Cherokee County Banner. (Jacksonville, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, October 14, 1904 Page: 3 of 10
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BOX!
One Key Given With Every One Dollar Purchase
ONLY ONE KEY WILL UNLOCK THE LOCK ======........
The Person Holding the Key that Unlocks the Lock Will Get the Money Contained in
the Box. Thursday, December 22nd, is Unlocking Day.
SOLID OAK DRESSER WITH 18x40
FRENCH BEVEL PLATE MIRROR
SOLID OAK WASH STAND
SOLID OAK, 72 INCHES HIGH
This Three Piece Suit at a.
Many Other Bargains Which
I Am Offering to the Trade.
IRON BEDS
From $2.50 Up
FRANK DEVEREUX
JACKSONVILLE, TEXAS
PERILS OF LAND AND SEA;
HEAD=0N COLLISION.
Thirty People Killed on Missouri Pacific
at Warrensburg, Mo.
Warrensburg, Mo., Oct. 10.—
A head-011 collision occurred be-
tween a freight and passenger
on the Missouri Pacific railroad
this morning, and thirty people
were killed. Twenty-one dead
have already been taken out of
the wreck. The train was from
Wichita, Kansas, and was en
route to the World’s Fair.
A Dozen Times a Night.
Mr. Owen Dunn of Benton
Ferry, W. Va., writes: “I have
fcad kidney and bladder trouble
years, and it became so bad
|t I was obliged to get up at
Et a dozen times a night. I
Ter received any permanent
benefit from any medicine until I
tried Foiey’s Kidney Cure, After
using two bottles I am ■cured.”
^>old by Jacksonville Drug Co.
An Irishman says the easiest
way to take a cork out of a bottle
is to push it in.
The man who chases a street
car gets a run for his money.
Saved His Life.
J. W. Davenport, Wingo, Ky.,
writes, June 14, 1902: ‘T want
to tell you I believe Ballard’s
Snow Liniment saved my life. I
was under the treatment of two
doctors and they told me one of
my lungs was entirely gone,
and the other badly affected. I
also had a lump in my side. I
don’t think I could have lived
over two months longer. I was
induced by a friend to try Bal-
lard’s Snow Liniment. The
first application gave great re-
lief, two fifty cent bottles cured
me sound and well. It is a
wonderful medicine and I recom-
mend it to suffering humanity. ”
25c, 50c and $1.00 at Johnson
Drug Co.
While a marriage ceremony
was being performed near Dan-
ville, Va., last Friday a kerosene
lamp flamed up and was about to
explode when the bride siezed it
and hurled it through a window.
The groom then came out from
under the table, where he was
hidden, and the ceromony pro-
ceeded.—Exchange.
Many a girl fails to catch on
because she doe^ all the angling.
In Love with Tom,
It is seriously Stated in a Wash-
ington dispatch that Roosevelt
has fallen in love with Tom Wat-
son, so to speak, because of the
many kind things Tom has been
saying about him in his speeches,
and will invite the Georgian to
one of his famous White House
lunches^an honor conferred only
on special friends like Booker
Washington and others equally
dear.—Nacogdoches Sentinel.
Saves Two From Death.
“Our little daughter had an
almost fatal attack of whooping
cough and bronchitis,” writes
Mrs. W. K. Haviland of Armonk,
N. Y., “but when all other
remedies failed we saved her
life with Dr. King’s New Dis-
covery. Our niece, who had con-
sumption in an advanced stage,
also used this wonderful medi-
cine and today she is perfectly
wTell.” Desperate throat and
lung diseases yield to-Dr. King’s
New Discovery as to no other
medicine on earth. Infallible
for coughs and colds. 50c and
$1.00 bottles guaranteed by
Johnson Drug Co.
The many things we wait for
are not worth the delay.
An Enterprising Church,
The Cumberland Presbyterian
church of Comanche Springs,
McLennan county, planted and
cultivated a cotton patch of seven
acres this year, the proceeds of
same to go to missions and other
church work. The field was cul-
tivated during spare hours by
members of the church and the
staple is being picked in the same
way.. Two bales have been mar-
keted and another is to be pick-
ed and the church treasury will
be gainer to the extent of nearly
two hundred dollars.—Honey
Grove Signal.
Never judge a man by his
looks; judge him by the looks of
his wife.
A Love Letter.
Would not interest you if
you’relooking for a guaranteed
salve for sores, burns or piles.
Otto Dodd of Ponder, Mo ,
writes: “I suffered with an
ugly sore for a year, but a box
of Bucklen’s Arnica Salve cured
me. It’s the best salve on
earth.” 25c at Johnson Drug
Co.
Barnett Gibbs of Dallas is
dead. He passed from the
scenes of earth Tuesday after
an illness of many months. He
was one of Texas’ unique politi-
cal characters, and few men
were more prominent in the
state's political history. He
served one term as lieutenant
governor and was the leading
candidate for Congress in the
Dallas district twenty years ago,
but neither he nor Olin Welborn
could secure the necessary two-
thirds majority and the nomina-
tion went to a dark horse. Gibbs
was an intellectual giant and was
always interesting. Soured by
defeat he left the democratic
party a few years ago and
affiliated with the populists, but
his stay with that party was
short. Barnett Gibbs was a man
of great ability and was very
popular. His death is mourned
by many admirers.—Honey
Grove Signal.
. The janitor may not be an
autocrat just because he gets in
on the ground floor.
Captain Willnef s Remarkable Escape
Shows What to do in Time of
Trouble;
For many years. Captain Will-
nef, says the Times of Glouces-
ter, Mass., was one of her best
known seamen in the Glouces-
ter Fleet. The catarrhal troubles
with which he suffered for fifteen
ye^rs made him dread the nights
at sea, being unable to lie down
and sleep, on account of the con-
stant catarrhal dropping.
Captain Willnef went to two
different hospitals for treat-
ment, but could get no lasting
benefit. He constantly raised
yellow and green phlegm and his
trouble became so unbearable
and nauseating that he was
ashamed to go out in company.
When despairing of ever getting
relief, his wife purchased a
Hyomei outfit for him, and try-
ing it before going to bed, he en-
joyed the first whole night’s
sleep for ten years. Captain
Willnef says. “I have used less
than two bottles of Hyomei and
have beencuredby the remedy.”
Hyomei kills the germs of
catarrh and makes lasting and
permanent cures. Jacksonville
Drug Co. sells Hyomei under
their personal guarantee to re-
fund the money if it does not
give quick relief.
Judge Felps and Governor
Bates of Massachusetts have
both expressed proper contri-
tion for fining Mr. Guerney of
the British legation and the
latter now appears to be mollified,
the British lion is no longer
growling and Edward VII has
again gotten his crown on
straight. Judge Felps said he
was ignorant of the law; like-
wise the Governor of Massachu-
setts made a similar statement;,
and while both these gentlemen
are, no doubt, lying, this apology
will be taken as proper amends
for the ruffled feelings of His
Britannic Majesty’s representa-
tive. We are all so glad this
grave international incident has
been thus satisfactorilly closed
and that the fleets and armies of
England and America will not
have to be martialed over the
over-speeding of Mr. Guerney’s
automobile which was contrary to
the statutes of the common-
wealth of Massachusetts made
and provided.—Laredo Times.
Cause of Lockjaw.
Lockjaw, or tetanus, is caused
by a bacillus or germ which
exists plentifully in street dirt.
It is inactive so long exposed
to the air, but when carded be-
neath the skin, as in the mmnds
caused by percussion caps oKby
rusty nails, and when the air
excluded the germ is roused to
activity and produces the most
virulent poison known. These
germs may be destroyed and all
danger of lockjaw avoided by
applying Chamberlain’s Pain
Balm freely as soon as the in-
jury is received. Pain Balm is
an antiseptic and causes such in-
juries to heal without matura-
tion and in one-third the time re-
quired by the usual treatment.
It is sold by Johnson Drug Co.
The attorney general decides
that ‘‘persons engaged in selling
merchandise on the street cor-
ners and who employ singers to
attract a crowd are liable to an
annual state tax of $50 per an-
num and a county tax of $2.50
for each day that they perform
or sell goods.”—Vernon Call.
A HEALTH WELL
Chambers Well, Palestine, Texas.
Ils analysis is as follows:
Gr. Per Gal.
Silica..................... ................ 1.2476
Alumina and Ferric Oxide.............. Trace
Calcium Chloride....................... 7 8551
Magnesium Chloride.................. 6.5948
Sodium Carbonate...................... 83 354o
Analysis University of Texas.
And surpasses many of the most
famous health resorts/ This water is
good for STOMACH, BOWEL, LIV-
ER, KIDNEY, BLADDER and FE-
MALE TROUBLES; RHEUMATISM,
DROPSY, CATARRH, PILES, UL-
CERS, SORES, SORE EYES, and
GRANULATED LIDS. Acts direct-
ly on the blood. If you have any
chronic trouble, try this water. Bez-
gin at once, or it might be too late.
You can easily secure rooms and
board here at moderate prices^ or nice
cottages cheap, where you can have
either your family or a number of
friends with you. to try these minerals
which God has proportioned and put
together. It has worked wonderful
cures for others and may do the same
for you. Address
Prop. Chambers Mineral Well,
9 Combination St., Palestine, Texas.
Mention Jacksonville Banner when
you write.
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McFarland, J. E. Cherokee County Banner. (Jacksonville, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, October 14, 1904, newspaper, October 14, 1904; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth508045/m1/3/: accessed May 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Jacksonville Public Library.