The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 45, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 11, 1919 Page: 1 of 8
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!4PMaER &• EltWIN, PiiEjIiaSierK.. ^ _A. X^aper 1 devoted to the best Interests of the 3 ' opie. {Suh*crii t«oss, $8..T>ft IVr Aimcflia
VOL. 44.
iINDBN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1919.
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- AltUANUETO BUY YOUR COT-
<TON SEED NOW FOR PLANT-
ING IN 1920.
In much of t ho territory inCeiir
;ral. TuftiS, frast Texas, and
Hoiitb Texas, the excessive rains
have damaged the cotton seed so
that they may not heritable
for planting.
Good seed may bo secured now
in West and Northwest Texas,
and those who need to buy their
planting peed should arra&gft po
buy direct from the farmer. But
these hif triers have no storage fa-
cilities and cannot hold the seed.
Each farmer' institute should
elect a business agent and ar-
range to send this agent into
West or Northwest TexaH to buy
what planting seed the members
will Deed. >cS':?
The Texas Departrneut o£ Ag-
riculture is riovfr locating cotton
fieed suitably for planting purpo-
ses, and wilj lw) glad to inform
those who desire to buy planting
soed where and from whom a
supply may pe purchased.
'filter rfiatter should fbteive
prompt atteution before these
good seed are crushed or are
bought Viy specirlrttora.
For full information as to
Where and from whom good
planting seed may be secured,
rtddress T. S. Winter, IFirector of
Slarkets, Texas Department of
.Agriculture, Austin, Texas.
Fred W. Davis,
Commissioner of Agrietlture.
odd times. You study at home.
The education comes to you. The
. £3
Get An Education for Which the
^-Business World Pays Cash
IF YOU CAN'T COME AFTER
IT. LET IJNCLE SAM'S MAIL
CARRIERS BRING IT TO YOU.
WE ARE AS CLOSE TO YOU
AS YOUR NEAKEST MAIL
UOX. MOST SUCCESSFUL
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
TRAINING IN THE
WORLD.
Uncle Smn will carry our origi-
nal, practical and modern cours-
es right to yodr door. By the
use of a very thorough, practical
bourse of Telegraphy, By rue
Shorthand nnd Typewriting,
Practical Brjofekeeping, Business
Finance, Penmanship, Lettering
and Salesmanship, our school
has grown very ray idly and the
siiccess of our studeuts has been
wonderful. Mr. Byrne, the au-
thor of thoso famous systems,
and the originator of our practi
eal methods of correspondence
instructions, is at the head of
our Extension Department.
To show our faith in our meth-
6ds, we have for several years,
ngreed, at the completion of the
course, to refund every cent of
tuition if it is not satisfactory
and as ref'omm. rided. No other
school can afford to give you
such a guaranty, nor could we if
we used their methods and sys-
tems.
ADVANTAGES OF OUR COUR.
SEA BY CORRESPONDENCE,
LcscMut--not one-sixth of that
required to attend school. No
loss time or salary. You "earn
while you learn," save your leis-
ure time that might otherwise be
wasted; make just, as much sala-
ry ns if you were not studying at
Compulsory School Attendance Lawi l,n5Pen HRrnRS-
mill in , m - - • N .... ITII M For several days wp have beeu
Attendance RiiumREMBNTs anjj Provisions .—Every child in this State who s|.jrtjn<>, ^he Aleutian -Island#.
, -I,,,. _ . is eight years and not more than fourteen years old shall be required to attend" . n„, • _f.,
triven with fall Shorthiind ! * They he back there-to the north
•• ® the public schools in the distri& of its residence, or in sonic other district to ._ _.._i , m. • .j.
which it may be transferred, as provided by lajKr, for a period of 100 days.
Exemptions.—The following classes of children are extmpt from the require -
ments of this Act':
Any child in attendance upon a private or parochial school or who Is being
properly instructed by a private tutor.
Any child whose bodily or mental condition is such as to render attendance
inadvisable, and who holds definite certificate of a reputable physician specifying
this condition and covering the period of absence. v
Any child who is blind, deaf, dumlj or feeble-minded, for the instiuctipn of
whom no adequate provision has been miide by the school district.
Any child living more than two and one-haIf miles t)y direct and traveled
road froth the nearest public school supported for children of the same race and
color of such child, and with no free transportation provided.
* ✓
Any child more than twelve years of age who lias satisfactorily completed
the wojk of the fourth grade of 9 standard e'emejitaTy School of se<>en grades, and
whose'services are needed in support of a parent or other person standing in par-
ental relation to the child, may, on presentation <if proper evidence'to the county
superintendent of public instruction,* be exempted from further attendance at
school. ^ >
Excuses for AbsKMcbs.-—^ny child not exempted from the provisions of this
Act may be excused for temporary absencc due to personal sickness, sickness or
, V .
death in the family, quarantine, severe storm which has destroyed bridges and
'made the regular medns of travel dangerous, or for unusual causes aceeptablc to
the teacher, principal, or superintendent of the school in which said child is ear
rolled; provided that the excuses are in writing and signed by the jiarent or guar-
dian of said child; but any case so excused may be investigated by the authorities
discharging the duties of attendance officer for the school from which said child is
! y >ur existence. There are count-
less ones toiling in these lonely
j places all but forgotten l>y the
gain is clear. -Three months
use of a standard Typewriter
You use time you would other-
wine throw fitwtiy. Enter school
for personal work without pay-
ing additional tuition. Fill in
and lii.iil for free catalogue.
Name
Address
Course it)terested in..
Extension Department, 'r.yler
Commercial College, T^ler, Texas.
Good NcwsPaper Copy.
The following, clipped from an
exchange, is worth space in any
newspaper. It is unique and "dif-
ferent" in appearance and drives
home a moral to nonadvertisers,
and to those who gfet ofK -a few
circulars once in a while in place
of having regular newspaper
space:
SOME PEOPLE think
ADVERTISING is simply"
SPENDING MONEY.
BUT THE wise man knows
IT'S The surest way to make
more.
THE ONLY problem is
WHAT MEDIUM to use. .
CMlCULAItS and hand-bills
COST A LOT of money
BUT YOU give them away
SO NOBODY wants them
On ThEIR front porches
NOR IN their morning mail.
TflG SUBSCRIBER
PAYS REAL money •
FOR HIS newspaper
AND THAT'S why he values it
MOKE HIGHLY
THAN A circular.
nE BRINGS his paper home'
SO THAT every member •
OF THE family
CAN READ and enjoy its
Breezy, up-to the.minute news
AND PROFIT by heeding
tHE HOME xown merchants'
BID-FOR their trade.
AND tHAt's a good reason
FOR apvertisrim
IN A newspaper.
and not ouly that
BUt
the mehciiantusing hand bills
AND Circulars hopes
For ten readers
to the hundred bills,
if WILLIE delivers the 100.
wiiicitEAB the newspaper ndver-
t iser
is sure of at least
FOt'r reader&tO / .* .
every copy of the paper
and they all read and heed _
ii1s ads.'
and that's why he
looks pleasant
and grows fat in the
hank account.
better call Up today
and have OUr
advertising manager
explain.
* 4%
Subscribe for th > Sun.
of us in,mist and fog like step-
ping-stones throwr^into the sea
by some great Titan who desired :
to wade across from the coast of 'i
Alaska to that of Siberia. _I..bare*'
Iy got a glimpse of one of tin so
in the early morning, and shiver-
ing with cold, felt a deep sympa-
thy for the lonely group of oper-
ators at Dutch Harbor whose
duty it is to reinforce wirelesR
messages that have not yet ac-
quired the nrt of leaping aeros*)'
the Pacific.' How dependent we
are upon the service of the many
heroic men .and women in this
world .who, unseen, are quietly
and "sometimes .unconsciously
weaving the fabric and strength-
ening the bonds of civilization.
—Bishop VY. R. Lambuth, ir.
(Nashville) Christian Advocate.
It is one thiug to work in the
white li<rht with the applause of
the multitude to cheer you. It is
altogether another thing to work
j in obscure places with the world
! all unconscious of your efforts or
Most laxatives nnd cathartics nffotd
d?jly lemporary relief and ihr.uld be us-
ed ofcly for tlwt purpuce. Wh.n
want permanent relief take Chuntier-
lnin'9 Tablets and be c ireful to observe
the directions with cach "these
tablets not only mow the tiowls, hut
improve"!he appetite nnd tttTiigtlKn the
di gist ion.
so excused.
Employment Prohibited.—No child under fourteen years ot age not lawfully
excused from attendance upon sehrfol shall be employed by any one during the
school hours in any occupation during the period which the child is required to be I world. bUG God knows w here
in school, as provided by this Act. Any person, firm or corporation found guilty I 11 ey arc atld what they do and
of employing oy child or any person inducing any child to remain out of schod jf they work in harmony with
who is subject to the provisions of this Act shall be fined not to exceed*ten dollars plans he will erowtl them vic-
for each offence, and each day th it said child is emJilbyed.after due notice pivt-n
by any school official that said child can not be legally employed shall constitute
a separate offence. _ % tian Advocate.
tors in that day.—Texas Chri:
*2
3
i
I-
Catnnla tirn ao/cl cxrery-
*rh*rt> in aci on tifica Hy a aaled
. packages of 30 ct/faretten or
«anpack«,1iw(.?00c/^arn<f 3)
in a glaaaine-papnr-covarod
carton. We atrongly rooo.Ti-
mend thie carton for tho
home or offloa aupply or
wifn you travel.
R. J. Rejrnoldi Tobacco Co.
Winatoa-SaleBH N. C.
CAMELS are in a class by themselves—easily the
most refreshing, the most likable cigarette yew
ever smoked. You can prove thatl Simply compare
Camels puff-by-puff with any cigarette in the world at
eny price t Fut quality, flavor and cigarette satis*
faction to thb utmost test!
Tj j * 1 • •
JIade to meet your taste, Camels never tiro it, no matter how .
liberally you smoke thorn f The expert bland of choice Turkish
and choice Domestic tobaccos makes Camels delightful—«o full-
bodied, yet so feEcinattngl^. smooth and mellow-mild. Ewry
time you light one yoiiCget^aew and keener enjoyment!
Freedom from any uiMeasant cigaretty aflef teste or any
unpleasant cigaretty odor makes cs unusual as tbey j
enjoyable. «
In fact, Camels appeal to the most fastidious svDoker in
«n?iny new ways you never will n*ss the absencc of
premiums or gifts. You'll prefer Camel Quality/
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Banger, J. E. A. & Erwin, W. L. The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 45, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 11, 1919, newspaper, November 11, 1919; Linden, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth341179/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Atlanta Public Library.