The Bonham News (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 100, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 8, 1913 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Fannin County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Bonham Public Library.
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MOTES
NDERTAKINGWvb^k
T T-TonHI* a Comnlete Line of --- • A -
I Handle a Complete Line of
*
Caskets, Coffins and Burial Robes
HILIP WISE
o teamsSewinc Machines
ANTE D
EACH DAY
Wt will appreciate the patronage
all who come to Bonham.
KING’S, WAGON YARD
old stand of L. M. M^ers
Lead
REPAIRED BY
PHIL JAG («
ILL CIVE YOU PERFEC1
SATISFACTION
I SUPPLY NEEDLES, OIL, BELTS &
PARTS FOR ALL KINDS
BRING YOUR SEWING MACHINE
TROUBLES TO
th§ BLUE STORE
NORTH MAIN STREET
BONHAM TEXAS
UlMuvm. ®uhb
I
trail
Keep the sheep dry.
Keep the milk cans clean.
Alfalfa is a business crop.
Soil for onions should' Je sandy.
Whitewash the stables.
Keep the hens scratching.
Keep tools in their places.
Breeding and feeding go togethi
Keep the nests clean and sanitary.
The big milker must be a big eater
and drinker.
" \ . *
Blue or white sifruce trees on the
lawn are attractive now.
'• — , A
The ram should be In perfect condi-
tion, but not fat, at mating.
For a feod to push the young calf,
try ground oats and alfalfa hay.
— ' * v.ftf '' '
Use corn stalks to
frees from the ravages
protect frultt] ' "
of rabbits. j!
1.1
H
Skimmilk, sweet or- sour, can t
made good use of by the chickens.
Good feeding is an Integral part of!
Eggs are a perishable food product. •UCC€M breeding pure-bred swine.!
When you feel dull, out of sorts, discouraged,
half sick and everything seems to be going
wrong, you can blame it on your liver. It is
]- torpid. You need
HERBINE
A Medicine of Power in
mAI! Liver Disorders.
When the liver is torpid, it throws impurities Into the system,
wh.ch hamper every organ in the body. The result Is that func-
tlonal processes are not properly carried on. Impurities get into
be blood, the stomach is bilious, the kidneys weak and the
bowels irregular—generally constipated. Herbine clears out all
these impurities, opens up the obstructed channels, strengthens
t..e torpid liver, cleanses the blood, purifies and regulates the
bcwcls. ^.fter tho system has been thus overhauled, there is an
immediate improvement Appetite returns, digestion is good, the
spirits rise, the mind clears of gloomy forebodings and everything
looks bright and cheerful, which means, sound, healthy condition*
everywhere in the body. 7 anions
Price 50c per Bottle.
JAMES F. BALLARD
ST. LOOK, MO.
To core Smarting Eyeball*, Sore Byes or Weak Sight.---
Stephens Bye Salve.
Aa a soil enricher, vetch ranks doa*
to the top.
/ ' F .
Give the poultry the care and at*:
tendon they deserve.
■ • < • :-,*r . 5
\
Skim milk la one of the beat supple-
ments to corn now known.
Poor quality in
never be cured,
sd.
dairy produc
It must be
m,1
prevt
Bare ground makes a cold bed
lows these nights. Straw is plend-
tuL
\ 1
KODAK
tingSteamTrains
HAnd
Gas-Electric Cars
m *
ivenient Schedules
Cafe Car Service
Moderate Prices
F. B. McKAY
il Passenger .. Agent
Terrell, Texas
ft*
—
l^OW RATES
list One Way Rates
To
CALIFORNIA
the Northwest Via
Just opening and, as
usual, I have Ansco
Cameras end Kodaks
to loan. Will pay
charges one way by
Parcel Post and send
to responsible; parties
anywhere in tlie Coun-
ty. No charges for use
of Camera, if I finish
your work.
And Connections
its on Sale March 15,
to April 15, Inc.
iral Stopover Privileges
BONHAM MARBLE WORKS
Anything in Granite or
Marble. Fully equipp-
ed with up-to-date Ma-
chinery. Prices furnish
ed on application.
ANDERSON, PROPRIETOR
E.
Don't
in reach.
mfts the
l They
the chlicken shows with-
are educators.
Animals
ty on corn
hones.
1 i *
grown largely or exclustre-
ire likely to have weak
Colored butter need not be labeled If
the coloring matter la not injurious. '
Hens will not lay when permitted
to run about the farm in the wet mud.
cold.
Watch your machinery for loos#
nuts, and don’t forget the!
If the cream Is still warm after sep-
arating, don't put the lid on the can
flown tight
holts and
oil can.
Dairying isn’t always easy work; but
neither is any other job that really
pays welt j :-
No man can make a
\ m
success
. dairying who does not take good care
- f af hi* <**1vah
Only In rare cases do cutworms f
bother crops that are planted on fall-j
plowed land.
of his calves.
Sheep, if given half a chance, and;
If of good healthy stock, are sure to
pay their way. ;
A well-established alfalfa field
fifteen to twenty
should graze from
pigs per acre.
Hens that are put out into the coldj
ind snow are soon chilled out of the
>gg-laying notion.
surround} i
Alfalfa under congenial —____
logs or conditions la a business crop
and no loafer. *
It is quite common to sow buck-;
wheat, especially on poor land, — -
green manure crop.
WAltham
' WAT CWCS.
T. & P
Ticket Agent
m
Or Write
D. Bell, Asst. G, P. A,
Geo. D. Hunter, G. P. A.
Dallas, Texas
M. A. BRIDGES
WATCH MAKER
Is now located on
South Main St. next
door to Sid Smith’s
Grocery.
Bonham, Texas.
as s'
^ !
Com ’fodder that is dry and dusty|
will be improved a little by sprin-
ding in the mangers.
Feeding chicks when too young and
joo much at a time are fruitful
tources of bowel trouble.
Pound for pound, vetch hay h** al-
nost exactly the same feeding value
is cow pea hay and alfalfa.
Get catalogues of the best nursery
tnd seed bouses. Make careful selec-
lons for next year’s planting
Sheep dogs In England, Scotland
ind France are the most serious of
inim&ls,
A dozen eggs
bushel of oats,
winter fed for
Provide roo:
slean nesting
shavings or cut
Do not attem
than you can
eat up all the
will buy almost a
d cfets make a good
terial,. preferably dry
f i
and plenty of
t-fc
OME—A world of love shut in,
* world of strife shut out.
Where each lives, for the other, and all
for God.
HOLIDAY LEFT-OVER8.
Take the legs from a cold roast tur-
key, make some incisions across them
with a sharp knife, season with pep-
per, salt and a dash of cayenne;
squeeze over them a little lemon Juice
and place them on a greased broiler
over a clear fire until nicely browned.
Serve on a hot dish with hits of but-
ter on top of each.
Minced chicken in a white sauce
served on toast is a most appetizing
dish which will use up even small bits
of cold roast chicken. The bits of
breast mixed with equal parts of cel-
ery and a bit of salad dressing will
go a long way, with good bread and
butter, in satisfying a luncheon appe-
} tite.
v*
to raise moqp bogs
die, else they .will
and are hard-working.
TEXAS TRACTION COMPANY
> (Denison-Sherman-Dallas Interurban)
“The Convenient Way”
HOURLY LOCAL PASSENGER SERVICE
BETWEEN ALL POINTS
P*
FAST LIMITED CARS
-EACH WAY DAILY BETWEEN-
DENISON—SHERMAN---McKINNEY—DALLAS
Direct Interurban Connections at Dallas for
Lancaster, Waxahachie, Ft. Worth
And Cleburne.
Baggage handled on regular local passenger cars. %
M. It FEWELL,
A..G. P. Am Denison, Texas
f AS. P. GRIFFIN,
G. P. A. Dallas, Texas
Good fruit can be raised only with j
are and attention given .to spraying,
pruning and generally good care. !
Sweet sorghums are more palatable!
md therefore relished better by both
torses and cattle than corn stover.
The dairy farmer should know what
ris milk costs him. This is^just as
mportant as knowing what it brings.
If sheep are in a good, thrifty condi-
Ion at the' start, two months of good
feeding will properly fatten for mar-
cst
When some men get on the track of
i dollar, they think of no other in-
erest until they have tracked it to Its
sir.
Sudden fright and excitement at
•nee tells on the egg crop. Never al-
ow strange dogs about where the
lens are. 1
There is hardly any question that
here is as much in the care of the
rees after planting as in the seloo-
ion before.
Feeding troughs raised above the
itter of the floor should be used if
oft food is allowed to stand before
he chickens.
No other class of animal so readily
ends itself to the demands of a rural
tousehold for a supply of fresh meat
a a young sheep.
Light framed birds that mature
;uickly, such as Leghorns and Minor-
as, should not be kept with those of
he heavier fowls.
Keep in mind the perishable nature
»f the product and do not hold eggs on
i rising market without proper facill-
les for storing them.
Draft horses in thp corn belt fed
argely on corn and timothy, or corn
tover, lack bone development, as is
ound In imported horses.
Have slop wajxn for hogs this cold
Feather if possible. If it cannot be
varmed do pot feed it thin, but make
<!> t thick. Always slop them before »
If feeding grain. Shorts make the best j
log slop with oil meal second. Two-
birds shorts and one-third oil meal
nakes a slop hard to beat.
The livers of turkey or goose, if
cooked and pounded to a paste with
seasoning of lemon jnice, mustard and
salt, make a good substitute for pate
de foie gras.
Plum pudding and any rich fruit
cake which may have been cut, but is
good to serve again, if carefully
wrapped. may be re-steamed and
served with a sauce, which varies
each time, and the pudding will seem
entirely new.
The carcass of the Christmas turkey
or chicken may be the foundation for
a good, deliciously flavored soup.
Break the bones and put them on cov-
ered with cold water, bring to the sim-
i , „ . K .* mering point and simmer for several
U an improved Breed of dairymen In- » mIlk Wnd wlth a toble.
,tead of a new breed, of cowe. , ; Epoonju, or of butter melted ud
Castrate every male lamb that will
be an eyesore to yourself or do mis-!
chief to any purchaser. f •
One of the most essential things for
good seed corn is not only to pick it
early but to dry it thoroughly*
i — •; i |
The cost of feeding an animal * In-
creases with its weight, but not in dl-
inject proportion to its weight.
What the dairy Industry needs most
A brush or
handy to brush
from the udder
Plant diseases
Rcter are caused
d whisk broom Is
loose hair and dirt
before milking.
1 il,
of an infectious char-
by microscopic or-
ganisms, either fungous or bacteriaL
Vetch stands out as one of the very
best green manuring crops to seed in
the fall and plow under In the spring.
The better your
your lambs, and mn
you will, ge
year.
ad so
frOm
sire, the better
the more money
your flock next
healthful of meat
the farm it is not
or pork.
Occasionally winter v^tchgis seed-
ed in the spring, but under such con-
ditions it does not seem to do so very
well.
While mutton Is one" of the most
foods produced upon
as popular as beef
H
, Many of the details in butter mak-
ing can be learned by doing the work.
No one can begin where the other fel-
low left off. . h >
Salt, hardwood ashes and charcoal
are ideal to keep iin hog pasture, and
bubbling, to which has been added as
much flour. Cook in the strained
soup and pour over a well beaten egg.
Serve hot.
Delicious fruit salads and desserts
may be prepared from the fruits left
over from the holiday table. The
combination of orange, banana and
pineapple, or grapes with a rich sugar
sirup poured over the finely cut fnjit
and served with whipped and sweet-
ened cream is always a favorite des-
sert.
Bits of salted nuts too small In
quantity to serve again as salted nuts,
may be cut fine and added to the
cooky mixture. They are much more
appetizing if a trifle thick, and may
be served In place of cake with Ice
cream.
,v ••
Election at Sav;y.
i
j At the town election in Savoy
last Tuesday only thirty-one
l
votes were poled, though enough
to elect the same Mayor and Ald-
ermen they had last year. Dan
and W. A Blair, Marshall. W.
L. Teague is still Mayor and the
Aldermen are as follows: S. A,
Harper, W. A. Pierce, O.
Ruthven, R. W. Gallaber and E.
T. Buford.
Em For Sole.
Indian Runner Duck Eggs,
Si.50 for 13. Cornish Indian
Gane, $1.50 for 15. Barred P1t*
mouth Rocks, $1.00 4ot 15 eggs.
All first class stock.
Miss Emma Benson.
Phone 24. „ 99H.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR. E. H H FOSTER
Physic^n and Surgeon
Office over W. P. Claypool’s.
Drug Store
Phone Office and Residence
J. E. XEVILL, M. D.
Surgery and General Practice
Office, J. W. Peeler’s Drug Store,
Bonham, Texas.
Phone Number 303.
DR. J. S. SPIKES
Veterinarian
Office at Robinson Sc Baker’s Stable,
Phone 104. Residence Phone 443. All
calls given prompt attention.* Gradu-
ate of St. Joseph VetenWary College,
St. Joseph, Mo. ti
DR M V. GRAY,
Dentist,
Office Over»Firet National Bank.
Telephone Number 352.
H. H. MITCHELL
Dentist
Office over Hargrove’s Drug Store.
Hours: ^ to 12: 1 to 5:30
Phone No. 156. Res. phone 156-2r.
A. I NASH
.Notary Public
Office with D. V..Bill’s Grocery Store
Situated West Side South Main St.
All business pertaining to his office
attended to promptly. Solicits your
patronage. Charges reasonable.
JAS F. DUNCAW. M.
•Special ist-
D.
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
GLASSES FITTED
Office in Fannin County National
• Bank Building
DR. J. N. T. TAYLOR
If there is any other one thing needed | Sweene? was elected Treasurer
It is pure water. \\ 11--.--- .■.i-'A- '■ ..
Residence Phone No. 322-2 rings
Office Phone No. 322-3 rings.
The nay of the country butter mer-
chant who was in the habit of trad-
ing calico and nail^ for dairy butter is';
rapidly passing.
People who say that chicken keep-
ing on the farm doesn’t pay are usu-
ally those who do not pay attention
to the chickens.
The male bird is the most impor-
tant individual in a breeding pen
through which to raise the egg laying
qualities of young fowls.
Give the poultry-house a thorough
cleaning every spring and keep It
clean; spray often; and whitewash
walls, roosts, etc., regularly. - ' I
Hatch the chickens early; keep
them separate from the old stock and
give them every possible opportunity
to grow into strong, healthy, vigorous,
well-matured birds before the cold
weather comes, In the fall and early
winter.
pyr
* *
CURED IN FIVE DAYS
VARICOCELE, HYDROCELE, STRICTURE,
HERNIA, PILES AND FISTULA
If ynu have tnklog 'treatment (or week, and months and
paviisr oat your hard earned money without helnc cured, don't you
think ft Is ht^rh time to accept MY OKAND OKI ER and t>o cured
nulckiy I Ax you will certainly not be out any more money If not
enred. If I deeide that your condition will not yield readily to my
treatment. I will be honest with you and tell you So and not accept
your liK.uey un ior promise of a cure. ,
NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOOD POISON. PIMPLES, ULCEMZ,
ECZEMA and ALL SKIN DISEASES, KIDNEY, BLADDER, UR1NABY
and FOOSTATIC TROUBLES Cured <e Star Cured. S nee lei
Dlesanee Newly Contracted and Chronlo Catos Cured, all
Hunting, It'.hina end Inflammallbn Steeped Ml *4 hoore, er.d All
Catarrhal Troubles, Chronlo Disorders el Mea and Wo.non Suo-
ceisfally Treated. *
You may pay others for failures but you pay me for et.r** only
I never disappoint my palieata. I fulfill my promisee. I never bold
•ut (alee hopes In Incurable oases.
I am ajxalnrt Mjfhand extortionate fees charged by tome physicians
and specialists. Vou will find my charyes very reasonable and no
more than you are wlllinyto pa v for skillful treatment. Consult
me In person or by letter and learn the truth about your condition,
tud iv'llsps nv« mach tltne.sufferlnj- and expense, lama regu-
lar graduate ami licensed, long established, thoroughly reliable.
DR. BOURQUE
Corner 6th end Main St.
Entrance 103 W.Oth.
FT WORTH, TEXAS
Hours! a. m. to
CALL OK WRITS—No detention from business. Treatment and advice confidential.
g p. m. buntlav 9 to 1. If you can not call, ftll oiic the following coupon:
Dr. BOURQUE, 103 W. Sth St FT. WORTH, TEX.
« ferns -.
. treatment. If I decide you can cure me
I cannot carl, so s«>ud me Question Chart and you
deelre tu describe my case to you for the purpose of taking treatment u j oreiut p™ wu w,c u.
and your charge Is b’weuouxrh to suttamllf we cap mutually arrange terms and netMMft T> sing
treatment, with the uudei etandiug that consultation, examination and advice Is *re*
Name
Address .........______.................................................................... ...........C. L. 1
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Comstock, E. B. The Bonham News (Bonham, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 100, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 8, 1913, newspaper, April 8, 1913; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth904700/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bonham Public Library.