The Cumby Rustler. (Cumby, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, March 17, 1911 Page: 1 of 8
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THE CUMBY RUSTLER
VOL. XIX.
CUMBY, TEXAS, FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1911
NO.
1911
1901
OFFICERS
J. A. BREWER, President
S. D. GREAVES, Vice President O. CURRIN, Asst. Cashier
R* W. HARRIS, Vice President R. A. GREAVES, Asst. Cashier
C. M. PATTON, Cashier
An Interloper
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The pessimist grumbles
That life doesn’t suit,
But still he hangs on
Like a pup to a root.
There should be a law
Made to stop his abuse,
On failing in that,
.fust to make him turn loose.
He. basks in the sunshine
And breathes the perfume
He sneers at and takes
Up a lot of good room
Another should have,
And lie revelleth in
Things the world should put by
For the man with a grin.
Courage.
T -4
“Little girlie with no dolly.
Has a heart that’s melancholy.”
Open a bank account now for each one of your
children. THEY’LL help you make it grow. This
will teach them the best life-lesson they can learn—
and YOU too.
• * * v "
DIRECTORS
R. w. HARRIS,
Hardware.
S. D. GREAVES,
V. Preside st
T. O. MARS,
Lewis & Mars.
<5. M. CGRBET,
CCRUET DRGS.
Gene. Mdse.
J. A. BREWER,
President
C. M. Sc. L. Co.
W. E CONNOR, M D
w. E. BREWER,
Genl. Mdse.
C. M. PATTON,
Cashier.
M
L e t OUR Bank Be YOUR Bank
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK, CUMBY, TEXAS
1901 1911
Phone 21 or 32 for anything to
eat. Johnny Graves has it.
-What to c >ok for dinner—ask
'him and stop your worry.
We’re
Shouting
quality
don’t
be,
turn it
your satisfaction. If
can’t, well tell you so
frankly.
Let Us Convince You
When luck is dead against
you. and everything looks black,
it does no good to falter or turn
upon your track; it does no good
bewailing the errors you have
made, or counting all ihi in
which your feet have strayed; it
does no good insisting that others
jyere at fault, for he who blames
bis comrades is hardly worth his
salt; and weeping never helps
you, or makes the way less
rough, for tears are only water,
f»d watei’s washy stuff. Brace
up, O weary pilgrim; brace up
and be a man! Though fortune
slowly swats you, do still the
best you can. Dame fortune
often tests us, to see how
high we stack, and if she sees us
weeping, or turning on the track
she sadly says; “Those pilgrims
re bargain counter goods; it’s
ot worth while to show them
sthe pathway from the woods!!’
jgmm b’4*» if-Jge_- meet-affliction,
fflpcftrrage bold and high, she
guides us to the valley where
here possessions lie. So do not
weep cr languish when life seems
void of hope, for tears* are only
water, and water’s flimsy dope.
— Walt Mason.
You will find three bank state-
ments in this issue and all are
in a prosperous and healthy
condition. The Camby banks
are meeting the wants and needs
of the people and business men
in every way. The new bank at
Brashear is starting out well and
makes a splendid showing in this
statement, the first. Brashear
people are appreciating the con-
venience of a home bank and
are giving it their unqualified
support. They will doon be
fully installed intheir new home
with furniture and fixtures con-
venient for the pleasant trans-
action of busines.
Small Deposits Wanted ^
We encourage them because many
large accounts began in a'smali way.
The small depositor of today becomes the
large one of the future. More people
would be bank depositors if they realized
how it would help in building their credit
and their success.
Opening a checking account here is the
first step towards financial growth.
Start now and follow in the footsteps of
the successful people who do business at
this bank.
No depositor ever lost a penny in a State
Bank.
GUARANTY FUND BANK
CUMBY STATE BANKS
T. C. Mara, President.
C. A. Bridges, Cashier
W. E. Hull, Vice Pres.
B. S. Branom, Asst. Cashier
That Spring Suit
PAINT YOUR HOME
With Pleasing Colors
With our experience we can be of service to you
ing tasteful color schemes and combinations that will
home appear to best advantage in its surroundings.
in suggest-
make youi
ACME QUALITY
House Paint
give« greatest durability and beauty and b3st resists ram an t shine
It costs less because it takes less and lasts longer. Cj% iu aad
ask us to show you harmon zing color suggestions.
A Richer, Strike.
“Is ft true that Maude refused a
amati worth a millionV’
“It is.”
“Was she crazy or in love?”
“Neither. She accepted a man worth
millions.”— Boston Transcript.
Dodging Indigestion.
Hoax—Siilicus was engaged to an
freiress. I wonder why he broke it off?
JToax—He had an attack of indigestion,
and the doctor told him to afoid all
srlcb things.— Philadelphia Record.
BERRY BROS
Have you seen that new
assortment of Pure Lin-
en Lace? Worth up to
ioc, for sc a yard, at
'Lewis & Mars.
j I have some good milk cows
sa*e* O. B. Jenkins.
How :abju a pairj of
good Work Shoes? See
Denton.
Lewis & Mars have tin
correct fabrics in Spring
and Summer Dress Goods.
Texas is the only state in the
Union where the farmers, this
year, will be paid for their work
in raising big crops of corn and
cotton. Write to the Texas In-
dustrial Congress, at Dallas for
the particulars of the $10,000
pr ze offer. Entries will not be
received after April 1st.
Some boy or girl will receive
$1,000 in cash next fail for the
best yields from four acres of
com or cotton, and the crop at a j
big premium for seed. If you;
fail to win the first prize there
are thirteen others, ranging from
$100 to $750, one of which jrou
may win. Write to the Texas
Industrial Congress an Dallas
about this, and do it today, as it
will be too late after Aoril 1st.
C.W
CLOTHES,
The Man Who
Appreciates
QUALITY
the discrimating
buyer is the man to
whom we like to show
** '
*- •<*
OUR
CLOTHING
An inspection of
our new Spring styles
will prove of benefit
to you whether you
buy or not. It will at
least show you that
nowhere are better
values found that here
/ !
mation before April 1st. After
that date it will be too late to
enter the contest, > i
*|
You will always find
the latest novelties in j
Gents furnishings at Bo
lin’s.
A Pair of Impossibles.
Assurance Doubly Sure.
“Do you think any one man could
ever read all the new books?”
“No more than could any one iuan
drink all the liquors that are distilled.”
i<>,50d, divided into 15 cash
prizes, will be awarded this fall
to the farmers of Texas who
feet tire the be<t yields of corn
and cotton on 20 acre-. There)
ire no fees or charges for enter-
ing the contest and the Tex ts |
Industrial Congress at Dallas
vi!I give you alC details of the ! dork and the dog's blanket
dfer. if you will write /or infor-T
Spiteful.
“Why do you hate him?”
“lie has been knocking me to the
gar I ! go with.”
“What did he- toil her?”
“Wlmt my s.ihvry is.”—Houston Post.
•s ' •
“Y- ti have returned from abroad, but 1 i ~
I don’t see any foreign checks on ypur i r-, , , Dense*
” f | I-lobos—Vv hen she w asn t looking l
"LV my wife pinned ,!„■ n on Lor | “s^d C gb0
Blobbs—Refused fo look at me for the
rest of the evealfm.—Philadelphia Rec-
ord.
I
jikiya
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Morton, George M. The Cumby Rustler. (Cumby, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, March 17, 1911, newspaper, March 17, 1911; Cumby, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth770153/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.