The Nocona News (Nocona, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 29, 1908 Page: 4 of 12
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LYON-GRAY Lumber Co ■
4
DEALERS IN
Nocona, Texas. Oct. 2», 1008.
TELEPHONE 24
S. E. HOWELL, Manager
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TROUBL
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Sewed Half Soles $1.00
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Heels
.25
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Rubber Heels Ladies and .
Gents
.50
H. J. Justin &
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Do your duty and come out and
vote on next Tuesday.
Every man that has a vote com
teg to him should be out next
Tuesday and help to elect Wm.
J. Bryan, John W. Kern and all
other good fellows.
Now that the hunting season
is about to begin, hunters should
take'Warning to all notices posted
upon fences and trees, and keep
out to avoid trouble.
The coal dealers of this city
were kept very busy the latter
part of last week filling up coal
bins for this winter.
If you should get a sack of
Acme, Parrot or Elk flour that is
not satisfactory, we earnestly re-'
quest you to return it.
Nocona Mill & GinCo.
I have Special bargains in
second-hand machines.
reg
ing
ano
e Nocona News
ly News Publishing Co.,
11.00
...50
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The doctors report the health
of our little city, very good and
that is the way we- want to keep
it.
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F
Met bo
arm
and
SuiJ
Coll
8uq
Ai
give
Guaranteeing,
seems to think or
TUX CHILDRIN LIKt IT
KENNEDY’S LAXATIVE
COUCH SYRUP
II
the
you,
mac
enq
*7sho
spel
vinJ
The only way to keep the
farmer from buying his goods
from those big mail order houses
in for the merchant to advertise
his prices in its home papers,
and let the farmer know what he
has to sell, the same way the other
fuiiow is doing.
Soeif
p. m.i
Bund
f /
A friend who sowed, rye lust fall on
a plot of ground—several acres—from
which he took a crop of potatoes the
latter part of September tells us that,
while he pastured this piece well Into
the winter and turned his cows on it
early last spring and did not take them
off until the 1st of May, the stand of
the cereal is so heavy and the heads
filling so well that he anticipates a
yield of close to thirty bushels per
acre. In addition to furnishing a good
bite for bls stock when green food was
scarce, the putting of the rye on the
piece of ground has resulted In keep-
ing It very free from weeds. After the
rye is cut he will be able to grow a
crop of buckwheat, millet or turnips.
We believe that rye might be used a
great deal more than It Is In the above
manner and the weed nuisance abated
considerably as a result.
[gone
[then
Bi
■L>f o
-of sd
accd
enjo
ened
B
EldJ
even
MoJ
then
dim]
you |
ask |
o’ckl
wasl
of til
t|
anca
M. I
Spil
for I
Ci al
wiul
A dead air space will be formed when
lath la placed. Plaster with cement.
Roof with shingles or galvanised iron.
The ventilators should be placed
above the windows, the-entrances for
man and fowl where most convenient,
but ao alleyways or aisles should be
made through the building to waste
space.
Does it pay to build a bouse like this
for chickens? Well, does it pay you to
banks. By this n <*ans which he
proposes,* the depositor will take
his money to the Post Office and
have it entered in his book like
bank, and the* money that the
Post Office receives from the de-
positor will be deposited in the
national bank’s of the country;
here is where Mr. Taft’s argu-
ment is torn to tatters and rid-
dled to shreds. After the Post
Office has received this money
from the people, they dp not
turn one dollar of that money
over to the banks until they have
a gurantee that every dollar will
be returned to the Government.
The habits of thought and work that
a boy acquires at from ten to fourteen
years are quite likely to be largely de-
termining and molding factors in all
bis after life. On tbis occasion it is
well for the parents to give wise direc-
tion in these formative years and for
the boy to take himself in band with a
bview to developing bls powers and tal-
ents in the best possible ways. The
boy that runs loose and wild during
these years without restraint of any
kind cannot be expected .to develop
into a good man any more than a colt
similarly handled can be expected to
That reply should be framed in make a tractable and valuable horse.
f and 1
t Pray
/ even)
J. j
I Lea?
Junol
Wald
B erintl
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Bryan-Kern Contribution.
The following have contributed
to the Bryan-Kern campaign
fund, and we earnestly solicit as
many more as can consistently
do so to hand us in your name
and one dollar at once. The time is
drawing nigh to the election and
the money is needed now. When
you pay your dollar be sure and
get a campaign button.
B. A. Carter,
Democratic Precinct Chairman.
The following have contributed.
C. M. Doss $1.00
B. A. Carter ..................... 1.00
J. B. March -■ 1.00
N. W. Crain.................. 1.00
T. W. Parker 1.00
R. T. Anderson 1.00
W. A. McCall 1.00
J. E. Barefoot ..........-...... 1.00
C. E. Quillin....................... 1.00
J. W. Buckley 1.00
B. T. Davis 1.00
T. P. Paine ................... 1.00
D. V. Crites ....... 1.00
N. E. McIntire ............... 1.00
H. C. Yantis ............_.... 1.00
W. T. Jenkins, Jr. 1.00
C. McCall -............1.00
J. R. Modrall .............._ 1.00
B. A. Barlow ...............- 1.00
*
Su;
“ ing
Miss
Pr;
Is-
X-t
By Having Your
Horses Shod Sy
A. B. BARLOfy.'
......... .. ,
as second-class matter June
6, at the poet office st Nocona,
, under the Aet of Congress of
it, 18TO.
Bf
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Cowboy Boot Mi
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I
Democratic Nominees
For President
W. J. Bryan
For Vice-President
J. W. Kern
For State Senator 31st District.
J. P. Hayter
For Representative 82d District.
R. L. Cable
For District J udge
Clem B. Potter
For District Clerk
J. I. Raglin
For County Judge
A. W. Richie
For County Attorney
Chas. F. Spencer
For Tax Collector
Hugh S. Walker
For Sheriff
W. G. Bralley
For County Clerk
J. E. (Ebb) Strong
For Treasurer
W. A. Morris
For Tax Assessor
_ , J.JS. Barefoot
— “FfirCounty Superintendent
W. A. Dyer
For Commissioner in Precinct 8
W. J. Priddy
iption, per year.,
six months
NOTICE
have special Prices on
Singer Sewing Machines 1
for the next r
60 DAYS
See me before buying,
J. I. HICKS,
Office at Stephens & Co’s
New Nickel Store.
L
- x ■
T. W. PARKER, Editor A Mgr
--
A HANDY HKNHOUSK.
If Cheep John Is bound to build of
pftino boxes, let him manage bis own
funeral.
If you're only in to be out, any old
aback will do.
If you're a stayer, you're not employ-
ing a funeral director architect
Here la a neat, handy house that may
be built for a moderate price and is
especially adapted to cold climates,
though the bare plan is standard for
any locality.
Dimensions, nine feet high in front
seven back, twelve feet wide and any
length. . i, >.
Bink stone for foundation below frost
axxl two courses of stone at least
at^OFo surfacOe
ur We use I
--
Advertising rates furnished on appli-
cation. All matter run and
. •barged for until ordered out.
a guarantee before they will de-
posit their own money in a
national bank, why should not
the depositor have a guarantee
before they will deposit their
own money in a national bank,
why should not the depositor
have a guarantee when he depos-
its his all in the bank? It is a
well known fact that the different
banks that the Government
designate as depositories in
which the Government funds are
deposited for the benefit of cir-
culation guarantee every dollar
of it. Now why should not the
individual as well as the Govern-
ment be guaranteed?
This all goes to show that the
Republicans have no pleatomake
to the people and that they have
been unable to answer any of the
Democratic arguments.
HXMDY UKBOUCB.
buy a good all wool suit or an imita-
tion wool shoddy that soon bags at the
knees and goes to the rag bag?
If you’rs going to make good money j t
out of hens, you must put good money (»
into good pens.
Yes. there are some deserted poultry
plants around the country, just as there
are some forsaken factory buildings
here and there.
Most of these forsaken edifices are
monuments to men who did their look-
ing after they leaped. “I will watch
your experiment with interest and if
you are successful may go into the
business myself,” said a Washington
gentleman to a young man who had
established a modern plant
"This is not an experiment,” replied
the plucky fellow. “This is not a
try or test case. There’s no maybe
about it Before we went into this
business we demonstrated the practi-
cal worth of our methods. We worked
on the plan of this plant for five years
before a nail was driven, and now, if
our bones don’t crack, we’ll have suc-
cess. ”
gold and its spirit followed.
REPAIRING WHILE YOU WAIT
FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS.
Mice do love to nest with the pi-
geons.
If you come home and find little
squabs and eggs on the Uoor and can't
understand it it is because you have
unmated birds in your pen and don't
know it You'D get the full meaning
when you look in the ledger.
If some of our poultry journals that
spend extra time and money on crowd-
ing their pages with big pictures would
only remember that the majority of
journal readers are after practical In-
formation they would confer a big fa-
vor on the majority and Insure renew-
als.
A York poultry man placed rat poison
beneath his buildings for the rata, and
the rats carried it out and fed it to the
chickens, and they deceased. If poi-
son is mixed with chop, it cannot be
distributed. If a hen does get a dose,
just give her a big dose of lard.
If fattening fowls of nervous tem-
perament, like the Leghorns and An-
cona*, do not keep them in a glaring
light, but in semi-dark pens in secluded
spots.
Do not keep ducks in a yard where
water runs from the eaves. They will
puddle along the foundation and loosen
the stonework. "
In searching for the assets of a
Pennsylvania cashier who stole |00,-
000 they found a 11.200 henhouse, but
no depositors’ nest eggs, and the golden
eggs his goose laid were missing.
Parties tn Mount Joy, Pa., shipped
6,000 worms to Forrest Park. BL Louis,
to be fed to the birds at a cost of |3.76.
It was worth that to count the wrlg
glen. To our friends who are raising
birds, quail and pheasants we recom-
mend the meal worm. Mix chop and
bran and strips of leather together,
get a few worms at the mill, add them
to the combination and watch them
multiply.
When you operate on a fowl for hard
crop or find an open wound, be sure to
use s strong disinfectant on the bared
flesh to kill the germs and drive off the
blowflies
Women are more and more taking
an active part In poultry work. Among
these are a number who have
broken In health or whose husbands
have been disabled by accident or
paralytic strokes, and they have taken
up the work of support Wo wish
them well, and may they meet no male
fakirs In dealt
• Do not use expensive lumber for
m. It . to « good plan occa
burn the nest material in
Ttiftt frUln tb# boffs, himI
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B- •
& HORTON,
Mr. Farmer how much is
Bears, Roebuck A Co., of Chicago,
paying you for your cotton, corn
and country produce? The first
person answering this question
we will send him the News one
year free of charge.
The News accepts advertising matter
' on a guarantee of having dou-
•, ble the paid in advance bona
fide circulation of any paper Now if the government demands
•ver published in Nocona.
Published Every Thursday.
g City Loan
Real Estate and Insuran
And in Fact Anything Carried by a First-
Class Lumber Yard.
Lumber, Sash, Doors, Lime, Cement
Brick and Coal
Upcoming Pages
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Parker, T. W. The Nocona News (Nocona, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 29, 1908, newspaper, October 29, 1908; Nocona, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1372533/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Friends of the Nocona Public Library.