The Panola Watchman. (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 42, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 28, 1913 Page: 1 of 8
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- I
gQhe pmola Tflatrljman.
“W» help Those Who Help U*, and TI;o*e Who Help l>« help Them velvet.*
CARTHAGE, PANOLA COUNTY. TEXAS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY IQIJ.
it will
Will HUMS HE ELEVEN MILUIN HIM
»B. FOB EEEDSTUFE.
SIDrKK
income,
grow bigger.
Spellman. Murray & Carr,
patent attorney*, 1717 Commerce
■treet, Dallas, Texas, announce
the issuance by the United States
patent office at Washington, D.
C„ of the following patents to
residents of Texas. Oklahoma,
Arizona and New Mexico for the
week ending May 24, 1913:
TEXAS:
James R. Brown, Pampa, Texas
adjustable window shade bracket.
Thomas S. Causey, assignor of
ono-twelfth to W. G. Dugan,
Arlington, Texas, composition of
matter to be introduced intp
inner tubes of penumatic tires
for rendering the tire puncture-
proof.
Morgan Davison. Almeda, Tex-
as, smoothing drag.
Elbert S. Dixon and H. E.
ONLY START! Bank and save one-third only of your j W«»er, Hou>ton’ Texa>- feed
If you begin to deposit one-third of your income it will ■ Louis F. Koniakowsky.Ellinger
Texas, store furniture.
rtf. „ , Arthur O. Knott, Johnson City,
Why? i Texas, funnel.
As you see the RESULT of vour labor (your bank ac-1 Joseph A.La Rue, Salmon, Tex-
The farmers of Texas do not
raise enough cereals and forage
crops for their own farm animals. i
They expend, according to a
recent census report issued by
the Federal Department of Com-
merce and Labor, $10,800,000 an-
nually for feed stuff! The of-
ficial figures show that twenty-
seven per cent of the farmers
buy feed.
Peter Radford, President of
the Farmers Union, in discussing
the subject, said: “A farmer
should, as a rule, raise his own
feed. While cotton is!our money
crop and the moisture require-1
ments of cotton and creals are in i
a measure antagonistic, and j
nature usually favors cotton, yet,
a farmed should plant enough
feed to take his stock through'
the Besson.”
The farmers of Panola county
expend $37182 annually for feed-1
stuffs. 949 of the farmers of I
count crow you’ll work harder nlease vour emidover and vourself “• sub soil irrigating implement. ■ thin county^ report purchase* of j
count grow > ju ii orxnaru.r, please your employer ana >ourseit James M. and B. T. Matsler,. feed-stuffs and the annual ex*
you see
the
togojSy'
credit
GROW
Springtime
Regeneration
better and increase your income—sure, sure, SURE.
Let OUR Bank be YOUR Bank
Chappel, Texas, mechanism for
signaling track conditions.
Levita.
penditure per farms reporting i«i
140.00. B y proper riiversifi-!
cation of crops this money can
lie kept at home.
Means a now lease cf life to you if you purge youi sys
tom of the accumulated impurities of winter. < lot your
blood in a good, puritied condition, so as to give your
organs renewed strength and vigor to throw off the
woato material. Wo carry In stock the very best blood
purifiers known. They are r< liable and have been
throuoghly tested, for at Hooker's pharmacy Vou are
always sure of receiving efficacious and pure drugs
and medicines.
Edwin B. Mayhew,
Texas, folding car step.
........... Joseph V. McMinis. Baird,
. Texas, and W. L. Sherwood, ' -
THE FIRST j^ATlOHJlL e.«i.ou«.
r . _ E. Seleste Moine, Tulia. Texas., Cards are out nnnoumcing the
tannage, • Texas camera attachment. marriage of Miss Mattie B
Alfred M. SipeB, Mobeetie, jj* rnenl>«rger to Mr. Grover
Hooker’s Drug Store
Carthage, Texas
A MARKETING PLAN.
Fort Worth, Texas, May.—I
want in this article to submit the
total storage capacity of 200,000 Watkins assignor! Hartt, Wednesday evening, June
bales,—with capacity increasing 0f one-half to N. C. Drum, Fort! ll'th. at 8 o’clock, at the First
marketing plans aa officially
adopted by the Farmers’ Union
to the city men and farmers as
daily—located at interier points
and we are building additional
warehouses as rapidly as we are
able to finance them. In addi-
tion there are many interior
points at which storage space is
Worth, Texas, and one-fourth to
J. A. Wisherd, Stanton, Neb.,
puncture closing compound.
OKLAHOMA:
Henry Stoffel, Tulsa, Okla.
trap holder.
NEW MEXICO:
Methodist church, Beckvilie,
Texas.
TEXAS INDUSTRIAL NOTES.
modern boon to the tiller of lha
I soil.
Wadding Invitation.
The W'atchman editor and fa-
_______________ mily beg to acknowledge receipt
well, for their consideration and secured. Our warehouses are William E. Thompson. Ranger 0f the following invitation:
co-operation. !IU&2lN^SM'SlS ^ * W
FARMERS’ UWON MABKET'NC > • ^ ^
,oipX'r.«:rr.rrei^“«■-fr?**.
the producer .he full bench,, of urice CL'ro™ U J!"”' ’ Y"“*’Thuroday. the fifth of June, nine-
It. advantages- As first aid the ' j„ tbja w warehouse TRAI.E MARKS: teen hundred "",l ^
farmer should have restored to | companies have declared divi-l John McBride. Phoenix. Ariz , thirty o clock, at th«tr residence, |
------- i (’uero—(ireat interests is being
Brownsville--Potatoes grown manifested throughout the mid-
in tho Brownsville section broke ' coast country over the meeting of
oil records for prices in the Un- jthe .VlidcohBt Industrial Congress,
ited States, it is claimed, when which convenes in this city Mey
local shippers marketed twenty- 27*28. The Cuero Commercial
five carloads at from $2 to $2.26! Club in conjunction with the
per bushel f. o. b. Brownsville1 Ladies' Civic League will enter-
during the season just closed. I t»in the v isitor#.
Tyler — The Commissioners' \ ——————
sociated in the handling of his
products. Many of the evils
that now beset the farmer will
him hi* independence takenfrom.dend$ oa inv„lment, |„
him by unnece...ry ,.v.rlciou.!manv jMUncel warehouaM are|
.nd l.wlw. Une. uf indu.trr ,,ui„ by r .ubroription of
the farmers for their use and no
storage charge is necessary cx-
. cept to take care of the expense
dl,appear when he I, free to die tinh (h, wareho#ta. We
hi. own ludamen. »>lilnK : „eomm«Dd «l.e building of w.r«-
No farmer, uni*,, compelled by, „ lhe int„ior w lhal
financial necessity or forced b, colton can ^ held at ,he
lack of facihtte. to hold hi. crop of DrDductjon unti, H|d and tbc
will roll cotton for 1«. than it |w>l oanker ca„ havc the fir3t
coet to produce it The Far- chanc, of finand„a th< cotton,
mers Union is in p<*ition to -
offer him money and a warehouse Mlaa Eunice Perktne Undergoes
to store his cotton until such ] *»» Operation,
time as he may choose to sell it. i Last week in Fort Worth Miss
warehouse system tEunice p*rk»n* undwwtnt an
operation for appendicitis, and a
We have unlimited storage ca- card ,rom Mra. p^kins Tuesday
pacity at the porta. *We now mornjng stated that Miss Eunice
have250or more Farmers’ Union . w|| doing nicely. We cerUinIy
warehouses with an estimated ; wj#jj nh« will aoon be well
, again.
Carthage, Texas. ’
Sixty Ytart th« Siaatotf
'DRf
VBSCEr
F CBEAM^
BU0NG
NUMI
A net tier New Car.
James T. Rountree received a
beaetifu) new four-cylinJer Max-
; well Roadster last Monday. This
is car No. 14 for Carthage.
4t ftsaMot
The County Superintendent
will meet with the patrons of
Pleasant RidgeScbool nextSatur-
day night at the school boose at
eight o’clock.
/•4adeUnker
H6id yoor order for baggies
eetil my ear arrives, which will
belwitbia the next few daya.
Rare the oetebmted Stadebaker. j
R. C. Tnshnr
T
WISE 111 If Mt Kill
V
T/irrc are Urn ua\js of saving your money—the
foolish way and the wise way. The foolish way
is to put it where fire, theft or other calamity
can take it from you in s second. The trtre way
is to put it in a bank of good standing like oura,
where It is taken care of in fire and burglar irrouf
vaults. Follow the example of the best busi-
ness men and farmers in this district—start an
account here at once—it is also the strmightett
road to success and wealth.
Coma in and taf u* talk it oarer.
THE FIRST STATE UNI
Guaranty Fund Bank
Court of Bmith county has been
petitioned to order an election on
Tueeday July 8 to vote upon the
laeuance of $.300,000 good roada
bonds.
Sweetwater—At a mass meet-
ing of citizens here recently the
i Swe«’twater Chamber of Commer-
: ce was organized with a member-
ship of ninetyone. Farmers in
1 the vicinity will be urged to be-
come members of the club ae it is
the deeire of the organization to
become allied ‘with the agricu!
tural and educational interest* of,
“A man died.” save the teach-
er, ‘‘leaving to hia eldest son one-
fourth of hit property, plus one-
tenth that of the share received
by the next son. who wan to re-
ceive one-fourth of the property,
plus one-twentieth of the share
received by the third son, who
waa to receive as much as the
other two received, lees one fifth
of the combined inheritances
How much did pach get?”
“Nothing,” promptly answers
I the thoughtful boy in the second
row. "The lawyers got it for
breaking the will.”—Ex.
rhe community. __
Dallae—The copy for the cat- j wPetoafcer Buggies,
aiogue of the Texas State Fair Hold your order for buggfe*
for 1913 ia in the hands of the until my car arrives, which will
printer end tbe publication will * be within the next* few days.
oc out some time in June. There Have the celebrated Studebaker.
are already on file at the State
Fair eflfioe application* from all
•ectiona of not alone tbe *‘Lone
Star” State but the United State*
and foreign countriea for hun-
dred* of copies of the catalogue.
Waco—Rapid progress is being
made in tbe construction of tbe
new steel bridge over tbe tirezoa
River for tbe Dallee-Weco Inter-
urban. The bridge will probably
be completed ahead of schedule
time.
Sen Angelo—Work oe the new
$10,000 Santa Fe roundbeuee
here is scheduled to commence
within a few days. Every mod* <
ern facility for handbag engines
will be iDetailed.
Btcsaiog—Within the past week
a loeal firm bee disposed of e
| fall earload of doe to the farmers
[ia the adjaeeat territory. The
with thafirj
ehoet t<*<Twslates *eehie wft*» »V*
R C. Traboe.
-“00
COME IN”
II
We have just received
a large tana pie book
from the Craek-a-Jark
Tailoring Co. “Do come
in” and let os At you
op. Will appreciate a
share of yoor cleaning
and pressing.
LEE RICH
■
vi
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Park, R. M. The Panola Watchman. (Carthage, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 42, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 28, 1913, newspaper, May 28, 1913; Carthage, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth885958/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sammy Brown Library.