALLAS
OCT. 15 TO 2S-06
Every Day
Is a special day for
which the Santa Fe will
sell round trip tickets at
greatly reduced rates.
Round trip rate from
Caldwell, $6.55 limited to
Oct. 28.
W. S. KEENAN, G. P. A.,
Galveston, Teaas.
SAN ANTONIO
FAIR
NT.SMteR9V.IM
IKS.
as
mttii
wr Falla
to
MVfe
Subscribe fur the Nrwa-C'iiaoNicnc.
SOMETHING
TO READ
....You can always find something you have
not read and something worth reading at
the Library. New tx>oks will be received
every month, and the new fiction kept up
with. V The standard authors will be added
and you will have more books at your dis-
posal each month, as every dollar earned by
the Library will be put into books.
RENTAL RATES:
Ose to Seven Days
Eight to Fourteen Days
Fifteen to Twenty-one Days. ......
Get a membership card for $1.00 good for
12 months, which will entitle you to half rates
.20c
. 4t)c
60c
New books now in and fifty more in transit.
GET A CARD NOW.
News - Chronicle
Library.
What You Warn
Each Week ....
THE NEWS-CHRONICLE £
TO KE£P POSTED ON ALL THE LATE NEWS
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Joiner, R. Lee. Caldwell News-Chronicle. (Caldwell, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, October 19, 1906, newspaper, October 19, 1906; Caldwell, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth169616/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Harrie P. Woodson Memorial Library.