The Sulphur Springs Gazette. (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, February 16, 1912 Page: 10 of 10
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TEE SULPHUR SPRINGS GAZETTE, FEBRUARY 16, 1912
88
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PALACE OF 5WEETS
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I have opened a place on Connally Street, where
I will always have
»
Fruits, Nuts, Candies, Cigars, Cakes, Bread
and Cold Drinks
I ask all my friends to pay me a call
the sweilest place in town
PALACE OF
HORACE OLOVER
SWEETS
THE OLD LEATHER SLIPPER.
“How dear to my heart are the ecenes
•/ of my childhood,
When fond recollection present them
jft^ to- view. ........ -
The orchard, the meadow, the deep
BE0&" tangled woodland,
every . lowed >pot which my
m*'.
ip-.-.
K
m
So sang the old poet In heart-touching
measure.
Yet hinted he not at that dreadful af-
' fair .
That often lent pain to our Innocent
pleasure,
The old leather slipper our ma used to
wear.
When tired of confinement in school-
room’s dull shadow
hookey and scamper
i ■
To toe ol’ swlmmin’ hole in the brook
in the meadow.
And sport in the 'waters like beavers
all blistered would
catch her attention.
She’d note the damp tangles and
■torts in
1M tkaa In a
most painful to
iifv i*
We’d feed that old sUpper our ma used
’. -to wear! --
We yet can remember the old wOoden
' cupboard
Where ma hid the pie tor the preach-
er to eat^Yp •
And when toe would go there Uke Old
Mother Hubbard,
No pie would her look of astonishment
call us before her, accuse us of
f course we’d deny it with innocent
n lying prone on her knee
be feeding *
leather slipper our ma used
> wear. ,:n
—. years have.^-.
of our childhood,
m.
to view,
the deep
m
mil
tangled wildwood, .
And e’en the sore spota that our in-
fancy knew.
That mother now lies where the
church bell is ringing
And oft we think of her time-whitened
jjjifei hair; ’v) ,.
We’d give all we own were toe here
while we’re staging
About the old slipper she once used to
-/j* <
The old leather slipper, the heavy-sol-
^^di'slipper,
The base burning slipper our ma used
to wear.
——Selected*
m-
-
Eg:
The family that keeps* on hand
and uses occasionally the celebrated
Prickly Ato Bitters Is always a well-
regulated family. Askew A Buford
special agents.
l.W%
m
FEW WILL DECREASE.
Judging from statements secured
from over one hundred farmers in La-
mar county during the papt two weeks
too cotton acnmge of Lamar county
will be decreased next year but very
little, if any.
Night out of every ten men ques-
tioned about the cutting down of the
cotton acreage claim that the other
fellow is not going to abide by the
advice of the governor’s congress as
to the decrease in acreage and why
should the others. Some claim also,
that many farmers are going to cut
their acreage, and they believe the
price wll be good next fall and they
are going to plant bl^ acreage in order
to further their own financial inter-
ests.
The river country will not be cut
one acre out of every hundred. But
few of the heavy land owners south of
Paris will observe the advice handed
out by Governor Colquitt and Editor
Ouflley of the Ft. Worth Record, and
if the season ig a good one next fall
will find the usual amount of cotton to
be marketed * Lamar county.
Provided the winter and spring sea-
sons are favorable, more land will be
put in cultivation next year than'was
the past year. It is believed that labor
will be more plentiful and the tenants
can cultivate more acreage.—Paris
Advocate.
1
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^ STRONG ^
VIGOROUS AND CHEERFUL
A
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■tool
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PRICKLY
ASH BITTERS
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BUFORD
IN DEFEN8E OF WOMAN.
Women are constantly accused of
gossiping and they certainly deserve
the name not half so much as men.
The Enterprise is glad toTcopy the
following editorial irotn the Graham
Leader and the gallant defens© of wo-
man which emanated from the clean,
manly mind and able pen of Joe Tay-
lor, of the Strte Press Column in the
Dallas News:
Graham Leader: Men will sneer at
women as gossips and scandal mon-
gers, while the fact is that the great
majority of our own sex take as much
pleasure in gossip and scandal to any
woman living. We will not admit it
—possibly wo are blind to our own
faults—but nevertheless the man who
haB something to relate to the detri-
men of his neighbor will never want
for an audience of the very kind of
men who are so ready to rail at gos-
sip. < .
And don’t you never doubt it. For
a fact nine-t> nths of the scandalous
gossip in every neighborhood starts
with the men. Women may retail it
with considerable relish, for .in truth
they are a great success as common
carriers. But they don’t start It. The
men start it, for it is among men that
mean, things are first whispered.
There are some men who are so erratic
in their temperment that their minds
thrive oh sub rosa confidences and
their close conversations riot in topics
which are taboo in mixed company.
This Is peculiarly discreditable to men
for man has so much that is different
and better to talk about. Women are
more restricted in subject matters of
conversation. They cannot talk politics
they cannot talk baseball or poker or
fish or big game stories. They are
limited to books and house work and
children and servants and htlsbands
__<
aware, Okla., an oil town near Nowata, #
were murdered last night and the
house set on fire.
All three of the bodies were fright-
fully burned. Wounds on the head in-
dicated that they had been killed be-
fore the house was set on fire.
An inquest held today on the bodies
of Hurst and his wife and Elsie Adams
tlie girl, revealed the fact that both
Mrs. Hurst and the girl were expecting
the stork. This fact may ultimately
lead to the arrest of a young man who
is known to have kept company with
Miss Adams, although the coroner’s
jury failed to fix the guilt of any per-
son.
The investigation has revealed that
the only wounds on the three bodies
were in the top of the head, apparently
made with a hatchet qfr pick. It is
also stated that a man was seen run
ning from the house at 11 o’clock at
right, some hours before the fire was
discovered.
L08T MULES.
\ ■ / v • *
Lost, two black mules about four
years old; no mark or brands; one
had little white on nose and white
place in flank. Both mules-wore new
halters, with about twenty feet of rope
attached. Last seen at Beckham Fri-
day night, Feb. 9th. 4
Will pay for information leading to
recovery of mules. J. A. BECKHAM,
. Beckham, Texas.
tui
THE “SATISFIED” MAN.
A humorest offers to give 1100.00
to any man who is so contented that
he doesn’t want anything. Of course,
no applicant could get the $100, for
his application would show discon-
tent. Another humorest once offered
a Southern farm to anybody who was
Deaf less Cannot be Cored
f fo , -Kg.1.* « : VC l\ ’ ! 'Jj ■
by local applications, as they cannot roach the dis-
eased portion of the ear. There is only one Way to
eon deafness, and that la by constitutional remedies.
Deafness is caused by an interned condition of the
maeons lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this
tube Is Inflamed you have a rambling sound or Im-
perfect hearing, and when It Is entirely closed, deaf-,
ness is the result, and unless the Inflamation can be
taken out and this tuba restored to Its normal con-
dition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases
out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which Is nothing
bnt an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars tor any case of
Doafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot bo cored
by Hall’s Catarrh Cura. Send fqpdmlan free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO, Toledo. O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c. , *i
Take Hall's Famfly Pills for constipation.
A MURDEROUS MONKEY.
Peasants living near the valley of
the Nesles are at present in a state of
terror concerning a monkey which es-
caped from menagerie some miles
away.
The animal has been at liberty for
several months and everyone talks in
|nad of toe animal’s ferocious ex-
ploits. It is credited with the murder
of two women( stealing various arti-
cles and eating children alive. Innu-
merable battles have been made in
the hopb of capturing the monkey, but
so far it has succeeded in eluding all
pursuers.—Letter to London Daily
Mail. "
You are probably aware that pneu-
monia always results from a
cold, but you never heard of a cold re-
sulting in* pneumonia when Chamber-
lain’s Cough Remedy was used. Why
take the risk wfeeg this remedy may
be had for a trifle? For sale by All
Good Dealers.
$100 W GOLD
WILL BE PAID BY THE
Meridian Fertilizer Factory
To Texas .farmers who obtain the largest yield of
cotton and the largest yield of corn from one acre.
$50.00 fpr best acre of Cotton
$50.00 for best acre of Corn.
The only condition is that the crops must be
grown with
• e (.
Meridian Fertilizers
“The Kind that Everybody Knows*'
If your dealer cannot supply these well known
\ brands write us and we will tell you
how to get them.
Fertilizer Factory
Shreveport, La.
HE WA8 WELL NAMED.
“What’s that you call your mule?"
“I call him corporation,” answered
the old colored man.
“How did you come to give him
such a name?
“F’um stndyln’ de animal aif read-
in’ de pa pahs. Dat 'mule gets more
blame an’ ’abuse dan anyt’ing else in
de township, an’ goes ahead having
his own ways jee' de same.”—Surburb-
an Life. {' j\\
for general topics, which topics they
share with men. Women would be
more justified in loose talk than men
are for the reason that they have less
to talk about, bat it is to their credit
and glory that about all the scandal
they disseminate cornea to them sec-
ond-hand if they are married, and 3rd
hand if not married.—State Press in
Dallas News.
’satisfied.’’ On applying for the gift
the man would be asked why, if he
was. satisfied, he did not stay at home
instead of coming South for the farm?
—The Outlook.
ZEMO MAKES ASTONISHING
E6ZEMA CURES
NOTICE TO CREDITOR*
The State of Texas. County of Hop-
kins.
To the creditors of E. F. Dillon:
You are hereby notified that J3L F.
Dillon, of the County of FrankUn-snd
State of Texas, on the 20th uay of Jan-
uary A. D. 1912, executed a deed of as-
signment, conveying to the undersign-
ed all of his property for the benefit of
such of his creditors as will consent to
accept their proportional share of bis
estate and discharge him from their
respective claims, and that the under-
signed accepted said trust, and has
duly qualified as required by law*
All creditors consenting to said as-
signment must, within four months
after the publication of this notice,
make known to the assignee their con-
sent in writing, and within six months
from the date »f this notice file their
claim, prescribed by law, with the un-
dersigned, who resides at Sulphur
Springs, Texas, which is also his post-
office address.
Witness my hand this the 23rd day
of January, A. D., 1313.
W. E. McGILL.
J.
TRIPLE MURDER.
Oklahoma City, Okla., Feb. 8.—
Harvey Burst and his wife and Miss
lists Adams, sixteen years old, who
Uved with them at their home in Del-
“WE PROVE IT.”
Every day ZEMO gives relief and
cures men, women and children in ev-
ery city and town in America whose
skins are on fire with torturing EC-
ZEMA rashes, and other itching, burn-
ing, scaly and crusted skin and scalp
humors.
ZEMO and ZEMO (ANTISEPTIC)
SOAP, two refiined preparations will
give you such quick relief that you
will feel uke a new person.
» ■
We give you three reasons why we
recommend and ^indorse ZEMO and
ZEMO SOAP for all skin and scalp
eruptions.
1st. They are clean, scientific prep-
arations that give universal satisfac-
tion and are pleasant and agreeable
to use at all times.
2nd. They are not experiments, but
are proven cure sfor every form of
•kin and scalp affections whether on
Infants or grown persons.
3rd. They work on a new principle.
They do not glaze over the surface,
but they penetrate to the seat of the
trouble and draw toe germ life form
underneath toe skin and destroy 1L
In this way a complete cure is effect-
ed in my cum of SKIN OR SCALP
ERUPTION. )
Endorsed and sold In Sulphur
Springs by Walker’* Drug Store. • ’
.:-C-vv- V*.
Ef&w? V
£RM€LE
ijfa <Iavftr
Ulo OdTGI
In a letter from Branch*
land, W- Va., Mrs. Eliza-
beth Chapman says: *T
suffered from womanly
troubles nearly five years.
All the doctors in the coun-
ty did me ilo good. 1 took
Cardui, and now I am en-
tirely well I feel like a
new woman. Cardui saved
my life! An who suffer
from womanly trouble
should give Cardui a trial.”
PREPARE YE -FOR THE KINGDOM.
Luke iii, 1-17—Feb. 18.
“Repent ye, for the Kingdom of Heaven U at
hand.’’—Matthew Hi, t.
^/OHN THE BAPTIST was the
m last of the Prophets and Jesus
M declared that none of them was
^ his superior—“There hath not
arisen a greater Prophet than John the
Baptist—and yet I say unto you that
the least in the Kingdom of Heaven is
greater than he.’’ (Matthew xi, 11.)
Every member of the Kingdom of
Heaven class must be higher than John
because begotten of the Holy Spirit.
They are reckoned as members of the
House of Sons, while the Prophets be-
long to the preceding House of Serv-
ants.—Hebrews iii, 5, 6.
God proposed before the foundation
of the world that •' ' ; -! ■
He would redeem
man and would es-
tablish His King-
dom for their res-
toration. The Re-
deemer of the
world was to be
the King by whose
reign of a thou-
sand years the
work of Satan
would be undone; “The voice of one cry-
the head of the in tfie vilder-
Serpent would be «««•”
crushed and humanity would be up-
lifted out of sin and death and be
brought back to the condition in which
Adam was at first.
Necessarily to the Jew Firct.
Although God had not mentioned this
elect class which He purposed should
be members of the Messiah, His Bride,
nevertheless God determined that the
opportunity to become members of this
elect, special class should first of all go
to Abraham’s natural seed. For the
three and a half years of Jesus’ minis-
try, and for a further three and a half
years after Eds death, the privilege of
becoming His Bride and joint-heir was
limited to Israel after the flesh.
Later, it was sent on equal terms also
to the Gentiles. Saint Paul tells us
that it was necessary that toe Gospel
Message should go first to the Jews be-
cause this was the Divine arrangement
Bat be adds, “Israel hath not obtained
that which he seeketh for”—the best of
God’s gifts, the privilege of becoming
■ -
8 61
4®
-- :’:4
members of the spiritual Israel—“but
the election hath obtained It and the
rest were blinded.” (Romans xi, ?•)
The blindness is not to be forever, bnt
merely until the completion of the
elect spiritual class—then the blind-
ness is to pass away and Israel Is to be
saved or recovered to the Divine favor
lost eighteen centuries ago (See Ro-
mans xi, 25-83)., ,
As Jesus declared, “My Kingdom is
not of ihls world (Age),” and as He
did not establish His Kingdom at His
first advent bat merely began the work
of calling the “elect” so the work of
John the Baptist was-merely to the
Jew and proportionately only was he
the antitype of Elijah. A larger anti-
type of Jesns, and of Elijah and John
as forerunners, w4 may now see.
Jesus in the flesh, and ail His faithful
members in the flesh for eighteen cen-
turies, have constituted toe antitype of
John the Baptist The King whose
Kingdom they announce will be com-
posed of Jesus and His glorified
Bride, beyond toe veil. These soon
shall take toe Kingdom mndxrelgn glo-
riously as Abraham’s Seed for the
blessing of all the families of toe
earth. 1 v
The Church baa cried “in the wilder-
ness” in the sense
that she has been
alienated and sep-
arated from the
1 world. She baa
called upon all who
would hear to pre-
pare for Messiah’s
Kingdom. She has
told more fully
than did John the
Baptist of the ef-
“Wko warned you to feet of Messiah’s
flee from the wrath Kingdom—the lev-
ta earner* eUng Up of the
valleys, the lifting up of the poor, the
straightening out of the crooked filings,
that, thus all flesh might see, appreci-
ate, understand, experience the salva-
tion of God. Both John and the Church
declare that this salvation is to be
brought' through Jesus and His glori-
fied Bride in Kingdom power. The
point we are making is that while John
the Baptist was an antitype of Elijah
and was forerunner or herald of Jesus,
so, only more particularly, the Church
in the flesh 1s s higher antitype of Eli-
jah, and still more particularly a herald
of the Messianic Kingdom.
Jesus did a harvesting work for the
Jewish nation only. He gathered their
wheat into the garner of the Gospel
Age by begetting them of the Holy
Spirit at Pentecost and onward; and
He “burned up” the nation in a time of
trouble with which their Age ended, in
A D. 70. But now for the larger ful-
filment—^worm-wide. In the end of this
Age, all the “wheat” class are to be
gathered into the heavenly garner by
the change of the First Resurrection,
sad in thf time of trouble coining all
•then will be cut off from all associa-
tion with the Church and from all ep
portrait? of membership in it—es taros
they will be burned—reduced to the
level of toe masses of enankind. But
flunk God! at that time will begin the
work of Meeting the masses of man
kind all toe laaalHee of the earth—by
1!
The Woman’s Tcpju^
m 50 yeart of proof hnfj
■ convinced those who tested
I it, that Cardui quickly f©*-i
■ lieves aches and pains doe !
I to womanly weakness, and'
helps nature to build up
I weak women to heaitoaqd
I strength. Thousands of
I women have found Cardui
to be a real life saver.
I Why not test it for your;
■ case? Take Cardui today! •
V*
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M$fl
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PAYS $110,000 FOR 60 ACRE GROVE.
Riverside, CaL,
velopment Co.,
sold James Applegate the
jpi
trees. Thi price was IU0.006.
Applegate is an Eastern
deal -was the biggest in
circles for the winter. Mf. Ap
will erect a mansion on his
' ;-!—. iiir
When the breath is foul and i
petite disordered, Prickly
is the remedy needed. It
stomach, liver and bowels,
the breath, promotes vigor and
futoess. Askew A Buford,
agents.
alSif
and' cause y&ar to.
ii
in Nbw York the
asked: “What is the
cess?” He replied;
ret about it. It is the
in the world—just to db \
to do and do it right aws^I
as -you possibly can. What
good of a motto? Just rush
attack the breastworks.”
just rush out and attack tofg
works—do whatever you. have
as well as you possibly can.
m*w memo-amt. .....
■■
Point Chronicle.
E. R. TBMflj _
PHYSICIAN AND SUMG0H
-'ri
OTflCE EVER STIRUM ft SOME I
W. W. LOOT
Geseral Practice
%#
> j.
m
W. C. STIRLING
SURlING t STIRLING,
PHYSICIANS ANO
‘ e-'V;..
Southland Business College
SULPHUR SPRINGS, TR!)CAl)|i®i^
A commercial school
order. Shortest flfll
hand yet published, t
ble. Enter any time.
if n if ATJTjq
: Mm C. Bnlvlb? . <
Physician and Surgeon
FWHdnlisuk 414
Phot* 302
H. C. CONNOR C.O.,
connor & suaa^-^m
Attorneys it Low - 41^31
Office:
ttUWI,%|;.: ROYS. I
DUS. LONGINO i
Genera! Prhoftlfj
ie .«taa
■Am
illilPB
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Fanning, R. W. The Sulphur Springs Gazette. (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, February 16, 1912, newspaper, February 16, 1912; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth816296/m1/10/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.