West Texas Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 5, 1912 Page: 5 of 8
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s!
Weare extremely anxious to increase the feeding of
MEAL AND HULLS
Among our Farmer Friends
As an inducement to this end, we offer for a limited time only, the following unprecedented bargains in
O.
Exchanging Meal and Hulls for Cottonseed
J. A. DIETZ
lbs. of Seed
For 1
e!
Total
13,975,000
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
"hh
L S. GRAHAM
f.
And First Lien Notes
Better aid Ci
sr Feed
better feed than seed
Graham, Texas.
Mr. and Mrs. H. 1*. Rose were
S
i
While there they
kep
TRADE A TRIAL BALE ANYHOW
Graham Cotton Oil Co
DESK USED BY HAWTHORNE
Just Received
GRAHAM, TEXAS
the
Line
Sloan Drug Co.
(RAHAM. TEXAS.
Mountainside Hotel
oroseription against
Graham Dedric Co.,
his
nost noted native sons was
1
RAMBOUILEITS
GRAHAM, TEXAS.
SHEEP
t
Jonas Dy, Proprieter.
(
of Fancy, high-grade
Chocolates
1.00
1.00
100
lb.
BEECHER M. BAKER. Prop.
$2.00 per Day
from
pies.
You get about 1000 pounds of seed
to every tele of cotton ginned
Pay for the Seed
You may be the judge and there'll
be no back talk.
BLACKSMITHING
AND WOODWORK
al-
per
Let Us Wire
YOUR House
in Ft. Worth Thursday and Fri-
day, guests of Mr. Rose’s aunt.
UNIMPROVED
LANDS
Ice Cream
and Chili
Foundry Buildings
For Sale at a Bargain
REHDER A SON
PAPERHANGING AND
HOUSEPAINTING
GRAHAM, TEXAS.
C. W. JOHNSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
I Mtice West Side Square.
GRAHAM. TEXAS.
had the pleasure of hearing Mad-
am Nordica in concert and Mr..
Rummell, famous violinist.
KAY & AKIN
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
If you have used meal and
hulls you know it is
Meal and Hulls
at these prices make a
Better and Cheaper Feed
than anything grown or made for
any kind of farm stock.
Hot and Cold
BATHS
,B. H. GARRETT
CONTRACTOR A BUILDER
You have the seed.
We have the hulls and meal.
We want to buy your seed.
We want to sell hulls and meal.
You need meal and hulls, for though
you have other feeds at home,
1 pound of meal and hulls mixed
one to four is worth
2 pounds' of corn
2 pounds of wheat bran
2 pounds of cotton seed
4 pounds of best hay.
It will make
More milk, more butter.
Better milk, better butter.
More flesh and more fat
and keep your cows or your steers
in better fix than cotton seed.
Act promptly, for these prices will soon be withdrawn. If not convenient to store the Meal and Hulls,
deliver the seed now and we will hold the hulls and meal until you want them.
r
fins,
HORSESHOEING
A SPECIALTY
Electric Lights
Are ao far superior to
any other kind that ar-
gument ia unneceaeary.
We have a complete supply
of fixtures at prices you can
afford. : : ::::::
one of Salem’s
For Producing Milk
and Butter
COCHRAN & SON
CoNTRACTORS - Builders
Graham. Texas
First-class Accommodations for
Csnunr trial Men
Feed it to any stock on your place
and if you don't find it a
Su pt. MeLendon, Prof. Gilli-
land. Misses Ethel and Fannie!
Bye Rogers, Bessie Lyon. Gradie
MtSSell, Ethel and Amy Atwood,
and Mrs. Lucy Isaacs attended
the State Teachers’ Association,
held at Fort Worth.
pound for pound, come and say so
and we will
i.
Go to -
John's Shaving Parlor
For First-class Barber Work
The OLD RELIABLE Stand
North of Postoffice
‘amous Author Worked at It When
Ms Was Surveyor of the Port
of Salem.
if you have not used it
catch one bale of seed
Bring it to us
and take home on this basis:
1400 pounds of hulls and
400 pounds of meal, being
1800 pounds of mixed feed
r
h
Worth pound for pound more in
feeding value than
Cotton Seed, Corn, Bay
We will give
1200 lbs. lulls and 400 lbs. Meal
Rubenkoenig & Bower
Proprietors
You can be assured of quality
when you busy --Batavia." W. 1.
Tidwell A Sons.
New Building, New Furnishings
Electrie Lights
Commodious Sample Rooms
DR. W. A. MORRIS
DENTIST
Ofice over Graham Xat"i. Bank.
GRAHAM, TEXAS.
e
For feeding Horses and Mules
fattening cattle, hogs or any kind of
poultry. 1 pound of meal is worth
3 pounds of corn,
2 pounds of oats.
4 pounds of wheat bran.
Two large corrugated iron
buildings, cement floors and
well lighted and ventilated,
with 100x0-foot lot. on rail-
road. Apply or write to
E.S. GRAHAM.
Graham. Texas
Agents for
Graham Steam Laundry
""
Mrs. Davis.
The desk at which Nathaniel
Iawthorne worked when he was sur-
eyor of the port of Salem, during
. period in the Polk administration;
s still in existence in Salem, care*
ully preserved by its custodians.
Iawthorne secured the appointment
a surveyor through the intervention
f his Democratic friends, who were
nfluential at Washington at the
ime. Senator Fairfield of Maine
ras especially active in the matter,
ind the munificent salary of $1,200
nabled this somewhat financially
traitened literary genius of the
irst rsnk to live in comparative
comfort during his four years of in-
% umbency.
With the election of Taylor and
, Fillmore the Salem Whigs conspired
-jo have Hawthorne supplanted by an
ifficial of their own political stripe,
ind the result of this unnecessary
Progress On New School
Building at Woodson.
Work on the new school build-
ing is progressing rapidly now.
The stone work is completed and
the walls stand strong and beau-
tiful as the outer shell of the
temple of learning. Joists for
| the first and second floors are
laid. Partitions of rooms are
GrahamaHCuryundale
I
I
Grand Opera in Dallas
The World’s Greatest Artists
Mary Garden, Tetrazzini, Dalmores,
Fraemsted, Capanini
and many others of world-wide renown will appear
in Grand Opera in Dallas, under the auspices of the
"Grand Opera Committee'' of Dallas on
February 28 and March 1,1913.
The railanads will ofter special raise tur mis unusuai eeau b isaas aes metum
For ticket reservations and information call over
Southwestern Telephone,
WV=# •V WWVW= an “ W-“T-N9 •AAAAMIW 0ech-
a. . --el
■.s . 62.
1912 Crop 13,975,000 Bales.
This season’s cotton crop will
total 13,975,000 bales, according
to estimates compiled bv the
New Orleans Times-Democrat,
from a canvass of reports from
correspondents in every cotton-
growing state.
This estimate does not include
linters and repacks.
The correspondents generally
if you are looking for real e For • Sale Good range cook
tate bargains read my display stove. IS inch oven. Apply at
ad. R. E. Mabry. West Texas Reporter.
completed and the roof will be
finished in a few days. Then
with the doors and window’s in,
the force of the elements may
rage in vain on this strong,.hand-
some village.
The stone work is indeed hand-
some. and the walls have a fine
appearance. T ire carpenter
work is strong and substantial,
and the building when completed
will stand for many generations.
Woodson Record.
A case of cere bro-spina l men-
ingitis reported near Gra-
ham and some doubt as to wheth-
er or not it was really meningitis.
Local physicians sent a sample
of spinal fluid to the State Health
Officer, Ralph Steiner for exami-
nation and yesterday received
by wire his report to effect that
it was a genuine case. At this
writing attending physicians
state patient convalescing.
Dan and Fred Morse of Wea-
therford are in the city awaiting
the arrival of material for the
building of four new bridges in
the county, locations of which
were given in The Reporter some
time ago. They are connected
with the Newton Construction
Co. who have the contracts f«»rl
the erection of the New bridges.
Ely’s Cream Parlor
report that the farmers have been
free sellers at cut prices. The'
crop, it is stated, has been pick-
ed and ginned with unusual rap-
idity.
The* Times-Democrat figures
on production by states follow:
Bales.
Alabama.............. 1,250,000
Arkansas............. 850,000
Georgia and Florida.... 1,900,000
Louisiana............. 450,000
Mississippi............ 1,100,000
Oklahoma............. 1,100,000
North Carolina........ 950,000
Tennessee........... 275,000
South Carolina........ 1,250,000
Texas................. 4,750,000
All others............. 100,000
ucc.".
greatest story, “The Scarlet Letter."
Appropriately, too, “The Scarlet
Letter’ is prefaced with an intro-
iuction, a reminiscence of the au-
thor’s experience at the dingy seat
f Salem’s customs. The collector
it the time was Gen. James Miller,
the hero of Lundy’s Lane, and Haw-
thorne’s references to the man who
zould say in an exciting emergency,
"PIl try’ air,” lends interest to what
a really one of the most attractive
portions of the book.
Hawthorne refers to this identical
leak in his minute description of the
business room of the custom house.
gb3 "An old pine desk with a three-
’ * egged stool beside it,” is the way he
referred to this equipment.
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West Texas Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 5, 1912, newspaper, December 5, 1912; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1558326/m1/5/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .