The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 26, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 24, 1924 Page: 1 of 8
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B4^ER & ERWIN, Pnblishers. >
Devoted to the best Interests of the 3?eople.
■<
Subscription, II OO Per Annan*
VOL. 49.
LINDEN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, JUNE 24. 1924.
NO. 2ii
■swags
jmreflli
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PROGRAM
:Farmers Short Course' and Pie-
nic, Hu<rhen Springs, July il7,
18, 19, 1921.
r w,
.j 11-
Thursday, July 17.
9:30—Devotional exercises led
by Rev. C. H. Collins.
9:45—Welcome address. Judge
Henderson, Linden. ,
10:00—Community singing
contest, and Corn guessing con-
test.
10:30—Sectional meetings: a.
(women) ''The Family Clothes
Line," Miss Sallie II1II, district
ngent, Home Demonstration
Work. b. (men) "Securing and
Maintaining Soil Fertility," 6.
W. Orms, district agent, A. & M.
College.
11.00—Old fiddlers' contest.
11:30—Poultry, Miss Myrtle
Murray, poultry specialist, A. &
M. College.
1:80—Sectional Meetings: a.
(women) Discussion of poultry
problems led by Mies Murray;
also egg show conducted by Miss
Murray, b. (men) Farm prob-
lems of East Texas, led Ivy visit-
ing county agent*.
2:30—Music,games and stunts.
3:09—Farmers' organizations.
T. O. Walton, Director Rxten-
'Sion Service, A. & M.
3:45—Songs und readings.
4:00 Cooperation between
town and country, S. E. Eber*
stadt, Sec. Bryan C. of C.
4:45—Awarding prizes.
7:30—Music and games.
8:00—Address, T. O. Walton.
8:30—"Le ad i n g, Following
and Getting There," Dr. F. M.
McConnell, Pres. Burleson Col
lege, Greenville.
9:00—Free show, amusemeuts.
Friday, July 18.
9:00—Devotional exercises, led
iby Rev. J. M. Kenna.
9:30—Community singing aud
amusements.
10:00—Community buildiug.S
yE. Eberstadt. ,
10:80—"Cultivating crops and
i brains," Dr. McConnell.
11:00—Entertainment.
11.15—Poultry, Miss Murray.
12:00—Awarding prizes in
corn guessing contest.
1:30—Sectional Meetings: a.
t (women) Milliuery, Mrs. Jim
Jett. b. (men) Scrub Bull Trial,
led by J. L. Thomas, W. R. Hoi-
8^y, M. R. Martin, R. E. Car Well
3:90—Music and games.
3:30—Sectional Meetings: a
(women) Tailored finishes in
clothing, Mrs. S. D. Murphree.U.
D. A., Titus county, b. (meu)
Soil Salvation, G. W. Orms.
4:00—Sectional Meetings: a.
((women) Farm home dairy prob
lems, J. L. Thomas, dairy spec
ialist, A. & M. b. (men) Terrac-
ing demonstration, M. R. Rent-
ley, Farm Engineering Specialist
A. & M. „
7:30—Music and games.
8:00—Short talks by local citi
zeus.
0:00— Free show, amusement.
Saturday, July 19.
Boys' and Girls' Day.
9:00—Devotional exercises, led
by Rev. G. K. Williams.
9:3')—Short talks by visiting
county aud home demonstation
agents. . .
10:00—Sectional Meetings: a.
(women) Millinery, Mrs. Jett. b.
(men) Dairying iu East Texas,
J. L, Thomas.
10:45—Entertainment.
11:00—Sectional Meetings: a.
(women) Home Improvement;
Kitchens, Miss Mary Kirby and
Mrs. J. W. Raird, Dallas Semi-
Weekly Farm News. b. (men)
Using Commercial Fertilizer for
Profit, J. C. Pridmore, Sbreve-
port. La.
1:30—Songs, yells and stunts
by club members.
2:30—Instructions to club
members, R. W. Persons, State
Club Agent.
3:00—Entertainment for club
members.
3:30—Sectional Meetings: a.
(women and gins) "The Family
Clothes Line," Mrs. S. D. Mur-
phree and Miss Sallie Hill. b.
(in^n and boys) "Increasing the
Acre Yield in East Texas,'* Dr.
J. N. Harper, Atlanta, Ga.
4:30—Closing exercises.
NOTICE.
No candidates having opposi-
tion will be placed on the pro-
gram. No discussion of politics
whatsoever will be allowed dur-
ing this short «o,urse.
POLLYANNA
COLYUM-
}
1186
Hello Folk*
Thf only
s o mo people
Imve for their
heads is to keep
their ears apart
Let me show you
something snappy,
*-aid a Linden sale-
man as he brought
forth the latest mo-
del of . garters.
Soap is cheaper thun dirt.
Nothing iu this vain world
seems to last forever except a
hoarding house towel.
My big brother's is so rough
he cleans his teeth with a steel
brush an' cuts his fingernails
with ru axe.
Calls that rough, does you?
Why, man, dut. ain't iiothin'. My
brother's so rough he shaves off
his whiskers twice a week with
a blow torch. %
Every kid knows about half
the licking he gets are just to
relive his parents' overwrought
nerves and not for anything es-
pecially bad he had done.
YOU MAY HAVE HEARD
THIS
"Go to father," she said when I
asked her to wed.
She knew that I knew that her
father was dead.
She knew that I knew what a life
be bad led.
She knew that I knew what she
meant when she said:
Go lo Father. '
It seems to he harder, says
Jack for an automobile owner to
get to church Lkau lor ,.a caaae]
to get through the eye of-a|
needle.
US TOO!
Making hominy, the great in-
door sport of our grandfathers, I
is again the fashion reports Sam
Like heans, prunes, carrots and
cauliflowers, hominy is supposed
to he nourishing, but danged if
we see it that wav.
Souse No. 1. Les go sbee
"The covered wagon."
Souse No. 2. Cau't we're
broke.
Souse No. 1. Thash alright.
I know the driver.
Simply because a man foots
the hills, says Kate, is no sign
that he is tbe head of the house.
IIow times change. When
Eve discovered she was naked,
she was ashamed.
Soon be wurin enough to wash
the tub out after you bathe*
If you walk a mile a day, you
will take a million footsteps a
year, hut what of it? asks John.
The objection to saying it with
flowers in love affairs, Fannie
says, is that the flowers get the
caressing.
Another unique and engross-
ing bobby for your spare time,
suggests Clarence, is minding
your own business.
JOSEPH MOMO and
THE poores
AT THE
RADCLIFFE CHAUTAUQUA.
The concert attractions of the
second day of the RadcliffeChau-
tauqua are of unusual merit in
their particular line of entertain-
ineufc. Joseph Motno, the cele-
brated "Accordion King," is an
attraction by himself, and would
make up a complete program.
But with Mr. Momo will be The
Poores, a Duo Extraordinary,
featuring their famous set of Or-
gan (.'billies. This day. therefore,
will be full and ruuniug over with
the most popular sort of enter-
tainment thiftt is found ou the
Chautauqua platform.
Joseph Momo deserves the title
of the "Accordion King." For
several years he has been in this
country, and has appeared be-
fore great musical organizations
as the solo artist. For two
seasons he has toured with the
Radcliffe Chautauqua, to the de-
light of every audience on his
circuits, for he is a reul musician
on bis chosen instrument. Tbe
big accordion itself is an attrac-
tion, but doubly so when you
bear the wonderful music whieb
cotnes from it when in tbe bands
of its master. Music of all sorts,
from the latest popular numbers
to tbe classics, swells from it like
from the pipes of an immense or.
gau, aud the ever popular stan-
dard overtures become more at-
tractive when played by Joseph
Momo, tbe "Accordion King."
Mr. aud Mrs. Murtell Poore
make up tbe splendid duo kuown
as^Tbe Poooes." Tbi* is a pair
of. Ukablfr, iri*ndly .Aud yr.arju
Hutchinson Bros.
SHRE REPORT
Announces Annual
JUNE SALE
OF NEW AND USED
PIANOS
Cable Nelson "Lakeside" Piano. worth $4®5
now $375> with duet bench to match•
USED PIANOS in PERFECT CONDITION
$90 AND UP-
Don't fail to investigate this sole if you are
interested in the purchase of a Piano-
BR UNS WICK PHONOGRAPHS
VICTOR V1CTROLAS ESTY ORGANS
Hutchinson Bros.
ESTABLISHED 1896
*
Shreveport, Louisiana
bearted musicians who are reul
artists. Their programs are full
of original readings and imper
sonations along with the music-
al numbers, making their offer-
ings unusually pleasing. Tbe
Poores will carry with them their
set of Organ Chimes, known
throughout the Chautauqua
field for tneir wonderful tone.
Altogether, this combination of
Joseph Momo, tbe "Accordion
King," and Tbe Poores is one
which is hard to surpass, and a
real treat is iu store for us on
the second day of the Radcliffe
Chautauqua. It will be in Lindeu
June 20 27 2.'3.
f
Old Folks'
Ailments
"I began taking Black-
Draught over fifty years ago
and my experience with it
stretches over a good long
time," says Mr. Joe A. Blake-
moro, a Civil War veteran
and former Virginian, who is
now a prominent citizen of
Floyd, Texas. "It is the best
laxative I know of for old
people... A good many years
ago, in Virginia. I used to
get bilious and I found that
Thedford's
BLACK-DRAUGHT
di was the beat and quickest re- IP
gjS lief I could get. Since I came fga
2$ to Texas I nave these bilious
TO attacks every now and then— SP
gg| a man will get bilious any-
where, you know—and I find iST
"M that a little Black-Draught PaP
^ soon straightens me out.
« After a few doses, in little or
no time I'm all right again."
|[jf Thedford's Black-Draught
gp§ is a purely ve err table liver §:«
medicine, used in America for f
AS over eighty yesri. It acts on ®#S
|8p the stomach, liver and bowels
in a gentle, natural way, as- S
sisting digestion and reliev-
ip ing constipation. Sold every-
Xh where.
1-102
The Right Time to Be Stingy.
There is just one time when we
believe a man is justified in being
downright stingy, a thorough-
going, unadulterated "tight-
wad," and that'is when be has
to buy on a "time prices" basis.
Better go half clad this year and
be able to pay cash next year,
rather thun wear good clothes
now and have to hand over ev-
erything you make to pay time-
price accounts. As the Sanford
Express suggests: "Most things
you go in debt for you can do
without. The next time you
want a uew hat, a coat, suit, or
a pair of shoes, do not buy it
unless you have the cash to pay
for it. You will thus save your
credit and at the same time ac-
quire a saving habit."
—The Progressive Farmer.
Crr IJay Chops at Right Time.
Let's not allow our hay cro, j-
to go to seed. It is well to re-
member that there is a wide dif-
ference between hay and straw.
When clovers, grasses, etc., are
in bloom, the elements that
make them of value as feed for
animals are soluble and distrib-
uted through the entire plant.
When the seeds begin to ripen,
however, then these element«
change t.heir forms—some con-
cent rate into tbe seeds, while t hn
greater bulk remains in tbe stem,
branch, leaf, and bark; a larye
part of it becomes woody fiber
and is not digestible.
A good rule to follow iu decid-
ing wbeu to cut grass and grniii
hays is to cut between full bloom
aud dough stages. Cut cowpea*
when the brut pods begin to ri-
pen and soybeans when pods aro
half growu. — Tbe Progressive
Farmer.
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See AUday £ &«ker for -yo.sr
tir*9 and tuhjbt*.v
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Banger, J. E. A. & Erwin, W. L. The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 26, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 24, 1924, newspaper, June 24, 1924; Linden, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth341339/m1/1/?q=music: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Atlanta Public Library.