The Hamilton Record and Rustler (Hamilton, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 6, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 18, 1912 Page: 4 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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I
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EY
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tv
A
ON
a
FARMSAND RANCHES
A
ledge, the joy of achievement, the
W
Notes Purchased and Time Extended
Vendors Lei
9
cotton a
ABSTRACTS
UNIVERSITY STUDENTS
$
Seven years ago the Mieeionary
additional charge.
J. T. JAMES, Hamilton, Texas.
College professors, in addition to
H. Griffith, pp. 131; University of
alent to University courses. About
from business firms with whom
be encouraging
of Texas ben the same basis as
be impossible to pass drafts for ex-
The coming of spring once more
—9
neb. Hence in order to prevent a
cant lot live issues. The removal of
for American cotton the staple must
P. W. Horn; pp. 363; C. A. Bryant
Company. -
i
Thackeray's English Humorists of
We Have Just Received
his influence beyond the sphere of
]
vacant property should permit it to
The Most Complete
ng samples. The demands that,
OVERTON DRUG Co.
\
L •
One small bottle of the Texas unsightly ad a menace to health.
Line of
W
The Texas Cotton association
The trash should be removed with
the results desired.
0
Hamilton County F. E 4 C. V. Officers
Tex.
N
/
E
The Phoenix Drugstore,
g
Y
quently a liability.
"I*
a.ouit-
I
KO
..
"Mwrnr
d-
marked the
cotton. As
mentsontheUse
dents" to a disc
Popular Science Monthly. Many of
them written in less popular style
appeared in the leading educational
periodicals of this country and
s in Acci-
the Latin
dative
The list of new books by these
tablished near the University of
Texas Campus suitable buildings in
which to conduct classes studying
the Bible. From the very beginning
many students, having come from
Christian homes, desired to pursue
intelligent effort if you have with
in you the love of higher things and
would
and .
L
O
A
N
a
ts of
have
Early Comedy. by C R. Baskervill;
pp. 328; University of Texas Bulle-
tin.
Sir Perceval of Galles: A Study
of the Sources of the Legend, by R.
dwarf your intellect and unfit you
for consideration by business men,
we can train you in business meth-
of the American bales. L__
A short while ago—relatively
speaking—a company of English
3. D. Porterfield. Fra. Fail
C. L. MeCtentock, Vice Pre
press me
Mil fifths
that will 1
According to L H. Kempner, com-
missioner of finance and revenue
of the Hty of Galveston,also one of
ekagtagof American
other cases of west-
4
SOME RECENT WRIT-
INGS BY TEXANS
Prices.
Inspect
Goods
, , r-r i “
/ •
i
l )
"i
MOOT THE .
TRASH HEAPS
direction of cleanliness and health-
fulness, but save for spasmodic and
more or less haphazard spurts once
or twice a year the removal of rub-
bish is given little attention, and es-
pecially b thb true of the vacant
appeared in The Nation, three in the
Sewanee Review, and two in The
damage to cotton received in bad
order. Thb suit was won by the
spinners in’the trial court Appeals
were prosecuted by the steamship
company to the court of last resort
and the last word of the English
law on the subject was that the
steamship company was liable for
damage the cotton sustained.
engaged in a campaign to impress
upon all cotton buyers the necessity
of careful sampling and b also
preaching more ethetical methods
have the power within you to pos-
sess the blessing of practical know-
are on record where i
as high is a thousand
Arrival of Beal Spring Reminder of Im-
portance of Cleanliness of
Premises.
a meeting In New Orleans in May
Unless present plans go awry all
Actio Agajnat Ameic Bal-
fag Methoda.
forty students are taking advantage they
Unless shippers of cotton can pro- of this opportunity. The University
WILLIAMS. Proprietor.
4 . "
• .4, Ik f
It has been the practice hereto-
fore for steamship companies to
give receipts—"bills of lading" is
the trade term—for cotton received
i at shipside stipulating that the cot-
I ton was received “in apparent good
order and condition." Under the re-
cent interpretation of the English
' courts, such receipts must be con-
strued as being received without
waste hole, or country damage.
who in the past have made much
profit out of their "sample crop."
Itisgeneraly belivd. however.
braces some ninety odd titles of have never sold a medicine that
books nd signed articles. For ex-proveda greater rmedy, •
ample, seven of these signed articles TEXAS .WONDER.
than in the nature of a hazardous
guess, but it is believed that when
the new rules are bid down there
will be some wailing, sprinkled with
• fey gnashings of teeth by com-
the statements of young people who"
have travelled the road we are ad-
vising you to travel would be in-
" . 1\- ' ■
" - I
That Have Ever Come -
to Town. We Defy
our Competitors in 1
Europe Their titles show every
6".
be put up in packages that will
muster, at the bands of steamship
officers authorized to give receipt
for the cotton. •
To bring about thb change in the
affairs of handling cotton, beginning
with the coming season all cotton
must-heve sample holes covered-at
Texas authors includes:
English Elements in Jonson's
m-em - -■ Vy,
. ===
water in part say that no bale that
exposes the bagging mutilated at
any point or place or that b "blos-
somed." broken banded or has nu-
merous other defects, all admitted
to be defects, that heretofore have
caused the American bale to be the
very worst package of cotton put up
in the world, will be received, except
after due examination. Thb is but
another way of saying that payment
for such bales will not be made by
draft, and unless payment is made
by draft, interest will eat into the
receipts of money for cotton quite
An examination of the recordswill show thatI am
now and have been for nearly a quarter of a century doing-
over nintey per cent of the land loan business of Hamilton
county. I am ready at all times to duplicate any rates'
or terms that maybe offered to borrowers. I will give
ever advantage that competitors can give and many
that they cannot give. , 2-
“Th
T
0
I
Wonder cures all kidney and it frequently happens that the apf
bladder troubles, removing grav- pearance of an otherwise sightly
el, cures.diabetes weak andIneighborhood is marred by the ac-
irregularities of the kidneys and cumulations of refuse on the vacant
bladder in both men and women, lots. with no effort whatever on
- ___ regulates bladder troubles in anybody's part to abate what is at
tie is two months treatment ana . .• {
seldom fails to perfect a cure, moved at frequent intervals.
Dr. E W. Hall, 2926 Olive St. St. The whole system of dealing with
before the coming crop iharvested
I Mr. Kempner, who was in Fort
। Worth last week says this change
। will be forced by a recent decision
in England—-
The cause of this change is due to
- what is known in the rotten trade
as “country damage" Stance the
cotton business basis there has cen-
to you
______.___________________ time of compression; nor can the
in 1911, is of interest The list em-; for years and frankly say we is still less reason why the owner of bales thus securely packed be again
*----------ne- — -el . medinie- hat 1 . mutilated for the purposes ofsecur-
our low tuition rates, together
with the short time taken to com-
plete the course would be a pleas-
ant surprise to you. Tyler Com-
mercial College, Box Y, Tyler, Texas
Christian schools throughout the
change, with bills of lading attached State, so nothing unusual has hap-
pened in acknowledging the Bible
work This bit of news ought to be
a comfort to many parents anxious
for the religious welfare of their
children.
tetimonina. Solbylarudint nbdtoimudcobnasnvnhwuich “nd
Call in an'd
our
age, the cotton grower is the dbe
who will reap the benefits that
ought to follow a better method of
getting the staple to the spinners.
-7) .
i N ‘•
AM " e ’ 0 •e-e
-
aw.ammeum
m* MSa " 4105’
School Room Essentials: An Ele---------------- — ,2.,
mentary Treatise on Managanwit garbage is an intelligent effort in the hiatus in the inflow of English gold
and Method, by W. S. Sutton and
makes the trash heap in the back
yard and the refuse piles on the va- through the regular banking chan-
bo expected, for two reasons: be-
cause they areusually thoughtto Henry Fox First Lord Holland:
knoITS.abquttheir special feld A Study of the Career of an Eigh-
of study than doesthe average cit Century politician. by T. W.
zenandbecaune they ar able.tRiker2VOls.pp. 438: 419:claren-
instruct by means of the printed H r
page as well as by personal contact n
*d. ,
» 1
sufficient frequency to accomplish with headquarters at Waco, is now
the "sample crop” of Texas alone
has readied a point where it rune
into thousands and even tens of
thousands of haba annullay.
In order t get thb new condition
with students Thus many people
know President Eliot and have
learned from him, though they nev-
( er saw him. By writing books
President Eliot has vastly increased
etantly been more or fess agitation BIBLE STUDY AMONG
on account of the shabby condition
—-inbuyingcotton. Indeed it Jai
ly reported at cotton centers 1
spinners brought suit in that country Society of the Christian Church
against a steamship company for
be the repository of tin cans and of
all manner of refuse, that is"FBth” come from the buyers across the
‘ 3
o pia
vi
1 vi
h l
the largest cotton factors in Texan, qeppa8g MGe ang,1
method of bailing cotton in Texas M pul down the or U
due to undergo a marked change
I own a compleu abstract of all titles in Hamilton
ccunty. During my experience in the loan business I
have worked up most of the land titles in Hamilton
County, and as a result I have accumulated a vast
amount of data and infomation that is on file in my of-
fice and is not of record in die county records and can
enot be found outside of my office.
■ . ' W i—-., . < 4 -
All of this is at the service of my patrons without
other duties of various kinds, write
and publish more books than most
Chicago Press. - -e
men of other professions. Thisisto, History of Economic Thought, by
L H. Haney; pp. 567; The Macmil-
lan Company.
Fromthevery beginning, alo, manyyas their rvurrwe, are finfebd Inta
students actually came. The work splendid positions secured thru our
grew in such a way that permission •MIM11 •111 uw
employment department - - ■
Our large catalogue containing
I R. W. Bingham,Lectrer.
G. L. Kent, Doorkeeper.
J. M. Thompeon,
* . 3. N. Blakely,
W. williame, >
a
“A rose with aU its sweetest
aves yet unfolded" Young Friend: e,
• Arieh woman’s husband isfre- fairly and squarely before the Am
lean people th steamship men
Druggist’s Sundries
bean docked on account of the un-
busingeslike. methods that have
rearrangement of affairs to inure to ods- bookkeepine shorthand, type- '
Ms profit. it is not an uncommop writing. writing, businese arithmetic, d
thing for a Sontzsdanade loss to
2’
credit for the work toward a B....
University degree. In reality, thi
is the first year under this arrange-
ment The courses are made equiv- tereeting reading to you. The letters
Biblical studies under the badfeship
of a teacher fitted especially to give
such instruction, and they found in
these buildings their opportunity.
and acuta, better days if-you have ambition, 1
noon those energy and determination; if yoU
are free from bad habits that _
§ Loans Mada on Farms and Ranch-
es. Long time, low rates of inter-
est. No delay. Vendors Lien
I, Notes purchased. I make a special-
<; ty of lending money on real estate
.mecnrita in Hamilton aad ndjoinjog
Countiea. I owa a complete Abstfact
; of title of all lands and town lota in
Hamilton County. Abetracte of title
I forpished on abort notice. Titles ex-
amined and perfected.
J. T. JAMES
UL I I fell I I
'' -1 —■
io.
whs asked and granted to allow stu-
donts taking Bible courses to receive
the Eighteenth Century, edited with
Harvard University. V introduction and notes by Stark
in this connection a recently com- YounePP.285iuinnc_ lor There is no sensible reason
piled list of booksand magazinear-—Dublin, Texas. Me have sodl why the owneF or occupant of a
tides written by teachers in the Hall's Texts Won de? for kidney,' bouse shouldnoQteep his premises
University of Texas, and published bladder and rheumatic trouble renmnwhly free of trash, and there
tually exist Annual clean-ups,
even whenthorough, are not enough, deeply.
mands. 'Let us impress upon
you in the language off Naradq a
Hind sage, "Study to know; know .
to comprehend, comprehend to 19
judge." Youn friends, use your
youth in the persuit of knowledge.
We could give you no better advice
than to join our industrious band
of 600 students now in daily attend-
ance;they are here from many dif-
ferent states, and are going out dai-
Henry Bollier,Becretary and Treasur-
er R. F. D. No. 4 Box 51 Hamilton Texas.
F. M. Jones. Chaplain.
rin nv..
(e
MI
teg.
r W f . r *
PAGE FOUR
business English, buineees law, tele: %
graphy and station work, and secure
you a good position. You have no
time to lose. The Spring and Sum-
mer months should be used in secur-
ing a practical knowledge that you
may accept a good paying position
when the busy fall season begins.
In our years of experience as teach-.
era we have watched our students
unfold and blossom into superior
manhood, awaken to the respoeibi- ,
lities of business life, and crown
their labor with success. What we
have done for others we can do for
you. The business world is seeking
every where for young men and
women who are able to do the U
work the business office de- -
' ialn
2d.07 ..
77
"SAMPLE" CUP IS CAUSE
. . ■ J 2."
No Shipihent win Be IcoeptU by fee
the Steamship Companies la Ms .
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Peck, L. O. The Hamilton Record and Rustler (Hamilton, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 6, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 18, 1912, newspaper, April 18, 1912; Hamilton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564443/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.