The Matagorda County Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, May 25, 1917 Page: 2 of 8
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-
I
tanks
me\i< o t'w gekwini.
>
From Missouri
If You’re
of hu
i
«4!
Come; We’ll Show You
-f
?re
M«x
II 1H
N’T
Stat
we have some of the
That
COWtHr
tin
farm lands in the state
best
'i ■ • i
found
-o-
now
Whitt
* C U<&r .<?*
A
you.
f Agric
nr>
a
MAGILL BROTHERS
It- vie
IN THE COLLIN S BUILDING
■>f
4
I
Planting' Method*.
Chase and
Di
Sanborns
manage-
stores
com-
*
fifty
num
lit* i
♦
y
in
*
♦
R. F. Anderson
f
The Genera! Store
♦
the
Systems of Feeding.
-o-
-o
the
•o-
Big Reductions are Being Made. Save Money and
Guaranteed to be the Best
Buy These Staple Goods
X
All Flowers and Ornaments Now
Offered You at One-Half Price
see
these hats. Also reduced
All Pattern Hats
can
in
Moore and Reynolds
Just one Price
One Just Price
i
Chaseft Sanborn's
OU P5LHD MAILS OVER 200 CURS
Chinese variety does be-t
ihkh
Ad dli
I HF W 13 t I BI \N 1 t»K
I HF *01 IIIEKN F VliHEIt.
4
i
th
ch
i
aOc.
Hus-
at
"1
attrtaij
for .
been a ve
aislent u>
tion of tt.
FIRST TREATMENT is
rant W;-.en ,n EFF1C!
Is a little '
velvet bean
een In
fl It till
you will reap the reward.
“A Guest.’’
a Pl
lor
<■1 J
It h .
I
rf per
Buy it n
Si
>n that per.
n UO and
Particular People
jt
poll
< OU
1 -..<11
1
llll'l
ed I
I'Oll
Particular Store For
H Urr
(Armins Ld
I’tH
be Bought
at One-Half the Original Price
All $5 to $7 Hats $3.75. $3 to
$4 Hats $1.95. Be sure and
of Texas right here in Mata-
gorda County For Sale and
it’s a pleasure for us to show
Telephone Number 86.
• Mexico; Mf’XJct* ('
Mer an tail flanking
' nials.
! cilities
Lope
Some farmers who :
. .. • . ' to the soil!
The mortgag*
of French cap
English capital,
trouble
mounds
of corn,
not. the
of
■
, growing and maturing and come n •*’*******'************* “■ * ' ' *****"*** ****************** •
at the right time with the corn and .
velvet beans. Flogs find the peanut; ~
in the ground, harvest them and also i
the velvet beans and sometimes the I
corn is left for them to harvest, a
combination that produces excellent •
pork at very low cost.
money to the dining room and there We can use several more good live
I placed the packages upon the dining advertisers, from the ranks of those
I table. , who are anxious to keep business go-
After a few moments spent in jolly png. We are doing our best to keep
conversation, the pastor and wife everything on the move, but there
were invited to join the victorious at- are others who might, if they try, add
tackers at the chapel where punch considerably to this needed undertake
and cake were served and where a ing.
mruercf in 1
a comhlnatb
nd from
Anyone hunting
fishing, depredating, camping, open
Ine gates, taking down fences, or t
any other manner trespassing on thei
lands will be prosecuted to the exten
of the law. (Signed) C. G. Stoddard
*
n | »
on
righteous deed. Truly it Is more
blessed to give than to receive. This
was in every way a pleasant evening,
our appreciation of our pastor by giv- and many thanks are due the "Glean-
a ' pounding ' in the old-time ers" for their forethought in suggest-
J ing this entertainment. May other
At the appointed t.me. both old and classes soon follow this lead and find
ownership and
iilly hardware
4
T..- f ■
at,ng in the Cit<
fr'onrier Mexi
de Paris
mg Co ;
Canadian Bank of
Bank of Montreal; I
and Ban o Central
ith the United States, and of
opposition, if such should
needed, against aggression
matter
not tai
m of fuarnnteexg their notes.
T e banks that to id tberoe’-es is
prices
Shapes and Children’s Hats
The customary way for the South-
ern farmer to plant velvet beans is to
plant two rows of corn the
one row of
dang*- of mfectp-it
" ......................
|of exnistiion led into believing any al'Unce the feeding value in the field.
tO b
emanated
legaiding Mexico that
uple long since refuse*
sto.y, no matter
bore the date of the
government, but
in learning the
xa- tly thirty Ger -
ma y
aks, one of them
and a noth e
» not
man or teast. BOROZONE is the
IDEAL ANTISEPTIC and HEALING
AGENT Buy It now and be
°Gfor an emergency Price 8Se,
een tn the |j v, and |1 R.bl • P G
have even ton.
I and stormed the
Hotchkiss was completely
surprise and at once surrendered and 11.00 per bottle.
WHINING: BCCKEYE without conditions. The invading Huston.
LANDS POSTED, army took possession of the fort, the
! parsonage, proceeding without cere- |
1 money to the dining room and there (
PACKAGE TEAS,
I ni> untied 1 harxrier >f th
Isamarlug tllegafi>>ns.
In < irt elation.
the army, and ha* ummanded
those In the army mint teave
service
Much has ?een made by some
are ignorant of the facts, over
Hjwned in- t
But the Can. dian the
:te French and the Ger-
haring no n,
participating then began to
■ disperse and retreat to their homes.
The Sunday school of the Methodist feeling the joy which always accom-
Church was invited by the Gleaner panies the peiformance of a good and
After cows and hogs have ranged class to meet with them at the Wes- righteous deed. Truly
over the field during fall and winter. hey chapel, on Thursday evening. May
I they have beaten down practically all 17, there to enjoy a social and to show
of the vegetable growth. The wise
farmer anxiously conserves the resi- fng him
roughage there is fair | due of the crops and gets it deep un- Methodist way.
!. for above all things
else, Southern soils need this humus1 VOUOg, began to assemble, nearly ev- something worthy to do. for surely
eryone with a package of some kind
and of various sizes, ranging from [
pound of honey to a sack of flour.
After about an hour of social inter-
course
they formed in line, led by Barbed wire cuts, ragged wounds.
I collar and harness galls heal up
‘ ‘ y when BALLARD’S SNOW
:. Bro. i LINIMENT is applied. It is both
taken by healing and antiseptic. Price 25c, 50c
Sold by P G.
lew City has l-e»n favored
"permitted’’ to continue
while British, French and nther for-
eign owned banking institutions were i
said to have been proceeded against J
The feet is that not niy w ,
German bank "allow, d’
Operations, but also all
re-ietuptWi <rf t eir
and there was no q
Pan-owned banks of
ed exactly as wer-
tii>it!cn-
Ameriean.
Teas are sold by
us and are guar-
anteed to be the
best there is
THE SOCIAL AT THE most pleasant hour was spent in a
WESLEY ( HAPEL. social
! The
■ ■■ d <t t-ir food value, the meal
- a high cla.-s product. For dairy
cattle st has exceptional valm
doubtful, however, whether
mnui meal * .11 attain any re.i
m rtar.-- for the reason that the'
most economb tl use of the velvet j
t in the field and mar-1
f->.: of eef. dairy, or
What better eoil ■
can be conceived with j
reference to the use of the vetve-
ean to have the food they afford con-
sumed on the ground on which they ,
have grown and the largest possible
amount of their plant food value re-
turned in droppings to the soil’
The ve set bean will grow- as fa
north as Tennessee and how much
further remains to be determ.ned
The variety known as Medium Earl’-
proves best in the more northern iati- I
' civet -au» and ■ orn re.iowabir- tudes of the bean maturing zone I
,n a most congenial way for the ben- This variety
IVInet
t 1 -xme time the i-eans find the and Twenty Day. In the southern
all nt stal.-.* of corn ladders on which thei par’ of the velvet l ean zone, however-
can climb and over which they can the Chinese variety does best. In
run riot ’ . ti-y have o Literal-d al! fact
signa of acorn field save billow rows beans is to speak in uncertainties
or hummocks that tell >f ornstalks —-—
beneath.
Velvet neans are 1
in the South, that 1-
embroil thh country and klevn > iu
trouble t . ,.1-gat u.- <jf iritr.g
between Germany and the Conatitu-
tlonai Goveiu 1.,-nt Ti.,- f
this moveu .- t <* t-en n F.. Pas
that lr n - bi-.1 during the <-t
five years tiavi emanated so many
falsehoods i-gaiding Mexico that n-
teil.gent
believe any
plausible that
Texas city.
These stone
apparent that .ny reasonable <-
would th.ok they would receive
credence, have been of the
surd ehara< ter and really
eeive no attention, but the
proposes to show tne fa
least some of th- m
For exam >ie
thousands of 1
the border from the
Into Mex.co during the
four moat: -. <&d .-,ni<
bet wean the two n •* h<
bea .rne critical. As .
the records of the var.>
the border r.d through
can any ■ n .deraMe num
aot>» pass from
Other, sh>
than two
of Mexico Blanc,.
Hlpotacarto;' f'redit
, Coanpania Bancaria
tty Rana-
Co.; The
f Commerce
Descuento Eapanoi.
1 Mexicano,
In Mexico
The entire list of falsehoods >n
this connection might w> gone through
with, but these are sufficient as ex-
amples. and their refutation is but an
illustration of the character of the Velvet t.ean- a e recent newcomer
who e tissue of misrepresentations I in the South, that is- too most Soutb-
It Is true, there are a I a rite ntrtn-;.-rn furims. but uo crop is leceiv'iu-
' ' o
. .. • J
rovlde enough •
i’t-.haps it is a little ; runners 1.0 submerge the t * > row- of ♦
to dig into th-' velvet bean . (,rn Other farmers plant the rows 18
and extract the ripened ears | of corn quite w ide and put a 1
but whether this is done or I velvet beans in the middle,
combination itakes a para-'others plant in alternate corn
hogs and cattle. The bogs between the cornstalks
plow in and feast while the I Farmers who have in mind
|the products of the field in ork pro
Southern farmers have found that duction. also plant peanuts in corn
hoga and cattle iave only to be turned 1 rows, alternating with velvet beans
into th' :i id 1:1 tin fall and turned The variety of peanuts is the North ;»
out in the spring with no other food. Carolina or Viiginia, and not the it
When frost has taken the green out Spanish which is used when planted j J
of the leaves there remain the heavily alone in the southern part
podded vines and fodder on which to I countrv.
rustle for the winter. The beans and
l.ods have high feeding value, provid- ;
i-t; what is usually the most expen-1
[sive part of a ration for cattle. The
ibean itself baa the following food
constituents or digestive nutrients
Protein, 1X.1 percent, carbohydrates.
50.x j»er cent; fat. 5.3 per cent. The
hulls carry comparatively high per-
centages of food values Beans in
pods rate as follows; Protein, 14.9;
; fat, 3.8. With
any other foreign | ^eans as a concentrate and vines and
fodd'-r as a r
reason, it must be admitted, why cat-iqer surface
tie could spend the winter in the I,--- ~—•---- ■
corn bean field. I making material. Then. too. there is
i the contribution of leguminous nitro-
j gen and the droppings from the ani- a
The hulls of the beans become quite’“»'»• What better 90,1 funding fa-
hard and tough as the pods ripen and cilltles cou111 the Southern farmer
for a period are a trial to the teeth boPe for’ Ho* differently from cot- Mto Woolsey, the class teacher, car-,
of the animals. Some farmers who!ton mowing, this method contributes ' ryjng the weapon of woman, a broom, • quickly
go in for pork production prefer top0 *be | and stormed the parsonage. L.«. .........
break down, disk and turn under the
beans after frost has come. Buried
for a ft w days the pods soften and
remain, of course, in that condition.
The hogs root for the beans and at
the same time stir the soil. Other I February 15, 1917.—I have posted
farmers go tn the trouble of harvest-' according to law all my lands in the
ing the pods and having them ground 1 vicinity of Buckeye,
and then fed By grinding of course
the greatest feeding value of the
bean is realized but not enough to
nected with -ithe
vitally interested
truth, show that
hull- are in that city
classed as new-comers.
No vessel plyrog lietween American
and Mexican ports can land fore.gners
at the latter who are not provided'[t
with passports issued b Mexican con- ,
sular officials in the United States rj
During the period while tae “scare"
has been most diligently in Process
of incubation, less than five h mdre
such passes have been issued.
So far from their being, as
tiveiy de'lared, large n imturs <if Ger-
num officers in the Mexican army.)
there are non*
half a dozen men
age on the father’s side, natives ot [ and Germany
Mexico and Mexican citizens, in one
branch or another of the army, but
these have been there since the com-
men'ement of the revolution and join- I
ed the Constitutionalist for es at a '
time when no one dreameJ of any
trouble between the Unit'-d States and (ir-o would be so foolish’
Germany
General Obregon, secretary of war
and navy has just prohibited abso-
lutely the entry of any foreigner into
that as opposed to the United States? Mex-
i ico knows that the only possible
1 course to be pursued by all the Latin-
who American countries is one of friond-
the ' ship w
allegation that a German bank in Mex- ; constant
by being 1 ever l»e
business, from any foreign countrv, no
what.”
This opinion, when repeated to oth-
er leading official-, was heartily en-
theldor id by them Indeed they all
j continue | seemed unable to comprehend how | make up for the expense of harvest-
the bankv Americans could for a moment be mis- ing and grinding as compared with
say. has for ov
he hands of the Ger-
e has been no notable
German population
six months. Had
been such increase
been impossible to conceal it.;
Review editor made special !n-
iquiry in this direction while visiting
Mexico City recently and from all
mrces the foregoing was confirmed,
was declared with positiveness, too,!
the German mer- hunts in the
while naturally sympathizing in„
their native land, bad no sym-j,.:„.
for any movement calculated to |
'embroil Mexico with the United States. 1,
j and that they would assuredly not'
i»>si- j countenance or supoprt any such plan.1
I as it would imperil and threaten with
the Mexican at my , destructi-n their business interests.
There are. perhaps., »ar as concerns even the pos-
i of German parent- of an alliance between Mexico carbohydrates, 51.7;
-/ or i~- **'— *—‘—
; country, a very- high official thus ex-
pressed himself recently t > the edi-'
tor of the Review
How can the people of the United
States believe for a moment that Mt x-
_.,w’,d h? Do they not
I realize that we Mexicans understand
' to the fullest that it would be national
suicide for us to ally ourselves with
'any country outside of this continent
maturing
is known also as Hun-
Planted dred Day. Minet
find the and Twenty Dav.
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Smith, Carey. The Matagorda County Tribune (Bay City, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, May 25, 1917, newspaper, May 25, 1917; Bay City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1346262/m1/2/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Matagorda County Museum & Bay City Public Library.