The Post-Signal (Pilot Point, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, March 3, 1911 Page: 1 of 10
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The Post-Signal.
VOL XXXIII.
PILOT POINT, TEXAS, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1911.
NO. 27
ij® AJiTSJ® AJTij5 AJ7>? \u>r A}i>>? AJ m11 AJTi)1' AJ \ i
Ready for Spring Business
>t!
N.
R E750LVED that
it 15 a dream.
5o are the Beautiful
, ,vA/A.'5T5 and other
J^^thinics v;f_ show'
%^VoUR DREADS wiui
come true ato'jr1
_mst0re/^
"V
*
Site
>rV. O -,
CC«Pvui(pHT it TM|
WHY -SHOULD YOU MAKE Yol/R OWN WAISTS
WHEN WE HAVE SUCH A SPLENDID ASSORT-
MENT OF UP-TO-THE-MINUTE STYLES AL-
READY MADE FOR YOU? GooD*S LOOK DIF-
FERENT WHEN THEY ARE MADE UP, FRoM
WHAT THEY DO WHEN YOU -5EE THEM IN THE
PIECE. YOU CAN &E SUKE OF A FIT, Too,
WHEN YOU BUY YOUR WAISTS READY-MADE
A GOOD WAI.5T 98C
A BETTER WAI-SI 2.48
THE BE-5T PoSSWLE •• FOR THE MONEY 2.98
South Side Square
W§& Pilot Point, Texas
(s$r
avsy.* y.^e f'8£ *
In Every Department.
The new stocks of pretty stylish merchandise
are rapidly nearing completion. No matter what
you want, it's here, be it for ladies, gentlemen,
boy or girl.
THE NEW SCHWAB CLOTHING FOR MEN 1-5
NOW ON DISPLAY, PER -5UIT 7. 50 To 1 7. 50
NEW PERFECTION SU\TS FOR BoY-5, PER
SUIT 2.00 TO 7.5O
NEW MEN',5 AND BoY-5' HAT-5 50CT0 5.00
tt <i i( it CUTR T ? Tn i
MEN'aS AND LADIES NECKWEAR 25C To 1 .00
NEW LAWNJ 5 C To J 5C
NEWGINGHAM-5 7 1-2C TO 1 2 1-2C
20C TO 2 5C
35C TO 2.00
45C TO I .50
1-2C TO 25C
5 C TO 5.00
TO 1 2 1-2C
IOC TO 25C
1 5C TO 50C
J 5C TO 35C
1 0C TO 25C
5C TO 1 5C
I OC TO 20C
IOC TO 25C
new TISSUES
new -5ilk-5 per yard
" WOOL -5kirting, per yd.
" lace.s 2
" embrolderie-5, per yd
" percale-5 per yd 7 1-2c
" madra-5 and shirting
" white flaxons
" stripe flaxons
" dimities
" c'k nainsook
" Long cloth
" cambric
" novelties of every description
Our riotto: Keep what you.want and keep
the qualitj up, and the price down. Looking or
buying you are always welcome.
m
RUSSELL BROTHERSCO.
Where Quality is Higher
Than the Price
m.
The appropriation bill has not
been completed but it is estimat-
ed to require $5,000,000 per
annum t<3 support state govern-
ment. The state receives ap-
proximately $3,000,000 from
sources other than property tax,
such as gross receipts, franchise
poll tax, liquor license, etc., and
the balance will have to be
raised by advalorem tax.
Old papers for su.lt* at this office.
THE
WATCH
STORE.
All Kinds
All Qualities
All Prices.
and each Watch the best
at its price, whatever the
price.
Every Watch guaranteed
according to its worth, in
knowledge of that Worth.
$1 to $100
There has been over 500 bills
introduced in the legislature,
some of them sound economical-
ly, others would shake the
pillars of government and still
others would blow it up. Texas
is a big state and can assimilate
more calamities than any other
country on the globe but so long
as the legislature remains in
session the state will shiver like
a lemonade shaker in action al-
though it may be a case of the
farmer who sheared his hogs—
all noise and no wool.
Texas produces 20 per «ent of
the cotton of the world and on a
per capita basis, uses one-fourth
percent. We not only produce
a large surplus but, through
lack of diversification concen-
trate our production, making a
deficit in certain lines of pro-
duction, equally as abnormal as
our surplus production on other
line?. We are a people of pro-
ducers and interested in a high
price for our products, and need
factories to consume our surplus
production.
The proceedings of the house
of Congress wer« enlived last
Thursday by Delegate Wicker-
sham and representative Mondell
of Wyoming coming to blows over
the conservtion question during
the debate of the Alaska bill.
The peacemakers also nearly
came to blows while separating
the combatants.
A bill has been introduced in
English Parliament to quash the
veto power of the House of Lords.
It is expected to cause the great*
! est parliamentary battle in Eng-
j land for years. The Lords' veto
of the land tax bill several mon-
ths ago is responsible for this
measnre to take away the veto
power.
Col. Geo. W. Bain.
Col. Bain is one of the most
widely known and generally
successful popular lecturers the
Lyceum has ever known. A
short time ago one of his con-
temporaries who has traveled
this country over and over, and
has himself delivered more than
five thoiusand leotures, said :
"Col. Bain has done more good
than any other man on the
American platform." No audi-
ence ever felt the sway of oratory
without a vision of a great per-
sonality, matchless in character,
masterful in brain, sympathetic
in heart and sublime in purpose.
Col. Bain is just in his prime,
doing the best work of his life.
He has a phenomenal Chautau-
qua record. The call exceeds I
the number of available dates
from year to year. His record
at Ocean Grove, New Jersey, is
without a parallel, uuless it be,
that of Dr. J, M. Buckley of
Chautauqua, N. Y. He has1
lectured for hundred* of
Chautauquas, lyceums, schools,
colleges and societies throughout
the United States with never a
dissatisfied audience. The un-
iversal report is "He pleased,
instructed, and did us good.
We want him again."
Week's Opera House next
Wednesday night. Prices 25,
35 and 50 oents.
School Notes.
Following is a list
'thirty-eight handsome
of the
volumes
I in Farm and Ranch Club
! Library; each with bookplate,
all packed in a neat two-shelf
case. Extra.
Aesip's Fables.
Itobinson Crusoe, by l)e Foe.
Grimm's Fairy Tales.
Pilgrim's Progress, by Bunyan.
Dicken's Christmas Stories.
Southern Poets (Selections)
Hubert E. Lee, by Thomas Nelson
Page.
Stonwall Jackson, by White.
Abraham Lincoln, by Oberhoitzer.
Plutarch's Lives [complete in two
volumes.]
Hans Drinker, by Mary Mapes Dodge.
Tom Brown's School Days, by
Hughes.
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland,
by Lewis Carroll.
The Child's History of England, by
Dickens.
Arabian Nights.
Scottish Chiefs, by Porter.
Thaddeus of Warsaw, by Porter.
The Alhambra, by Washington
Wakefield, by Gold-
anil Tot, by Mrs.
Schcol Garden, by
Irving.
The Vicar of
smith.
Diddy, Dumps
Pyrnelle.
How to Make a
Ilemenvay.
The Last of the Mohicans, by Cooper.
The Deerslayer, by Coyper.
The Pathfinder, by Cooper.
Masterman Ready, by Captain
Maryatt.
Webster's New Century Dictionary.
Black Beauty, by Sewell.
\ Boy on a Farm, by Abbott.
Stories of the Great West, by Theo-
dore Roosevelt.
Every Child Should Know, series of
eight volumes edited by Hamilton W.
Mubie, and including volumes on
Heroes Every Child Should Know,
Heroines Every Child Should Know.
Stories Every Child Should Know,
Fairy Tales Fveiy Child Should
Know,
Poems Every Child Should Know.
Songs Every Child Should Know,
Water Wonders Every Child Should
Know,
Bird s Every Child Should Know.
Continued on Supplement.
SEED CORN. SEED CORN.
FROM
Tex Seed Breeding Farms.
Car of King Cotton Fertilizer Just Arrived.
Use Best Seed Corn and the Best Fertilizer—Start you '(J
3 a Bank Account—We have both. Come and see.
FLAKE & HALE.
Phone 46.
tf
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The Post-Signal (Pilot Point, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, March 3, 1911, newspaper, March 3, 1911; Pilot Point, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth291157/m1/1/: accessed May 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.