The Plano Star-Courier (Plano, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, January 30, 1920 Page: 3 of 8
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Y.ti w!i» >»u kar il.
You uft arktn >•« a>« il.
IIICHEST
QUAIJTY
HIGHEST
\ AWARDS
II? '’■■tiz/h
11* to tcni and strengthen
the organs of (digestion and
elimination, improve appet’tu,
elimination, improve appetHe,
stop sick headaches, relievo bil-
iousness, correct constipation.
They act promptly, pleasantly,
mildly, yst thoroughly.
Tomorrow Alright
"'****4.
HW"
KANSAS CITY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
ATES PER $1000 OROI-
RY LIFE FROM 15 to 60
YEARS OF AGE
Condensed Annual Statement, December 31, 1019
Resources
Liabilities
RATES PER $1000 20 PAY-
MENT LIFE FROM 15 to 60
YEARS OF AGE
E RATE
............. $13.06
...........,\____ 13.30
................... 13.5b
.......... 13.86
9 ............. 14.15
........ 14.46
............. 14.79
.................. 15.14
................... 15.50
24 .................... 15.87
25 .................... 16.27
26 .................... 16.03
27 .................... 17.12
28 .................... 17.6b
29 .................... 18.06
30 .....i.............. 18.57
31 ....... 19.11
32 .;.................. 19.68
33 .................... 20.Z8
34 . ................... 20.09
35 .................... 21.53
36 .................... 22.29
37 .................... 23.05
38 .................... 23.05
39 ...........*......... 24.09
40 .................... 25.59
41 .................... 26.53
42 .................... 27.50
43 .................... 28. Od
44 .................... 29.73
45 .................... . 30.93
46 .................... 32.19
47 .................... 33.69
48 .................... 35.16
49 , .».................. 36.74
50 .................... 38 12
51 .................... 40.20
52 .................... 42.1 r
53 .................... 44.16
54 ......‘............; . 46.33
55 ..... 48.65
56 .................... 51.31
57 .................... 53.7a
.................... 56.63
59 .................... 59.67
60 .................... 62.92
First Mortgage Real Estate Loans.................
Bonds (Government, School and Municipal) ........
Loans to Policyholders (Policy as Collateral) .....
Cash • n Banks and Time Certificates of Deposit ...
Book Value of Real Estate Owned ...............
Bank Slocks Owned........ ■<........... ........
Agents’ Balances, Debit $12,370.27, Credit $5,584.28
Accrued Interest on Investments ...............
Premiums in Course of Collection and Deferred
Loans Secured by Collateral ......................
Bills Receivable .................................
Total Resources ............................
.$ 8,018,100.88
1,632.696.35
1,569.421.31
1 503,032.58
166.513.45
7.640.00
6,785.44
265.750.64
628,984.58
71250
._ 491.72
$13,800,1 )9 in
Legal Reserve ..........................
Reported Death Claims ..................
Fresent Value of Annuities and Installments
Interest Paid in Advance.............
Set As de for 1920 Taxes..............
Unpiid Bills and Accounts...... . ...
Surplus Assigned for Policy Dividends
Surpius UnaFsigned ...... ... .....
Capital Stock ......................
Surplus to Protect Policyholders
$11,948,492.65
134,616.69
80,970.80
29,458.09
85,000 00
15,231.63
$1,097,363.97
158,016.18
200,000.00-
$1,455,380.15
Deduct
Bills Receivable ...........................................$ 491.72
Agents' Balances ......................................... 12,370.72
Loans in Excess of Reserve .....................’......... 38,127.00—
Amount Deduction ...........................................
Net Resources .................................................
__ 50,989.44
. $ 13*749,150.6!
Net Liabilities and Surplus
$13,749,150.01
New business issued and paid for in 1919, $62,760,042.00.
New business issued and paid for in Texas during 1919, $12,120,399.00.
Paid for insurance in Force $182, 515,645.00.
Paid for insurance in Texas, $40,224,067.00.
The Company’s liberal low rate on Non-participating Total Disability and Double Indemnity Policies make a good investment.
The 20 Payment Lii’e Guaranteed Addition Double Indemnity Policy is the best contract for a young 'man that is written by
any Company.
All policies have liberal cash or loan values, paid up insurance and extended insurance after three years.
If you are in debt on your farm or otherwise, then you should carry enough Legal Reserve Life Insurance to meet your indebt-
nass and leave no burden on your family when you are gone.
If you have an estate of $50,000 or more, then your estate is subject to the Federal Inheritance Tax and must be paid in cash
at your death and you should protect this with a Legal Reserve Life Insurance Policy. The Kansas City Life writes a special
policy for this purpose at the least possible outlay in the way of premium.
If your boy is 15 years of age or more then buy him a Saving Deposit Policy and teach him thrift.
I want to meet and talk Insurance with you whether you buy or not.
SEE ME BEFORE YOU BUY
J. E. B00K0UT, Agent.
AGE
RATE
15 ........
.......$21.17
16 ..........
.......21.47
17 .......
21.80
18 .......
........22.13
1Q .....
......... 22.48
PO
.......... 22.86
21 .........
.......... 23.21
22
.......... 23.60
23 ..........
.........24.10
24 ........
.......... 24.44
25 .........
26
.......... 25.32
27 ........
.......... 25.80
28 ..........
......... 26.28
29 ....
.......... 26.80
30
.......... 27.32
31 ...........
.......... 27.88
32........
......... 28.40
33
...... 29.05
34 .........
......... 29 68
35 ...........
.....30.33
36 ...........
31.02
37 .
......... 31.74
38
........ 32.49
39 .........
......... 33.27
10
. . 34.09
41 ...........
...... 34.97
42 ...........
35.81
43 ...........
36.84
44 ...........
........ 37.86
45 .
38.44
46 ...........
40.07
.» T
41.29
48 ...........
42.58
49 ...........
42.96
50 .........
45.38
51 ...........
46.9C
52 ...........
48 5«
53 ...........
50.31
54 ...........
52.1/
55 ...........
....... 54.18
56 ...........
56.82
57 ...........
......... 58 62
58........
61.08
59 ..........
60.......
......... 66 61
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Roosevelt’s Views Talking Machine
On Coinage Motto Goes Into Politics
X
S TRA01 fllGISTLKU) MARK
FOR SALE
SALK E. J. Reefer's “More
" 'I onic. Makes layers out of
i'%l s A monej back guarantee if
ty.'RWIVd. MRS. Z. <;. PERRY.
l’olilieal workers will have opporlu
FOR SALE 10o Singh (’mill) White
Leghorn hens. Rest laying strains.
A. D. HOLMES, Plano.
M EBA NE ('OTTC) N A KKI >
tor sale another ■ ar of genuine Mebane
Cotton Seed. (’. M. STI AKT.
In God We Trust,” on United Stales
i coins, is afforded in an article in
' i tie December Scribner's by Joseph
| Dunklin Bishop, llie former presi-
I will have | dent’s biographer.
A letter written by Mr. Roo^velt
'on Nov. 11, 1907, to a clergyman who
- - had dil’feered with him about placing
CORD WOOD FOR SALIC Oak, Mea-jihe motto on llie coins, read:
quite and I ine. A. .1. KIES IO, Nava-! "When the question of the new
sot a, I exas. coinage came up we looku ■ into the
■ — law and found there was no warrant
WANTED J therein tor pulling ‘In God We
WANTED- A good used saddle. Phone Trust' on the coins. As llie custom,
in^ explanation' of' Colonel Roosevelt's 11''• ‘‘I!”*["1. "!?"?"•
objection to the use of the phrast
ferent voter during the presidential
campaign through the « mployment of a
new and unique political instrument)
through which lthe important issues
may he carried to the homes. The
National committee have invoked (lie
use of talking; machines for all manner
ol gatherings reproducing the living
voices of notable authorities upon the
pariieular subjects on which they will
discourse.
Pastors-Workers
of Baptists to Meet
Tell Why They
Want the Ex-Kaiser
iLTQAyUlD},’
MISCELLANEOUS
WE will pay a straight salary $35.00
per week and expenses to man or wom-
an with rig to introduce Poultry M.'x
lure. EUREKA MFC. CO., East St.
Louis. III.
FARM RENT CONTRACTS FOR
SALK - A form that covers every im-
aginable condition of farm rent agree-
ment, with acknowledgement (hat pro due to my very firm conviction ihai
vides for filing in Ihe county clerk’s *° l’ul suc*1 a mo,,°
although without legal warrant, hau
grown up, however, 1 uiighl have fell
at liberty to keep the inscription had
i approved of its being on the coinage.
But as 1 did not approve of it, i did
not direct that it again be put on. (>l
course, Ihe mutter of (lie law is ah
soluleiy in the hands of Congress, and
any direction of Congress in the mat-
ter will be immediately obeyed. Ai
present, as 1 have said, there is no
warrant in law for the inscription.
"My own l'eling in the matter is
office if desired. Ten cents per copy.
Three copies 25c. Three dollar’s per
hundred. On hand and sold by STAR-
COURIER, Plano.
on coins or to
use it in any kindred manner, not only
does no good, bui does positive harm,
and is irreverence which comes dan
gorou.'dy close to sacrilege.
“A beautiful and solemn semen'1
such as ihe one in question shouT"'
These talks will be five minute ad-
dresses on the big issues of ihe cam
paign so recorded as to be capable of
reproduction on any standard talking
machine with great clarity and in such
volume'as to be adaptable for use in
ihe home or any gathering.
By ihe Democrats one such talk
will in prepared and sent broadcast
each month, commencing on Septem-
ber I and continuing throughout the
campaign. The opening gun will tie
fire4 by I'nited Slates Attorney Gen
oral A. Mitchell Palmer on September
1. Other talks have already been
scheduled by President W oodrow Wil
son, Vice-President Marshall, Secretary
>. wlon I>. Baker. Secretary Josephus
Daniels, former Speaker Champ Clark,
William G. McAdoo, James Hamilton
Lewis. William J. Bryan and a number
ot olliers, including Ihe next presiden-
tial nominee whoever he may be.
The Republicans will have Senator
IL nry Cabot Lodge and oilier notables,
i nited Suites Senators Hiram W.
mmmim
treated and uttered only with that fine Johnson, Wiliam E. Borah, Warren G.
reverence which necessarily implies a Harding, Philander ('. Knox. Major
ei Dain exaltation ol spirit. Any use General Leonard Wood, Speaker Gil
which ta nds to cheapen it. and above lotte ol the House of Representatives,
all, an., use which lends to secure its Governor Lowden, of Illinois, formei
ing treated in a spirit, ot a Senators Ohauncey M. Depew and
from every standpoint profoundly to : Klihu Root, Justice Hughes and an ar
be regretted. ; ray of others,
“It is a motto which it is indeed
well to have inscribed upon our great U
National monuments, in our temples;
ol justice, in our legislative halls, ami |
It <s a powerful and scientific
combination of sulphur and other
healing agents for the relief and
cure of diseases of the skin. It
is especially effective in the
ITCHING VARIETIES; giving
instant relief from the itching
and smarting sensations and by
its germ-destroying properties it
exterminates the microbe which
is the cause of the eruption, thus
curing the disease completely.
Littell’s Liquid Sulphur Com-
pound is used in all cases of Ec-
zema, Tetter, Barber's Itch, Pso-
riasis, Herpes, Rash, Oak and
Ivy Poisoning, also for relieving
the annoyance caused by chig-
gers and mosquito bites.
In the treatment of ECZEMA
-the most painful and obstinate
of all skin diseases—it is one of
the most successful remedies
known.
llie < nil in county Baptist Paslois Paris, Jan. IS Tin* supreme conn
and Workers Conference will he held Cj,-H no(e 0, ,lt(. Dutch Government
al tlie I1 irsl Baptist church ol MeKin asking Ihai Ihe formei German Km j
ney, on Monday, February 2 Following pomi |„. K|Veri up to the allien undei !
is the program. | Article 227 ot the Versailles treaty, loi !
1,1 '(l Devotional. Rev God trial, points nut that if the funnel Km
ilanl, pastoi Allen Baptist church i peror had remained In Germany u>
Id.JU to 10.50 a. m Enlist ing j would have been delivered up under!
men in Sunday school, by Piol \\ . S die same conditions by the German
Smith, teacher ol Men’s Bible ('lass.! Government
l iisi Baptist church. McKinney. "Among so many crimes,” the note
10 -.0 to 11 . JO a 10 Enlisting men , , Ihe “cynical violation ol Ihe
in mid week prayer service, Re\ It. E. neutrality of Belgium and Luxemburg,
< .orneliuH, pastoi first Baptist eliurch, die barbarous system of hostages, n>««
f at met sy die. and Rev. I. < . < ampin-ll, H,,(j deportations, systematic devusia
pastio Melissa Baptist chinch. don without military reasons. Ihe sub
' I • ”0 lo 12-15 Enlisting men lot marine war," and declines “lot all oi
lie betteiment ol church llnances, by 'which acts responsibility, at least mur
Di. G E. Isles, pastoi first Baptist ;l| reaches the supreme chicl who or
‘hoi Hi, McKinney, also loiind table dered them oi utilised Ids unlimited
discussion led by Di. Yales 1 powers to break oi permit others to
1,1 * 0 m. Dlnnet served tin* most sacred rules ol human
by ladles of Ihe church in dining hall conscience “
l..,n to 2.15 p. m Meeting ol tile “The powers can not conceive,” it
Executive IloRid. adds, "that tin* Netherlands would
_.la to .,15 p. m Enlisting men |,.(.!(),| with less reprobation than1
in Missions, by Lev. O. E Smith, pas diernsel ves the immense i espofi ability
|(>i f its) Baptist chinch, Nevada, weighing upon Ihe ex Kmpcrot Hoi
lion nil table discussion led by Rev |am, wmll), nol b)> r„|,min.. bet Inter
by
Small size SO cents bollle, largo the $1.00
JAMES F. BALLARD, Prop. St. Louis, MO. 3
Get a
25c. Box
ALLEN BROS., Druggists.
in
in buildings such as those al West
Point and Annapolis-—In short, wher
ever il w ill tend to arouse and inspire
a lolly emotion in those, who look
thereon. But ii seems to me eminent
ly unwise to cheapen such a motto
by use on coins, just as it would be
to cheapen it by use on postage stamps
or in advertisements.”
Among the 150,000 letters written
by Got. Roosevelt during his public
career, Mr. Bishop said im found a
number from Rudyard Kipling, wi’ir-
itn in that famous author's charac-
teristic way
I Am the Printing
Press/' He Sings
T he Plumb Plan
With Reservations
' SmitIi
3:J5 to 1:00 p. m. Address by Rev.
!i)avid if, Hill, Sunday school and H.
Y P. I secretary and missionary of
Collin County Baptist Association
Ladies Meeting
1:30 to 2 p. m Dovotinal, led
Mrs E E. King.
Special Music.
Roll Call.
Reading of Kecomuiendations, .Mrs
Waller Howell
Echoes from Convention, Mis: John
nie Swan
Our Young People, Mrs. \
Bryant
Deepening of the Spiritual Life, Mrs
A J Seale.
OBITUARY
—-
T®m=N©=M<o)]pe
THE SKIN BEAUT1FIER *
> Protects
Cleanses
ksp
“! am ihe printing press, born of tin
mot.h< r earth. My heart is of steel, my
limbs are of iron, my fingers are of
brass.
•"I sing Ihe songs of llie world, the
! oratorios ol history, the symphonies
j of all time.
1 am the voice of today, Ihe herald
of tomorrow. I weave inlo the warp
of ihe pas! ihe woof of the future. I
tell stories of peace and war alike,
j “1 make the human heart beal with
that is, in the tiniest passion or tenderness. I stir, the pulse
| pi nations, and make brave men on
written in 1908 tl;| ibraver deeds, and soldiers die.
"I inspire the midnight toiler, weary
il
chirography.
in a lettei
Colonel said:
‘"Great Heart' is my favorite char- at tiis loom, to* lift lis head again arm
actor in allegory, just as Pilgrim s I gaze, with fearlessness, into the vas.
Progress' is to my mind one of tin1 j beyond, seeking the consolation oi
greatest books that was ever written ' hope eternal.
and I think that Abraham Lincoln is When I .-peak a myriad people lis-
The non-partisan league convention
at Pierre endorse!d Ihe "Plumb [dan"
for conducting the railroads. As we
understand this, it provides for a com-
mittee of three railroad employes, three
owners of the roads, and three bus!
r.ess men represent in the users ol
transportation, to run the roads. The
experiment could easily be tried out in
Big Stone township. Let. the farm-:
there be concluded by a committee
consisting of three owners, say W. D
Hall, Emil Gerhardt and R V\ Casler.
three farm hands to be se lected by the
farm hands of the township, and three
farm produce consumers, say a street
ciir conductor, a switchman and a dry
goods clerk from Minneapolis. If this
works out well, we indorse the Plumb
plan. loo. Bin Stone- (S. 1 >.) Head
light.
Improves
Beauty, even skin deep, should
be protected and improved. Tan-
No-More. the ideal face perparation,
does both. It. is a sure protection
against the beaming nun or blister-
ing wind, and at tVe same time
helps rebuild tissuet It brings to
the Bkin that velvety softness of
youth.
Applied to the fare before going
Into the open, Tan-No-More insures
full protection against the elements.
Used before going out in the even-
ing, it assures a faultless complex-
ion. Thousands of testimonials de-
clare Tan-No-More is superior.
You can have a clear, smooth, at-
tractive skin by using this guaran-
InhH KoomGO _ r* » f . /. dr
lag. At toilet counters 35c, 50c
and $1. Tints, white and flesh.
Baker-Wheeler Manufacturing Co.
T>A.I.|.a •» TUT A m
the ideal 'Great Heart’ of public life.'
He returned to this idea about Lin-
coln from time to time, a fact which
explains the origin of Kipling's me-
morial poem entilled "Great Heart,
written when the Colonel died.
Col. Roosevelts' admiration for the
I great emancipator was also show n in
a letter w ihch he wrote on March 9, j
1905, a few days after his inaugura l
tion, to Sir George Trevelyan, the Eng .
lisli historian and nephew of Macaulay, j
in which the Colonel said:
“Ii has been peculiarly pleasant to|
me to find that my supporters •>'-
ten to my voice. The Anglo-Saxon,
the Cell, the Hun, tlie* Kla\, the Hindu,
all comprehend me.
“ I fill the dullard's mind with
thoughts uplifting. 1 am light, know
ledge and power. I epitomize the con
quest of mind over matter.
I am the record of all things mac
kind lia.s achieved. My offspring
come to you in ihe candle's glow, arm ,
the dim lamps of poverty, the splendoi
of riches: al sunrise, at high noon, and
in the waning evening.
“I am the laughtec,and tears of tin*
world, and 1 shall never die until ajt
the overwhelming\Tbings return to the immutable dust.
' I am Ihe printing press."
The above timely gem of though!
NO GREAT ACT OF HEROISM
REQUIRED
if some great act of heroism was
necessary to protect a child from
croup, no moMii r would lu-siiat • to
protect her oflsprim.1. but when d is
only nece-;-ai > lo s«*ep at hand a bor
tie of Chamberlain'-. Cough Remedy
and give ii as soon as the first indica-
tion of croup appeals, there are many
v. ho neglect ii. Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy i- within tin- ie-ieli of all anil
is prompt and effectual.
Mrs Elizabeth ileus) is, widow of
Henry Houstis, one of the oldest clti-
zens ot Collin county, passed quietly
away al her home In southwest Collin
at 4:30 Sunday morning, January 25,
after a long period of declining health
While her death was expected by h*p
family and friends, ii brought sorrow
and rogretH to all.
Funeral services were conducted ar
Baccus cemetery where she was laid
to rest.
Mrs. Heustis was born in Green
county, 111., January 23. ik2!t, and was
91 years and two days old at the time
ol her death.
She came to Texas with her parents,
Mr and Mrs Henry Cook, in 1K46 and
aetHeri on the farm on which she has
lived until death called her home
She was married to' Henry Heuslls
in 1858. Five children were born lo
this union, three of whom survive
Airs. G T. Rurcell, ot Myra, Texas,
Mrs. G R. Bishop, ot Celina and Mrs
G. L. Bishop, of Plano: with whom she
lived. Two having died in infancy
She is also survived by sixteen grand
children, and one sister, Mrs. Sarah I
Dudley, of I’lano She lias two de
ceased brothers, and two sisters.
Daniel and Lewis Cook, Mrs. Jno.
Marlin and Mrs Rachael Baccus
She joined the Liberty Baptist
chilli h in 185b. which wa- organized
at hci lather's house the same year
She remained a member
national duly if she refused lo asso
(date herself with othei nations so far'
as she is able lo prosecute oi al least
nol Impede Hie punishment ot criinr.ni
committed."
The note points mil that il is Im
duty ot the powers lo insure execution1
of Article 227 without entering Into
argument because "II is not a question
of public accusal ion having through
oui a legal character', but an a< i oi
high international policy Imposed by
the universal conscience in which leg
al forms are employed solely to insure:
the accused body ol guarantees such as
have hitherto been unknown in publh \
law.”
It concludes hy expressing the con
victlon that, Holland, one ol the first j
to claim a place In the League of N'a
tions, will not desire to (over by moral j
authority violation of the essential!
principles of the solidarity ot nations
and that all are Interested to proven*
a return of a similar catastrophe
Paris Churchmen
Tackle Tough Job
The church crusade
Baris. Jan 1
against short skirts and low neck '
, , 1 Teparedness applies fo Hie bnniaa
gowns continues A notice posted on . „ .. . . . ...
' . : beiiy as well as to nations. A botti*
the door ol one raids house ol worship j
reads
. *4 J’ricklv Ash Bitters on Ihe shelf at
No women will be allowed to attend * ?!
.. , f jucyaiedne loi indigestion. eonsl.i
in tiie church whose dresses , , , , , . i , i, , ,. .
pillion and kidney troubles. It is tka
dose taken in lime that wards oil sick
ness valid saves money. Frlct $1.25 get
hoi He ALLEN BROS., Special
gefl 11 .
and whose,
I eji st. to J
service
jure cut low in the nock
j skirl , do not reach
I their ankles.”
Scathing sermons on the subject
j have been delivered in t’ai^’ churches
for some firm One Priest refused lo
conduct Hie marriage service for Hie
; bride whose dress, in his opinion,
i showed to great a length of silk stock
j ing and which was cut in such a way
possibly to make it suitable for
•vening weai and certainly not filled
tor a church " The wedding wa po*.
polled Probably this was llie first or
'Hslon of the postponement ol a mat
1 iage ceremony for such a reason.
Parisian women say that this mea
PGA
Bpv
Kg’
The
thought
old-fashioned womaa wka
the only way to be good wa# la
lick .urcnid borne now has a danffhrar
wiio Hun1. Hie only way to »• happy
is lo i rot .'round town.
to be found among
majority whom Abraham Lincoln call I
ed Ihe 'plain people.' As I suppose
hero He "as taken from a card sent out wifn
I the compliments of Saults A- Pollard.
you know.
Lincoln is
.. 0 . Vr, nnet
V\ ilh it man ut • n* p‘ ‘G
felt with and for the people, but
had not the slightest touch of
who
the
Ltd., Winnipeg. Canada. It carries .«
lesson of li!e and cheer to the printer
and emphasizes the enduring vitality
Ot 1 IIP |M P>.1.
class
Heartburn, indigestion or distress of
the stomach is imsiantiy relieved by
Herbine. It forced the badly digested
food out of the body and restores tom-
in the stomach and bowels SolrJ by
BROS.. Druggists-
'he
job
< eurier
for
first
pt inUDg
AX.LEN
A West Dallas Widow says the lalesi
proposal she has received was from
Oak Cliff art student who said li<- wa.-
painting Hie picturi1 of a s«-a nymph
land wanted a wife who would pose for
him in the Trinity River.
Gus Shufib r, who
sold his
far.n
south of the city .t
f**u' vv#‘fks a#o, iw
riretisrinc '/> mnvi
. Minimi WHI*
H*- Will *liip i ;,.I
u: ‘-ho1(l kocj !
is to
morrow .tnd h> end
hi family
v|M*rf
to leave Monday. 1
fl<* h'l- bony
ht a
truck tann near ilia'
my, and wi
II *4n
gage in dairying. t rip
•k farming an
*! tftf
poultry husin* !- . 1
IValf**! Karl:
►*f of
Forney, Texas, w ho
iioughf Mr
Shuf
fler’H farm will nun
'f* U> tin* j*la
o as
soon a Mr. Shuffb-i
W'HViS. lie
paid
$28,009 fot the farm,
ronsiating o
f 100
lire, if generally enforced, would corn-
rd that' ,4V,‘ry wo,ni,n worahiper to have n
church until her death, having belong j t'1 w,,-m to ( Dmcli
(•(1 to a Baptist church in Collin county;
69 years, longci Hian any one m t Lie* cp i . oil*
e-oum> a friend 1 uoercuiarooldiers
Avoid irregularity in Hi* bowel
movements, it leads to chronic < ••
-t.ipation a condition that poison* tk*
blood and breeds diseues. Prickly Ask
Miller-, is a man's remedy for puttiag
the .stem in order. Price $1.25 per
bottle. ALLEN BROS., Special
Agents
ft ni v Hacking cough is hard on iiic
lungs, often causing them to bleed
Ballard's Horchound Syrup is a healing
I f\ Ra f ’<i rrul
* o Ayv VUIUU X V /1
Sometimes a girl [mis on so muck
rouge her beau leaves her hous^ look
1 ing llk«- In- bad hii into a niHpberrV pie
f
Hu lung' and ail passag*
ALLEN BROS , Druggist i
Foi su k headache, backache, beart-
ikurn. nervous weakness and constipe
lion. Pricklv Ash Bitters is the ren»*4*
tl»'t men use. |i purifies the bowels,
Himes Hie stomach, clears ihe brain.
McKinney. Texas, Jan. 28, T ('.
Sold hy|Anrt,f’W8' °f ,hlK ,l,Vl a,ul ,jr ,u‘n F
Largent, commander ol the local [wist
■ ol the American Legion, are receiving j sweetens the breath, restores eaei'gy
contributions lot Hie Benevolent War * am (lieerl'ulness. Price $1 25 p*| b*t-
K was ail right to make a Secretary[ Risk Society with which, to erect a* He ALLEN BROS., Special Ageata
of Hie Treasury out of the head of large hospital to care lor fuberculars
Ihe Agricultural De[iartrnent The among the returned seir-vice men Col
mers have got most of the treasure.) 1 in county is asked to contribute $7 621
Let
charge vour battery.
HARRINGTON MOTOR CO.
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The Plano Star-Courier (Plano, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, January 30, 1920, newspaper, January 30, 1920; Plano, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth570346/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Collin County Genealogical Society.