The Grapevine Sun. (Grapevine, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 11, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 20, 1912 Page: 4 of 8
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—
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Your Money
4. mm PNMlsbar.
s
Scruggs last Sun-
D
WalU
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wi
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IWN ITETIS.
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TI
A
e
a crop
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to
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„&*• ' i
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amr
ma
I
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•A
f
p
•MVBDMT.
r io, uta.
up
bil
tbeai for auy stomach, JIvef or kidney
trouble. Only Me at C. J. Wail’s.
i* little baby,who
•o long, la improv-
mel and at the tame time gentler
and without the bad after-effects
of calomel, please call and get your
money back. It will be given you
promptly. Dodson’s Liver-Tone Is
a vegetable liquid with a pleaaapt
Mias Bessie Nickens is visiting
in Commerce this week.
tokos eighteen bales of cotton to
buy a mule, would It not be better
to raise the mule?”
The remark Is quite of a kind
A Flbrida girl has nlarried a
a baseball player because he
made home run; but can she keep
him in the habit!
The C. J. Wall drug store sells
Dodson’s Liver-Tone as a perfect
substitute for calomel. If you try
one bottle and find that it is not
Hooey Promptly Refunded if Dod-
son's Liver-Tone Pails to Take
Place of Calomel.
Come From
the State.
Money is by far the most neces-
almoet beh
It suited n
Jaundice *i
to it “«y Potou
y
£
app
ana
thai
pan
Con
Editor 8t
I Will I
give ths
of our 111
I see.
flower”
is no better, we are
t, but wo hope for
scovery.
and family visited
family at Coppell
fly story*
u (Wmthebot-
otaO. B- Bader,
, “for the won-
I got ftotn Bloc-
aacf both a st*
, trouble and of
■ME
■■■ m - ■ *
R
x
I >
poatoflee st Grapevine
ad-class matter.*
d
the g
Millie
Mr
■ with
WHITE ROSE.
THE CONSTRUCTIVE DOLIAR
Development Moat
Prom Outoido
I
public
fected.
ng othof crops—
its thio end J but
the Immediate
eduction of this
Vith that aceom-
Stion will follow
i fairtaer will not
diled nor will he
will sard by.re-
i aereago. HL*
her things to do.
Go to
City Barber Shop
--
...
I
pd’W'51'
'• 4
tL
OTfi
■
“I want to
tom of my h
of l^Wtahoq
derfui doubl
trie Bittern, i
vote OM8 o|
aud promote conditions which
good prices for the next.
j
vests the p
farm or fl
creased bol
(deed glad to see so
n the Sun last week,
aging at Gains Blev-
ky night and all re-
pag.
bam broke his arm
on the ice last Pri-
sing as well as could
iey without people be- Ing slowly.
Mess substance. Then Will Post*
f- —— — ywv-~—— -w — 1
and development. Tlje following Ljar
Alli will - Aleak I •
between a trade dollar and a do-1
ha.few minutes and
p«” and “mishaps”
J“Slado” and “Sun-
in good letters last
How
Men 1
tell you
when th
hinting 1
conduct
few days with Mrs. Joe Simmon^ last Wednesday.
Carl Yates of Celina was in the
Vine this week.
Charley Berry and family re-
turned last week from a visit to
p..
th» Mill
*-
V
Byas is on the sick
Le is reported as be-
■ able to sit up some,
pvlns and wife were
If Tilden Smith and
Ry-
i and wife called on
l and wife last Sun-
1 ’te!
.
> I
i
lharlte Stowe Were
the guests of his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Billie Stowe.
Lee Millson and family spent
Saturday ..<2i>nr>«v x^ith
John Blgj^;
Grandma
Mrs. E. 8.
TWT
evening.! |
Mt end'd
Byas was the guest impatience of our people. Inci- taste, that livens up the liver,
dentally it proves how careless we
become when we shift all or a por-
tion of a burden from our own
shoulders to a collective body.
Insurance companies are indis-
pensable, we could not carry on
business as at present without
them. But if every insurance pol-
icy in the country were canceled
to-day the fire loss would decrease
to-morrow. By this we do not
mean to charge wholesale incen-
diarism, but to emphasize tehat we
all know to be true, that most fires
are easily preventable and are the
result of carelessness and neglect.
If we had no Insurance, we would
be more careful, we would not per-
mit rubbish to accumulate around
our premises, we would see to*it
that our eleotric wiring is properly
done, that buildings are safely
constructed, In a word, we would
exert ourselves to see to it that our
property is not destroyed by fire
because that would mean great
personal loss, possibly bankrupt-
cy. Without intending to be care-
less, the possession of an insur-
ance policy, and the knowledge
that the bulk of the loss will fall
on an insurance oompary, causes
us to be tolerant of conditions
that would not bo tolerated If we
had to carry the risk.
< Collectively, the result is the
same, for insurance companies
Mr. Roosevelt’s position seems
to be that he positively will not
say thai he is a candidate, but
dares anyone else to say he isn’t*
mildly but surely, instead of whip-
ping it into action as the strong
chemical calomel does. It is used
by both children and grown-upd
for constipation and inactive liver.
That is^why the C. J. Wall drug
■tore is willing to guarantee it ab-
solutely, not vyith another bottle,
but with your money back. Isn’t
a medicine with a guarantee like
this worth a trial?
BETTER FROM THE 5TATE
HEALTH OFFICER.
pergdniir rehpotfsHJHr
personal carelessness.
This truth has an application
broader than the insuradee busi-
ness. We join a charity associa-
tion fancy ourselves relieved of
duty to personally succor the
needy; yte pay our dues to the
Board of Trade and let that suffice
as our coutribution to the advance-
ment of the community; and
worse than all else, we vote the
party ticket and feel no further
responsibility for good govern-
ment. ...
individual initiative is the main-
spring of all progress, and like-
wise a sense of individual respon-
sibility is the only safeguard of
sound business and good govern-
ment.-^Ft. Worth Record.
--
. ^By keeping everlastingly at it
you win success in advertising*.
Everlastingly in an advertising
sense means the newspapers.’’—*
Witt K. Cochrane.
- Miss Stella Oaks is Visiting her
parents In £alo Pinto this wepk.
Dr. 0. O. Hollingsworth was in
Dallas last Monday.
W. I. Weatherly was in the Fort
Readable crop, and -
South cannot hope
agricultural wealth oi
The question of th
reduction of cotton a
way to raduoe Is to reduce. The *hila a
duty of avery farmer is to keep day .J
faith with his brother farmers and ba exp
to persuade every other farmer of Mrs.
his acquaintance to keep faith|*ony (
with him. her a si
1
■ ■ ■" ■■ r
and Sunday ^ith
fl and family.
en was the guest of
. Qreener last Sunday
Mrs. Frank Ford spent
Sunday with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs, C.Oi Millican.
Mr. and* Mrs.'Jim Millican were
the guests of ,y® scribe and wife
Monday night of last week.
Mr. and Mrs. George Roach
spent Saturday night of last week
With her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eli
Hallford. \
A new boarder, in the person of
a ten-pound boy, arrived on the
ilth inst. at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Situations.
Mr. And Mrs. tfoyd Dyer also
have a new baby boy. ,
Ye scribe And wife were <he
guests, of Mr. And Mrs. Will
Greener Tuesdfty Bight.
Mr. R. E. Lewis was in Ft. Worth
last week.
Mrs. Little Long i» spending a
w ter.r
ntvaralfl
V' 1
il
w
this week. |
Mrs, Charlie Greener spent test
Sunday evening with Mrs. Joe
Simmons.
Ye scdb« tool! dinner
Charlie GreARAK
As news iAAOai
branous j
one will i
Mr. ai
called on
erslas4
-^■ise it
•ary, the most powerful and tluliiattbisv
7 - agency in the affairs 91
. Its study is facinating,
its pursuits alluring and its pogfoS
sion the most agreeable of all effth-
ly substances. It stands first in
war, first in peace and first in ths
hearts of the people.
There are two sources of develop-^
ment, to-wit: wealth and population. I
The two are inseparable; people
cation,“la thus formulated! mt m<m^ b*?m® • howling|
mob and mon<
oomes a worthless substance.* Thom
are also two kinds of dollars—trade!
I’.*,* *. _______w
•ut will illustrate .the difference |
i* ' . ‘ .7.
velopment dollar.
>Ct WB,” he has changed hie location
but Texas has not developed as thf
transaction has increased neither out
wealth or population, and if ths
farmer at “A” sella his farm anc
buys a factory, he has changed hi)
occupation, but he has not develop!#
Texas, as neither our wealth or pop
ulation has increased, |mt if ths
farmer nt "A” sells his farm tc
some one outside the State and in*
vests the proceeds in another Tbxat
factory, then we have in
I tli our wealth and popula-
tion by the transaction and Tsxa>
.has developed. .
I If the farmer at ’‘A’*' can, with
| his net earnings, buy the farm al
‘“B” then we nave also developed
as our wealth has increased, al the
our population has remained th»
I same. The development dollar must,
I therefore, come from the soil oi
moving into the State from outside
I its borders,
B. R. Wall had business in the
Panther CMty last Monday..
John Pearson, who has been ab-
sent from Grapevine community
for some time, living up in Kan-
su, came home on a visit Friday
of test week and on Monday last
he was in Grapevine and gave the
Bun office a pleasant call. He re-
port* lots of snow up where he
has been.
lets In the multiplicity of duties and
.in- rush of business, don’t forget that
out you’ll want to Tots when the elec-
ore lion day roll* around* but to do
to so you must have a poll tax re-
10,- oelpt and yon have only IB short
00- dp^s before you in which kto get it.
pill Don’t wall Uli the last day, or the
••illaat.two or three for there’s sure
last few days.
r®1® •oarage. smhA<
with muoh that Is uttered by smart-
aleoka on southern farming. It
bsi not take eighteen, nor eight,
oa of cotton to buy a mule. Dl-
sifioation preachments are of-
qulte as wide of the mark.
n the prasent ootton situation,
hl here In Texas, there are those
o are scolding the farmer for
EXtoMMui
r acreage in
A compara-
tive failure for lack of rainfall at
the proper time. The aame thing
is true of oats. The North Texas
farmer in 1911 endeavored to di-
versify, but the Weather defeated
hie qflorts and he had only hie cot-
ton for his labbr, and his option,
by reason of the exceptional yield,
te bringing unremunerative prices.
The remark about raising mules
Is wise enough when applied to
normal seasons, but seasons for
three years io this state have*been
Abnormal. The farmer should not
abandon effort* at diversification,
but those who are so glib to advise
Would render mote service If they
would address themselves to the
Situation as it Is and not as it might
be with fair seasons.
The commanding agricultural
problem in the Routh to-day is to
develop such conditions by mar-
meeting and by planting as will se-
* cure the beat possible price for
what remains of the present ootton
MAP OF TEXAS.
If a farmer located at ^A” edit
his farm and buys another located
— ■— 0. S. 1
014 AoMisr Tortured. John F
“Pteyears I suffered nDapeaksUe ter-
tore from lodigeetlon, constipatloo and Mies 1
liver trouble,” wrote A. K. Km I th, a of Mis*
war veteran at Brie, Pa., “but Dr. day.
King’s New Life Pills fixed mo all Waltei
right. Thsj|>s Simply groat.”
Joe Tl
Will Me:
7^-or best and most
Up-to-date Tonsorial
Work
HOT And COLD BATHS
at all hour, of the day
Also agent for Sherman
Steam Laundry .
Biggest and Be<it
elan called on Ray
unday evening'.
son and wife visited
ion and family, who
lick child with mem*
p. We hope the little
jget better.
k*. Charley English
and Mrs. Tom Shlv-
Laboring under a New Year
resolution id Ukq carrying A pane
of glass. One slip and it’s all off.
And tjie way Is mighty slippery
these days.
If vour children are subject to at*
tacks of croup, wat<h for the first symp-
---------BAT*.
mmsmsM*
al sotiaas • eoato per Hao each
Itos.
tee for diepley advertisement H b
and amle known or application
eeoluttons of Blepest and Obttoa-
I cent* a Ito*.
II Nottoes and Advertioomonta not
Irscted for s specified time, will be
■serted and charged tor until ordered
out.
fluMC*1 mow PAIC*—Ono year, *1
... monUi., We; (fan. mvatb.. Mo.
WK®
ESS
‘ th<
Pr
th<
________________ - , .. ‘___ ~~
inoiviou.l nespoNsifciurv. |a Medicine as Good
If all toe buildings burned last
year in the United States were
placed close together on both sides
of a street, they would make an
avenue of desolation reaching from
Chicago to New York city. At
each thousand feet would be a
building from which ar severely
injured person had been rescued,
and every three-quarters of a mile just a* sure in its action as calo-
there would be the blackened rains1
df a house in which some one had
been burned to death.—Bulletin of
the Insurance Society of NewYork.
That’s a gilm record, but it is
typical of the hurry and haste and
The following letter was received
by our City Health Officer, which
explains itself. Read it and co-
operate with our Health Officer in
carrying out the measures speci-
fied in the letter:
Texas State Board of Health, )
Austin, Jah. 8, 1912. J
Deau Doctor :
Isolate and place in absolute
quarantine all cases Ceretro Spi-
ndl Meningitis. On appearaned
of the dlteake In your city close
public schools and discourage
public gatherings. Insist upon
general sanitary measures, clean
and disinfect sidewalks, streets
and alleys. Carriers convey the
disease by means of the nose and
throat secretions. Insist upon the
inforcement of the anti-spitting
ordinance and advise the use of an
.♦Altoepfeto ^^mand.
Conveyances ate dislnJ
Yours truly,
Ralph Steiner,
State Health Officer.
This is the big Democratic
year we’ve all been hearing abouti
There are 1911 reasons why
you should lead a better life in
1912.
-
pay mon
’ now w
igthei
old a c
9
•to
• ■■
•• ^'1
■
, . ‘ Moitey^ for
Railroad timr table.
•onto woura.
I IM—Dus at. ____________._.9:8» a. m.
IOB-Du* at .---9teSp.ni.
<MMWO MVrto. Uteful
IOI-Qm aS— --TjII s. m. Hf*.
iOS—Dus *t___________l:4Sp.m.
^-«*,**'*'****»<**w**<R**<*i*w**w*^ww»^»zvww-.
COTTON AND MULES.
Fmsb ths Fart Warth Record.
“A telling point in favor of dl-
vsrsiflsd agriculture In the South,”
partly ramarks a northern publl-
Norvel J
Ing better)
Charley}
th* guertl
wife last 9
L. H. C4
Walker B|
day.
Mr. Pend
harbeen si
-----Grapevine visited
the Dove Sunday school last Sun-
- 1 8UNFL0WEH.
■
jisf
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Keeling, J. E. The Grapevine Sun. (Grapevine, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 11, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 20, 1912, newspaper, January 20, 1912; Grapevine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1290964/m1/4/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Tarrant County Archives.