The Panola Watchman. (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 23, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 9, 1904 Page: 3 of 8
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'“If mf countrymen should, oall
me to take up tide work, I will,
God helping mo, use rrwyfaetl*
ty of my mind and will employ
•wry power that legally and
constitutionally inheres to that
great office to accomplish the
most beneficent result “
CIALSALE
Upon this issue Judge Parker
mount question before the Amer-
ican people is, oan they afford to
allow him to be beaten?
Discover
Cure* Winter Cough,.
J, E. Grover, ICi N. Main Street,
Ottawa. Kau.. writes: ‘‘Every fail It
has beeu my wife's trouble to eatch
a severe cold, and therefore to cough
all winter long. Last fall i got for
her a bottle of Horetound Syrup.
Sbo umnl it and baa been able to
sleep soundly ail night long. When-
ever the oough troubles her, two or
three doees stops the cough, sud she
ia able to be up and well, 25c, 50o
and S1.00.
Sold by O. E Jones.
- ■■■•/■ -' •• • .»■*• !i*
V- „ .
TbSIwSsb^..
Ss33bS
WKmm.
Aft
m,
iy Wa-
wrilsa:
at ttir-
much
Snow
pains,
earth.”
ones,
d pig
NEY’S.
sciatic
: influ-
liment.
I bone
blood,
iveyed
effect
Do, fi.
ones.
Woot-
ill get
its are
which
a using
■ using
I had
it was
lils it’s
rill bit
ig oil
D. T.
Rust
BON.
ds.
Cheat-
ire been
omptly
ase of
remedy
irtainly
ey are
pleas-
dt,
Tex.
prices
e end
0N8.
i, Ind..
kidney
yean,
y with-
d Pine
id kirn,
isnons
•ladder
ineules
ones.
1
ig will
Tha
>r this
to fill
< I
f Ced.
JMNUI
4
V
!
_
In order to keep things
moving Along At a livelv
—..............S.--,.!
gait, we have decided to
offer the people of Panola
county a choice new line
of Millinery at absolute
COST from now until
Christmas.
a
0
1 .
VSv
Butler & Bowman
” * *
LA WATCHMAN
iser. uittwiu.
Entered at the post-office in Carthage
Texas, aa second-class mail matter.
te Roosevelt.
In his reply to Roosevelt’s now
famous letter. Judge Parker says
among other things:
“Many years have passed since
my active participation in pqji-
tics. In the meantime a startling
change has taken place in the
methods of conducting cam-
paigns, a change not for the bet-
ter, but for the worse, a change
that haa introduced debasing and
corrupt method! whioh threaten
the integrity of our Government,
leaving it perhaps a republic in
form, but not a republic in sub-
stance; no longer a Government
of the people, by the people, for
the people, but a Government
whose officers are practically
chosen by a handful of corpora-
tion managers, who levy upon
the assets of the stockholders
Cream Vermifuge
m muimhii
WORM
•T. Li
they represent such sums
money as they deem requisite to
place the oonduot of the Govern-
ment in such hands as they con-
sider best for their private inter-
ests.
“Political contributions by cor-
porations and trusts means cor-
ruption. They cannot be honest.
Merely business interests are
moved by merely business con-
siderations. A corporation which
subscribes to a political party
only because the corporation ex-
pects that party, through its con-
trol of public offices—executive
or legislative—to do something
for the benefit of the corporations
or to refrain from doing some-
thing to its injury. No motive
can be imagined.
“Let the defenders of ths prac-
tice, if it has defenders, answer
these questions:
“Why do corporations and
trusts subscribe to political cam-
paigns?
“What must a trust think of a
party, which, after accepting
from the trust a campaign con-
tribution of $200,000, should per-
mit the party’s representatives in
offioe to take action inimical to
the trusts?
Would the public interests be
safe in the hands of a party, ths
greater part of whose campaign
funds has been contributed by
corporations and trusts?
“When such forces unite to
furnish the money which, they
are promised controls the elec-
tion, their purpose is clear as
noonday. It is to buy protection;
to purchase four years more of
profit by tariff taxation, and four
years more of extortion from the
public by means of monopoly.
“Graat as are ths problems
Stockmen's Excursiea to Denver.
Onaocountof the Anntial Con-
vention of the National Live
8tock Association and National
Wool Growers’ Association to be
held at Denver, Colorado, begin-
ning January 10, 190ft, the Fort
Worth A Denver City Railway
Company (“The Denver Road”)
announces a rate of one fare
plus $2 for the round trip, appli-
cable from all points in Texas.
Tickets will be sold January 7, 8,
and 9, will be good for return
until January 31, and holders
will be allowed stop-over privile-
ges on the*going trip at and
North of Pucio within final limit.
As many matters of vast im-
portance to live-stock interests
are to receive attention in these
conventions, an unusually large
attendance is expected from all
seotions and it goes without say-
ing that Texas will, in all re-
spects, be well represented.
Those interested who may de-
sire further information regard-
ing transportation arrangements
or wish to reserve sleeping oar
accommodation, etc, in advanoe,
should address
A. A. Glisson, G. P. A.,
Ft. Worth, Texas
That awful griuding, stabbing
pain in the Iwck is from the kidneys.
A dose of Pineules will cure it over
night. Pineules is a new discovery
put up in » new way. A delightful
remedy and specific foi all kiduey
ifnU ility and symptoms of iadi-
festioa, sad thus the psnoa is aawd from
(hoar av (upturns uI fever. ni|rbl *wral*.
headache, r%r., which ate so common. A
tonic made tip largely of alcohol will
shrink the '-orpascles of the blood and
make them weaker for resistance.
•This is to certify that I haw used Doctor
Pierce', Ootdea Medical Discovery, thiak M‘«
the grandest medicine la the world.-write# Mrs.
V. m. Young, of Weir. W Va. "1 had dyspepsia
la ha worst fc.w I decided to try your amd.
Mae I aeed ‘va bottles, aad sow I am doing
my own house rath. A number of my friends
alee are uaiag Dr. Pierce's atediciae aad they
recommend H highly. May God Mam you iu
your graud work>
Dr. Here* ' rlieves that a tonic amde with
alcohol will asiiak the red blood corpnaclee
and make the system weak for re el stand;
that ia why b<* avoided the aae of any alco-
hol nr narcotic* in hia* Medical Discovery, •
which contains the pare eatraet from roots
aad herbs wiiboat a particle of alcohol
Accept no substitute for "Golden Medical
Discovery " Thera is authing "Just k.
good" for dvapepsia or debility.
Bilionmess is eared by the aae of Dr.
Pie ice's Pleasant Pella ta.
.Solti by O. K. Jon**
To Core a Cold in One Day
NewYork, Oct. 29.—The widow
of General .lamen Longstreeet,
who hoe judt been appointed
poetmietreea at Gaineeviile, Ga.,
has written a hook, “Lee and
Longetreot at High Tide," whioh
hae been the subject of criticism
in southern circles in New York.
The first cause of criticism is that
Mrs. Lnngstreet has gone to a
northern soldier, Gonerul Daniel
K. Sickles, to write the introduc-
tion of tho book*. The subject
matter of the work itself, how-
ever, gives cause for much com-
ment. Mrs. Longstreet makes
no apologies for her distinguished
husband. In defending him she
is careless of whose toes she
treads on and gives proof to dis-
prove the many adverse charges
made against Lee’s famous lieu-
tenant after he became a repub-
lican. It is this which has arous-
ed the southern colony.
Trials of Winter.
Do not permit yourself to lie a vie
tim to a coif4 or cough. They lead
to pneumonia, conaumption and elne
where. Be wise; use Simmon’a Cough
Syrup. It curen cough*, brain lunga
and will keep you riirht here to enjoy
the beeuties of spring
Startling f acts.
Every young person should
know that the average wages
paid for unskilled labor in tide
country is loss than $300 a year;
the average paid to skilled labor
is about $1000—a difference of
$700 a year.
If the skilled laborer works 30
years at the same rate, this
makes $21,000 more he will earn
than the unskilled laborer. But
suppose the skilled laborer puts
out his $700 superior earnings
eaoh year at 6 per cent com-
pound interest, this would amount
to $63,947.70 at the end of the 30
years.
It seems like a fairy tale, too
good to be true; but a total in-
! vestment of $135 and five months
i time in a business and shorthand
course in Tyler Commercial Col
before ua in the near future, pol- {tciactany toadeocy toward pucumo Tyler, Texas, prepares a
itical, industrial and social, in my. nia. young peraon to do the skilled
judgment no one is so pressing You wapt a remedy that ia pleaa-; * an **v* UP •
as this, greatest of moral quea- RU(V^m^rUiVaUkCougb Remedy' * This school now oooupioa its
tione. Among all other great ajj 0f requirements and j own splendid new building and
issues it liee at the foundation ofj for the speedy and permanent cure; is by far tho largest and beet
all other problems and its settle- ' ***<1 co,(** without a peer.; equipped commercial aehool in
mentby the absolute and final! Sold by O. E. Jones. the §ou^h. Students enter_ any
exclusion of bribery or thraat of j N. O. Fite has sold a part ofj* tor tro*
bribery, ortho raising of money; his farm, three miles north of! a naariMaatf cure Per mm.
for this foul purpose, is to my | town, to Albert Phillips and has! Itching, blind, bleeding or prntrud
■ ■ ...................... ■■■; purchased the George C. Tiller ing piles. UruggiatM refund money
property in west Carthage. Mr. jif P*«> Ointment fails to cure any
Fite will move his family to town 00 m*Uer of bo* loa* ■‘■nd
in the near future. .u*,i.«lc 14 d.j. FintWftaft*
-....._ ---------- _ / gives esse and rest. 5l)c. If your
j Mis* Jennie May Chadwick ’ druggint humi't It wml 50u in ntampa
|} commenced her school in the Sut- j and it will l*e forwarded poxt-paid by
Ton r.atghborhood last Monday. Fans MnhmxrCo, St, Louis, Mo.
of Carthago,
oeremooy..
The Watchman
congratulations to tbs
young people and
them a long and happy
aft.
On 8unday evening, the
Inst., at tha reaidenoe of W.
Atkinson in thia city, Mr.
Atkinson and Miae Maggie Tiller,
Rev. Pate officiating.
Mr. Atkinson, the happy groom,
hr a young mechanic of guud :
standing and character. Miie
Maggie is a young lady, whom to
know, ie to love; and n every
quality that goes to make up the
good wife, fitted to preside over
the home and fortunes of the
man the has accepted for a life
partner.
The Watchman joins the many
friends and well-wishers of the
young people in congratulations
end sincerely trusts that a kind
fortune may evar hover over aad
bless them in the voyage upon
whioh they have Just entered in
this new life.
Mas Stood the Teel >| Va
The old, original Grove’s
Chill Tonic. You know what you ere
taking. It is iron and quinine ia a
tasteless form. No oute, no pay. Me.
I have the genuine King's Im-
proved Cotton Seed for sale at
W cents per buehel. I purchas-
ed last spring direct from North
Carolina and have used every
irecaution in ginning to keep
them pure. From these seed 1
raised this season on 12 aoree of
medium up-land with 1000 pounds
of fertiliser 13 bales averaging
over 500 pounds to the bale.
Fifteen balee of cotton from these
seed were gathered in August,
L. D. Spears,
23»3m. Snap, Texas.
The best millinery ia the kind
we offer to the trade, not the
cheapest. If you see ue you get
the het you want at a price that
will be entirely eatiaf aotOry.
Don't fail to see us for hats.
Woodyard A Co.
Lost.
A package of notes between
Clayton and Kagley, one payable
to U. 8. Baker and the rest to
W. H. Hillen. Finder please
notify A. K. Buckner,
t .Pine Hill, Tex.
Off For IbaWorM’s Fair.
The following Fanolaites, all
of Clayton, left Saturday for the
World’s Fair:
Lee Williams >n, Calvin Jonea,
Mrs. Moliie Jarrell, K. F. Ash
and Miss Giftie Ash.
When You Have a Bad Cold.
You waut a remedy that will not
ouly give quick relief but effect a
permanent cure.
You want a remedy that will re
lievc the luugs and keep expectora-
tion eaay.
You want a remedy that will coun
teiaetany tendency toward pueumo
nia.
You want a remedy that ia pleaa-
Rather I’rmapMns.
Under the heading, “Fair
Flay,’’ Bro. D. H, Duke under-
took to ennounce the proposi-
tions agreed upon by Bro. Owens
and myself, to be discussed st
Clayton November 12th., and an-
nounced an entire different sub-
ject, as well aa to insinuate that
we were unfair in our announoe-
ment. Now we give in full tha
propositions as agreed upon, that
all may judge whether we were
unfair or not.
Resolved, That tha “Church of
God*’ (Sanctified) is eoriptural In
origin, doctrine and praotioe.
Resolved, That the Missionary
Bagtiet ohuroh ia eoriptural in
origin, dootrine and praotioe.
Ksoh is to deny the other's
proposition. Respectfully,
Jab. A. Long.
Cotton Receipts.
Carthage weighers report that
436tt bales of cotton were receiv-
ed at tbs several yards up to
November let. In September
2483 bales received and only 1873
in October, whioh showa that tha
farmers are not disposed to sell
the staple for lees than 10 oente.
Had the price in October been as
good aa in September the re-
ceipts for the piud month would
have been double—tha shave
figures
*44
Port Arthur is said to be in the
last stages of a desperate strug-
gle. The siege will go down in
history as one of tha Mondial
and most desperately contested
fn at! the
estimated that the cost to Japan
PVNMPWmF
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Collins, Jasper & Carswell, O. P. The Panola Watchman. (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 23, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 9, 1904, newspaper, November 9, 1904; Carthage, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth901107/m1/3/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sammy Brown Library.