The Savoy Star. (Savoy, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, January 20, 1911 Page: 2 of 4
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THE SAVOY STAR
T. E. ARTERBERRY, Prop.
BAVOY,
TEXAS
BOYS AND THE FARM.
The department of agriculture is
|>roving Its value constantly In many
ways, but In none more definitely and
clearly than in the encouragement of
American youth to adopt the cultiva-
tion of the soli as a career. It is
vitally essential that the children of
farmers should themselves till the
land theirt fathers and their grand-
fathers have tilled, says the Washing-
ton Star. They are potentially the
best farmers. If they move to the
city to learn trades or to enter the
professions or to drift Inefficiently
through life, somebody must take
their places to grow the crops essen-
tial to the feeding of the people. A
dangerous tendency exists toward the
elimination of. the small farmer and
the substitution of the syndicate, or
the large individual holder of land.
This destroys competition at the
source of the necessities of life. It
tends unmistakably to higher prices
and to the increase in the number of
non-producing individuals. Only by
making the farm attractive and profit-
able can any headway be made
against this city-drifting disposition,
with its inevitable consequence of
dangerous concentration. The tele-
phone, the electric car, the rural free
delivery and to some extent the good
roads movement have all contributed
to lessen the disadvantages of rural
existence. Now comes science, lead-
ing to an increase in the profits and
In the dignity of farming. It Is im-
portant that the competition among
the boys in the south which has just
been brought ty so successful a con-
clusion should be extended into all
parts of the country.
Where Is the psychologist who can
give an explanation of the different
ways in which the weather affects
sports? There are baseball and foot-
ball, for instance. Both are strenuous
games, yet pne flourishes like a green
bay tree in the good old summer time,
no matter how hot, and the other
thrives only in a frosty atmosphere.
Players and spectators seem to be in
the same boat When the sun shines
the hottest the heroes of the diamond
are warmed up to their limberest and
their best, while the lookers-on occu-
pying the bleachers just roast and are
happy. But let a cold blast blow
across the field and baseball shrinks
like a delicate flower touched by
frost. On the other hand footballers
want it cold and raw and really pre-
fer a near-cero temperature and a
flurry of snow, if they can be had-
Such conditions appear to put “gin-
ger” 4nto every brawny member of
the eleven. And the crowds on the
grandstand forget all about the weath-
er while watching the wonderful do-
'ngs of their favorite players.
GOOD NEWS EPITOMIZED
HAPPENINGS OF UNUSUAL IN-
TEREST TO OUR READERS, IN
READABLE SHAPE.
BOTH FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
It Was of Sufficient Importance
You Will Find it Recorded
Here.
Oil Indications are found near Kemp, j
where test wells are now being sunk.
The Slaton well at 130 feet deep at
Plainview is rising to within twenty-
two feet of the surface. After a con-
tinuous test of forty hours, the flow
was 1,600 gallons per minute. Great
excitement prevails.
Fire destroyed the gin plant of J. |
With the resumption of diplomatic
relations brought about by the United
States Argentina and Bolivar, the
two countries embroiled in a bound-
ary dispute, have formally proffered
their thanks for this service.
United States Senator Chas. J.
Hughes,‘Jr., of Colorado, died in his
home in Denver after a long illness
Death was due to a general break
down.
Jas. A. Patten, former grain and
cotton bull leader, is the defendant
in a $6,000,000 suit filed at Chicago
by Dr. Paul Burmaster, president of
the Chicago Anti-Gambling league.
James A. Farrell of Brooklyn is to I
succeed William Ellis Corey as presi j
dent of the Cnited States Steel cor- j
poration. His formal election will take j
place at an early date.
New York City will join the list of
cities which have legislated against
the long hat pin evil, if an ordinance
now before the board of aldermen
becomes a law.
Davis Elkins, son of the late Sena
tor Elkins of West Virginia, has been
LABOR PAYS TRIBUTE
TO GOV. CAMPBELL
GRANDFATHER’S CLOCK PRES-
ENTED OUTGOING GOVERNOR.
TRUE FRIEND TO THE TOILER
Ex-Governor is Moved by the Token
and Declares His Lasting
Friendship.
M. Powell & Son at Avalon, entailing j
a loss of $15,000. The property was , aPpointed senalor pe^ding the election
insured for $7,500. The origin of the
fire is unknown.
State Treasurer Sam Sparks has
offered a gold watch to the boy un-
der 18 years of age who will grow and
exhibit at the annual convention of
the Texas Corn Growers’ Association
at Corsicana, January 17 of next year,
the best bushel of corn,
Smallpox situation in Rio Grande
City is serious and many families are
leaving town for safety. Quarantine
was established by Hidalgo County.
‘ Encouraged by the high price of cot-
ton, some of the farmers of Lamar
County, who have realized good profit
in raising peanuts will, however, aban-
don that crop and devote an increased
acreage to cotton.
A school for training nurses has
been organized in Paris and a char-
ter has been applied for. It will be
conducted by the two hospitals of
that city and lectures will be deliver-
ed by physicians of Paris and by the
trained nurses of the two institutions.
The course will extend over a period
of two years.
One of the largest land deals that
has ever been made in Franklin Coun-
ty was closed last Saturday. Amount
of acres sold 1,660, consideration $19,-
072.50. The property was sold to cit-
izens of Franklin County.
Cleburne is in receipt of three new
“pay as you enter” street cars.
Fire destroyed two dormitories of
East Texas Normal at Commerce Sat-
urday evening. All students escaped
and practically all trunks and books
were also saved. The students will
be taken care of by private families
until the dormitories can be restored.
The loss Is estimated at $50,000.
of a successor to his father by the
legislature.
The department of agriculture an
nounces good results from experiments
in the culture of Egyptian cotton, a
very fine grade particularly adapted
to the manufacture of mercerized
goods, in the Southwest, and will soon
send out a large number of packages
| of seed throughout the South. Texas
experiments have have been especially
successful.
Wm. R. Sherwood, who for eighty
years has been considered perhaps the
foremost American pianist, died in Chi
cago Saturday of a complication of dis
eases which culminated in paralysis.
Tommy Burns, formerly heavyweight
champion, cabled to Hugh Mclntoesh
an acceptance of the latter's offer of
a purse of $12,500 win or lose, to fight
with Bill Lang in Ixmdon.
Gov. Lee Cruce of Oklahoma is an
ardent prohibitionist, and at the in-
auguration reception givin in his honor
in Oklahoma City, butter milk was
served instead of the usual liquid re
freshments.
One of the biggest gas wells in Ok
lahoma was brought in at Begg3, Okla.,
near Muskogee by the Caney River
Gas Company. It has a capacity of
30,000,000 cubic feet daily.
The work on Chaves County, N. M.’s
$130,000 court house is progressing
nicely, the building now being above
the basement windows, which are
about twelve feet above the ground.
The contractors have until Nov. 10
to finish the court house.
Davis Elkins, son of late Senator
Elkins of West Virginia, is likely to
be appointed to fill the vacancy caus-
ed by the death of his father. Davis
Elkins is 34 years of age and has
A recent tabulation compiled by the neyer taken part in public affairs
Secretaries Association shows that the The last few years he has been look-
center of Texas population is still
in McLellan County, where it has been
for the past twenty years, but moving
ing after some of his father’s In.'
terests in West' Virginia.
The Queen Bee Stove Company has
to the Northwest Bteadily. The area begun the erection of two large brick
center is In McCulloch County, near buildings to house the plaht at Tulsa,
Brady. Okla. One hundred men will be em-
The Southwestern Aero Club has ployed when the factory is in opera
been organized in Fort Worth, with
R. L. Costan president. The pur-
tion.
Sir John Aird, builder of the famous
Austin, Tex., Jan. 17.—Oft the last
night that he will be Governor of
Texas and in the hall of tne House
of Represenlatives, which is being
decorated for the inaugural ball in
honor of Oscar B. Colquitt, which
function will be in progress at thi9
time twelve house hence, the retiring
Governor of Texas, Thomas M. Camp
bell, was presented, in the presence
of a crowd which well filled the floor
and galleries, with a token of appre-
ciation by the organized labor inter*
ests of the State.
The gift was a colonial hall clock
of rosewood, with embossed gold and
silver dial. This clock, nearly eight
feet high, stood during the ceremonies
on the platform which had been built
over the Speakers’ stand for the mus-
icians of the ball Tuesday night. An
American flag /was * draped over the
Speakers’ table. Red carnations were
placed upon each side with ferns and
pot plants arrayed across all the front
of the platform.
The clock bears the following In-
scription: ‘‘Presented to Thomas
Mitchell Campbell, Governor of Tex-
as, upon Ms retirement from office
Jan. 17, 1911, ats Governor of Texas,
as a token of his unwavering fidelity
to those who toil—by organized laboi
of Texas.”
The presentation speech was made
by Horn Pat Neff of Waco, and was
a splendid tribute to Campbell's ad-
ministration.
A GOOD DOCTOR.
“Boone The Healer’*
SUITS TO F0RPEIT CHARTERS
In the matter of dress we have
fallen upon a decline since the days
when the Duke of Wellington was re-
poses of the organization, as set forth Assuan dam across the Nile, Is dead.
In its constitution is to investigate jje was born in 1833 and was a mem-
practical air navigation. ber of the contracting firm of John
The Postal Telegraph Company has
organized a new division covering
-_, . ._, . ., ... the States of Texas, Louisiana, Arkan-
fu«l admiuloD to Aim**. b.c.uM ' Arlzona New MeIlc0 and okla-
he was wearing trousers instead of
breeches and silk stockings, says the
London Chronicle. Even Almack’s,
however, had to admit trousers with-
in Its closely guarded portals the fol-
lowing year. /When Gladstone was
“up” at Oxford the reign of the dan-
dles was in full swing. When late in
life he revisited the university to lec-
ture to the undergraduates on Homer
he was asked by G. W. E. Russell
whether he noticed any difference be-
tween his audience and the men of
his own time. “Yes," be replied, “in
their dress an enormous change. I
am told that 1 had among my audi-
ence aome of the most highly con-
homa. The division headquarters will
be in Dallas.
A few days since Didies Masson j tlon.
made a trip from Los Angeles to San The store of Frank Ligotino, in
Aird & Sons. Hhe was created a peer
in 1901.
A commission form of government is
being advocated for Mount Plaesant.
and an election will probably be held
at an early date to vote on the propos-i
Bernardino, a distance of about 75
miles, carrying a message in an aero-
plane.
Contracts have been let for the en
tire earthwork of the Port Bolivar
Iron Ore Railway, which call for com-
pletion by May 1, which means that
it is probable for the entire line to
be completed by July 1. a record for
quick railway building for the sort of
territory through which is to be built.
Dr. H. Y. Benedict, director of State
University extension, announced that
Houston, was almost demolished by
the explosion of a bomb shortly after
midnight Monday morning. It is be-
lieved that blackhanders, who had de-
manded money of him some time
since, committed the crime.
Lena Stringer, a negro woman, aged
28, while crossing the Iron Mountain
Railway tracks north of Texarkana
was stuck by the fast mail train and
instantly killed.
Alex S. Coke, formerly a member of
the firm of Coke, Miller & Coke, at
Gov. Campbell After Katy and Inter-
national Companies.
Austin: For four reasons Govern
nor Campbell orders the suit against
the Missouri, Kansas & Texas of Tex-
as for forfeiture of charter and has
ordered Attorney General Lightfoot to
bring suits:
1. He contends that it is insolvent
under an act of the Thirtieth Legisla-
ture.
2. That it has not complied with
the law by failing to keep bona fide
officers and headquarters in Texas.
, 3. That the road has been con-
solidated through stock ownership with
the Missouri Kansas & Texas of Kan-
sas, in violation of the constitution.
Suit was ordered against the In-
ternational and Great Northern on the
ground of insolvency—that is, that it
owes more than its assets, as indicated
by the valuations of the railroad com-
mission.
FOREIGN TRADE IS ENORMOUS
nected and richest men In the uni- ©nee School is now more than 500 stu-
veraity, and there wasn’t one whom I dents,
couldn't have dressed from top to toe
for £6.”
the Registration in the Correspond- torneys for the Missouri, Kansas &
I former Cabinet Minister and for more
. ——...... * than a year and a half American Am
The “wild garlic” which infests por- bassador to Turkey, has resigned.his
firms of Pennsylvania, Ohio and In- post at Constantinople,
dlana la a noxious plant first sben In Uncle Joe Cannon is of the opinion
Pennsylvania. A farmer In southern that it would be unwise to Increase
IndUn* secured some seed wheat the present membership of thh'house,
from the Ohio Valley, and noticed
the preseMe of the onionlike pest In
the resulting crop. He gave it no
further thought, as “the entire In-
fested plot might have been carried
%way In his hat" And yet within
three years the wheat from that sec-
tion of the country was refused by all
nillers because of the malodorous g&r-
’lc, the seeds of which are about the
Tame size as large wheat grains. In
certain localities land values have
been sorely affected by the presence
of this weed.
| Texas railway, has been named as at
' torney for that company, effective Jan
Oscar Solomon Strauss of New York, > nary L °n that date the law firm
resigned from the connection with the
road, and Mr. Coke's appointment was
made.
Edward M. Shepard and Wm. F
Sheehan are rival candidates for U
S. Senator frem Npw York. The con
test promises to be a most spirited
one. Sheehan is a partner of Alton B.
Parker.
Favorable Balances Shown for Last
Year.
Washington: With the enormous
total of almost $3,500,000,000, the total
value of the foreign trade of the United
States during tbe year wnlch ended
December 31, 1910, was greater than
that of any year before, and left a
balance in favor of the country of
^over $300,000,000, exceeding the form-
er high record of 1907 by about $80,-
000,000.
The exports during the year were
larger than in any year except those
of 1907, the total being $1,864,411,270,
compared with $1,728,198,645 in 1909
$1,752,835,447 in 1908 and $1,923,426,-
892, in 1907.
The balance of trade In favor of
the United States in Its dealings with
foreign nations increased almost $80,-
000,000 over the 1909 balance. The
excess of exports for the year was
$301,603,648, compared with $252,677,-
921 in 1909.
A slngular^lnt evoked by recent
prosecutions of fortune-tellers and
palmists in another city Is the fact
that* their Insight Into the futures of
other people gave them no inkling
of the evil Influences that were about
to haul themselves into the police
courts.
which now numbers 391, and is a cum-
| bersome body to handle.
Cleburne business men are setting
on foot a movement to secure natur-
al gas for that city.
Following the detection of spurious
quarters by an electric piano player,
in Fort Worth, three young cotton
pickers from Oklahoma, were arrested
on charges of counterfeiting, and it
is claimed, one man confessed.
Sparks from the chimney of an ad
joining building set fire to the four
story building of the Jones Saddlery
Company at Oklahoma, causing the
Complete destruction of the structure.
The loss is estimated to be $100,000.
%
Tom J.
Jor, killed
ome for
•cording
They figure It out that the moon is
Bow 17,000 miles nearer the earth
than usual. Everything seems to be
coming down a bit
, respondent over ill he
Green, aged 60 years, a bt
himself at San Angelo,
20 years, by taking poison
to the coroner's verdict.
A commercial broom factory haB
commenced operations in Clarendon
A least Sl.O'iOJtOO a year is The sum
Gov Dix expects to save the State
of New York through the adoption of
economies he has submitted to the
Legislature. Suggestion for retrench
ment by abolishing wrae State of
flees and consolidating others consti
tuted the principal recommendations.
Thirty car loads of pecans, aegre
gating 900,000 pounds have been ship
ped from San Angelo. The amount
of revenue from the crop is $55,000.
This season's yield is larger than for
five years.
The general merchandise store and
postofflce, conducted by J. P. Sims,
at Crisp, seven miles from Ennis, on
the Texas Midland Railroad, burned
Thursday, it being a total loss, amount
ing to some $15,000, nothing being
saved. Mr Sims, the proprietor, re
celved painful burns about the hands
and face In trying to protect his books
Dallas has at least taken up the
matter of requiring builders to erect
roofed tunnels over sidewalks running
along buildings under construction.
According to trustworthy informa-
tion. there wilbbe made a practically
entire change in the personnel of the
State hank examining force when Mr
B. L. Gild assumes his duties as com
missioner of insurance and banking
Vast improvements, costing $42,000,-
000, have been laid out by the New
York Central lines, consisting pricl
pally of freight terminals on the West
Side of New York City.
Strong Anti-Usury Law Proposed.
i Austin: Messrs. Cathey and Min-
ton will offer in the house a usury
j bill, which provides that the receiv-
ing or accepting by any’ person, di-
rectly or indirectly, of more interest
than 10 per cent per annum upon
anv amount of money loaned shall en-
tail a fire- of noc itss than double
the amount of money actually loaned.
It is provided that each such loan, re
newal or extension shall constitute
a separate offense. The bill further
provides for the removal from office
of any County Attorney who fchall
fail or refuse in prosecute any viola-
lions of this law, when brought to
his attention.
County Judge George II. Hall has
appointed J. Mi Gee City Auditor for
thexity of Greenville.
The Terrell Cotton Oil Company has
Increased its capital stock from $100
000 to $240,000 on account of increased
business.
Mexican Rebels Lose Fight.
Chihuahua. Mexico: A sixteen hour
battle betw’een seventy Government
volunteers, so-called, and 100 ‘'revolu-
tionists occurred at the village of Coy-
ome on Sunday. No details are given,
but from the duration of the engage'
ment it is presumed the losses were
considerable. The General expects an
amplified report soon
Arrangements are making for build
fng a twelve-story home office build
ing for the Southland Insurance Com-
pany of Dallas.
Farm work has begun in earnest in
Ellis County. The recent rains and
freezes have put the ground in splen-
did condition for plowing.
Ijaredo is to get a new passenger
depot. It will be built by the Inter-
national & Great Northern and Texas-
Mexican Railroads, and will cost $25,-
000.
Mrs. W. M. Shaw, living a mile north-
east of Roxton. made 244 pounds of
butter from, one cow last year and
got 244 dozen eggs from thirty hens.
Mrs. J. B. Gambrell, one of the
most widely known Baptist women
in the Southern States, died at the
•Taptist Memorial Sanitarium in Dal
las Sunday morning.
Sunday morning as the San Antonie
& Aransas Pass trafh, making up at
Corpus Christi for San Antonio, was
backing out to turn around, it ran
oyer and killed Prof. Robert Milner,
a teacher in a business college at San
Antonio.
The Fourth Court of Civil Appeals
in an opinion holds that the absence
of a person settling on school land in
attendance upon a school in order to
fit himself so that he can pay for the
land does not work a forfeiture of
that land.
A petition to incorporate the town
of Spur and elect city officers was
presented to the County Judge during
December, and an election has been
ordered for the purpose to be held.
Feb. 4.
The fire which destroyed one dormi
tory annex at the College of Industrial
Arts and badly damaged another at
Denton caused loss to young lady stu-
dents who were hoarding in the burn-
ed homes of about $1,500 worth of
clothes, jewelry and other valuables.
Senator Bailey appeared before the
Senate committee and urged the In
corporation In the rivers and harbors
bill of an appropriation of $600,000 for
the Beaumon-Orange waterway and
$100,000 for works at the mouth of the
Brazos River, to clear away a sandbar
at Velasco.
Gov.-Elect Colquitt will formally
open the fifteenth anual Feeders and-
Breeders’ show' to be given in the Fort
Worth Colliseum March 13 to 18.
Engineer F. F. Andrews and Fireman
G. W. Wright were killed by a loco-
motive boiler explosion on Sun-
set near Flatonia. The explosion was
terrific.
A month ago Andrew' Payne, a ne-
gro, robbed a crippled w'bite man in
Dallas. On trial he was sentenced to
twenty-five years in the penitentiary.
The garment markers' strike in Chi-
cago, which commenced October »,
has ended after much suffering of 45,-
000 people affected and some blood
shed. Hart, Schaffner & Marx, the
largest concern involved have taken
back all employers, without discrim-
ination and the others will follow.
Abraham Gonzales, provisionl gover
nor of Chihuahua, Mexico, in an in
terview given out at El Paso, says
that the Mexican rebels are as active
as ever, and that President Diaz is
really more alarmed over the situa
tion than the press reports have in-
dicated.
The Wichita Falls & Northwestern
: Railroad has reached the town of
Hammon, Okla., with its tracks. Ham
j mon is eighteen miles north of Elk
City,, and it is the intention of the
road to push farther north to a con
nection with the Santa Fe.
At an election at Gainesville to see
w'hether the city should issue $150,000
worth of bonds with which to purchase
the Gainesville water works, the bonds
carried with only twenty-six dissenting
votes.
J. K. Biggerstaff, living in the south
west part of Umar County , w’as
thrown from his wagon and sustained
C. D. Windham has sold to C. W
Davis his farm of 331 acres, six miles
north of Waxahachie. for a considers
tion of $38,330, nearly $113 per acre
Grcynd was broken Monday for the
$17,0t>0 girls’ dormitory of the Bap-
1 tist College at Palacios, and active
work on the building is now in prog
tpss. C. F. Emmons of Palacios was
j awarded the contract for this build
tng and it is thought the structure will
be completed by June.
The big gin of J. F. Powell & Son
at Avalon, burned Inst Friday morn-
ing. Loss, $15,000.
The Rice Growers' Association sold
8500 bags of rice at their headquar-
ters at El Carnpe a day of two since
the Japan bringing $2.85 per barrel and
one lot of 1400 barrels of Honduras
bringing $2.90.
Vernon Eugene Horton, four-year
old son of Dallas County school su
perintendent, fell from a window
where he was watching the aviators
and crushed his skull, from which
death ensued four days later.
Philip Henson died in the ninety
' third year of his age at the home of
his son, P. E. Henson, a well-known
j cotton dealer of Paris. The dead man
was a native of Blount Springs, Ala.
J. F. Wolters, chairman of Anti-
Statelwide prohibition in a card asks
the prohibition committee to join
In calling the coming prohibition elec-
tion a very early date, so as to get
the matter out of the way.
Jenator Q. U. Watson proposes to
increase the pensions of Confederate
soldiers in Texas. He will introduce
a bill to that effect.
Is now permanently located at 10OS-
Olive St., in Texarkana, Texas. Seem-
ingly miraculous cures of consump-
tion, cancer, paralysis, epilepsy, dis-
eases peculiar to women and other"
chronic diseases have been made. Tho
best 6f results follow treatments with
his medicines. And some strange pow-
er he possesses never fails to produce
Immediate results. This strange power
Is not faith, electricity, or magnetism,
but an actual force, and so far as
known, “Boone” is the only one that
possesses It. No fees are exacted
and correspondence Is Invited.
One Way to Look at It.
Jinks—Do you know, I was re
fused three times before I found n
girl who would have me?”
Blinks—I see. Just like a patent
medicine: “Well shaken before taken.
—Judge. _
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate
and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels.
Sugar-coated, tiny granules: Easy to take
as candyX.
The greatest glory of a free-bom
people is to transmit that freedom U>
their children.—Harvard.
Cattle drink pure water at less coat te
you, If you have a bottomless tank. Book-
let "A” free. Alamo Iron Works, 8&a
Antonio. Texas.
The worst foe you >bave Is the man
who would kill all your enefnies.
ONLY OXE “BBOMO QUININE.”
That Is LAXATIVB BBOMO QUININE, took for
the signature of E. W. GROVE. Used the World
over to Cure a Cold In One ltaj. 23c.
We find the worst In all by trying to
get the best of any one.
Your Appetite
Easily Restored
and regulated if you will
only begin your meals
with a doseof Hostetter’s
Stomach Bitters. Loss
of appetite is a sure sign
of some disturbance of
the stomach and bowels,
which the Bitters will
quickly correct. There-
fore, try it this very day.
For over 57 years it has
been assisting those who
suffered tr6m Indiges-
tion, Dyspepsia, Costive-
ness, Colds, Grippe and
Malaria, and it will do
you good, too. Insist
on having Hostetter’s.
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nine time* in ten when the fiver it right d»
stomach and bowel* are right
CARTER’S LITTLE
UVER PILLS
gently but firmly co
pel a lazy liver to
do its duty.
I Cure* Con-
stipation,
In dig ca-
tion,
Sick
Headache, and Distress after Eating.
Small Pifl. Small Das*. Small Prise
Genuine ««*bm* Signature
1§f >.
mm
ilaiii
CURED COW’S CAKED
in i r
Use it for ailments of year chickens
and turkeys also those of your cattle
horses and mules and you will find it
sares loss of livestock. It is so pow-
erful that it cures almost immediately.
Mr*. Daisy Draw*. Nsw Orleans. La. writes i
“I hirre used Mexican Mustang Liniment
for several rears on mj chicks for th« Roup
and found It a sure cure t bars also used ft
in our barn with *ati*factory results. Our
cow hat recently been cured of a eorere milk
cake formed in her udder. Mexican Mustang
Liniment e flee ted a complete curs.”
25c. SOc. $1 a bottle at Drug A Gonl Stores.
Nothing
Like
them in the world. CASCARETS die
biggest seller—why? Because it * the best
medicine foe the liver and bowels. It •
what they will do for you—not what
toe say they will do—that makes
CASCARETS famous. Mfflioai un
CASCARETS and it i§ afl the medicine
dial they ever need to take. M
CASCARETS me a bos for a week's
treatment, all druggists
la the world, atuuoa \
■Biggest sellar
boxes s mgM
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Arterberry, T. E. The Savoy Star. (Savoy, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, January 20, 1911, newspaper, January 20, 1911; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth974169/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bonham Public Library.