The Examiner-Review. (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 4, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
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SAVING BARNYARD MANURE.
ago when I first graduated from cob
The manure made through the win-
it
■ J]
' P*V-* WIUUUW8 MIIU 5—• “5d---P- --0
Fsideof the barn till the time came to
•C
Most users of sarcasm think moi
of its sound than of the service
I of that little river was beautifully
an
f
* probably lboking
a
in that way, but no such streak
great re-
t
rage at being served with a summons this sarcasm.
I
in a divorce action.
"Kathle, darling,” said Mrs. Wibur
the relator bad had the oppor-
>
past
Tat
the
cover my retreat in case of need by a
knife disappeared when she left, that's
"We had
A
1
A
great play bout
•
»
to
-
m in a clean cloth.
MISLAR
him for three days. Then have
a
One Man Butchering Outfit
-
UMM A
d
at wholesale, and it was
duction, too."
Did you ever hear about the time
I served the summons on the strong
The case was accordingiy ad-
journed until Friday afternon.
seem aa if I ought to warn you con-
fidentially. Yes, if you can just as
1,3
apart as convenient.
It is claimed, says
J
-1
In this way we planned to have him
hemmed in by the table and hoped to
get away before he could get at us.
In spite of all our preparations, we
were both distinctly nervous
flank movement of a chair under Mr.
Hoggenhelmer’s feet.
ing improvements now under way will
coat about $310,000,000.
much the better. The foot to
do much toward putting a st
cry of exhausted farming lai
. $-
4
old playmate had come back.
' OUTFIT FOR HANGING HOGG.
New York to Spend Millions.
It is estimated that New York build-
court could issue process and
without predujice to its exact-,
ness. ”
- Justice Gaynor, who granted
the petition, backed by his col-
leagues, Justices Burr, Wood-
Curb for Recklese Hunters,
of the newly-elected members
Oregon legislature announces
How One Farmer Saved His Fertilizer
for the Felds.
NOBODY WAS
SUSPECTED
* ■ r - .
<1
along, but it is not to be compared
with the demonstratlons of Joy that
"a, -
L, - ?
bs
PATRICKS FIGHT
FOR FREEDOM
side of a shed. Run a rope around chanics, that plants grow as well in ft ,
the roll and over a pulley at the top as when turned out of it, and that
" ae
By Ite Aid One Man Can Handle the
Heavy Animals.
at her with seeming delight, prancing !
and whinnying, she ran around in a,
circle at great speed for several min- (
utes. I am quite sure she thought her
fully matched to the costume or select
M fron pale shades of flesh. biscuit
and tan, besides the natural tones of
"euede. Evening shoes are of silk or
duced on the form. This
toward keeping the cow
clean while shut up in
through the winter ses
farmers are not as careful
aa they might ba. Their o
to lie on the bare, cold i
show it, too. tn the fith-la
their bodies,:
Freddie. Why, she’s a lady—and look
would take more pains to save the I
tlity that naturally belongs to
form. By keeping more cows and ft
ing out all the stuff produced we
bring our farms back to their nal
state of fertility. It is worth dot
too. -} , 0,
White uibe Banisneu.
; White gloves are no longer worn in
the street, or, indeed, anywhere. For
all occasions gloves are either dare-
I
stances. A friend of mine who was
a lover of horses took a horse from his
back to the term. It meems to me
I am in that way .making my ti
SERVING A
SUMMONS
The Strong Man Was Not
ae Bed ae He Looked.
Hew te Cook Pbssum. . 9 ,
' F First catch your possum. Cut his
• throat Bleed him well. Remove his
htoldee Bcald him as you scald a pig
and scrape off all the hair. Some pre-
der shavig it with a razor. Diga
hole in'the ground, and, after wrap-
2 ,,
the side of the shed will hold a hog, convenient The illustration shows a
or even a cow musk melon plant in a four-inch
---* basket ready for transplanting.
at the care she's been taking of Kath-
arine the last two weeks?’
“I know, and, as I say, I don't sus-
pect her in the least. However, the
fact that she seemed so ladylike or
that she has taken good care of Kath-
arine has no bearing on the case, in
my opinion. There is such a thing as
One man alone can butcher a hog
with the outfit shown ia the accom-
panying illustration. To make it, ex-
plains Prairie Farmer, fasten the roll
of a hay wagon to the post on the
1 "Well!" cried Mrs. Wilbur. I knew
---— -"looked in the garbage barrel, when I
long the wall, knew all the time I couldn’t hate
suspecting the
nurse,” aid Mrs.
Wilbur. "She
seemed : such a
[ lovely girl, . you
, know. To be sure,
she leit the next
day, and she had
every opportunity,
and a young wom-
in himmel! It to too good. Ach! I
■ball be free! Ah. Gott be thanked!
"""B TTT;V-TT
with tiny pearls, beads and jet; they
.tore further beautified b gold-orisi
vered Louis XV. heels and big buckles.
3 '1 ♦
E * Anent Lace Guttong.
' H So frequently the little lace buttons
on sleeves are not laundered as well
■'This looked like easy money, and I
took up the paper to see where and
.when my man was playing. There was
his name all right, but he was billed
as a professional strong man."That
evening he was scheduled to lift two
hprses on his chest,
“No one likes to have a summons
served on him. In fact, some people
become quite abusive and some quite
violent. To make matters worse, on
opening my summons I discovered that
it was a divorce. My $25 didn’t look
quite as easy money.
“I had played on my college foot-
ball team, however, and I called up an-
other young law clerk who had played
on his team. told him the proposition
and offered to split the $25. We de-
cided that we must see him first in
the show, in order to identify him
afterward.' So we went to the the;
ater that night.
“Mr. Hoggenheimer duly appeared.
He was colossal, with a chest like a
barrel and arms like huge hams. He
was a ferocious looking German with
a fiercely twirled Kaiser Wilhelm
mustache and snappy eyes.
“According to the announcement he
lifted 100-pound weights, broke iron
chains, tore packs of cards across,
lifted men with his teeth and finished
by allowing two horses to see-saw on
a platform resting on his chest while
k
man?” said a lawyer the other day i
in the bar association.: “Several yea s
out of the
tunity to read the return of the <
district attorney. Patrick said 1
he had had no such opportunity 1
and the court took up other
• matters while Patrick went over '
Mr. Taylor’s return.
When the case was next called, i
Patrick rose and said that the 1
papers were long and complex, ’
and because of their ’ importance
he asked that the case go over
so that he might have time to go '
ihtothe matter of the return, ,
podudle qnyne pzuinst her for the near the roof The rods resting against its use as a hanging basket is most h
having her right in your home it does
“My friend shot a glance at me ।
to say: ’Get ready,' and we -
moved back por chain warily. F
for instant flight, I arose and sal
By using plenty of straw 1
ding the cows we also added
amount of homemade fertilla
a resurrction. The earth will have
absorbed moot of the stink. He to
now ready for roasting.—New York
Press.
r --------
suming it we made a
taking lessons, etc.
Some have oalled me a craz
this subject of barnyard manure,
to an right. If I mb save whatna
ly belongs to the term and gi
f ' ■
?
thrown it out”
"My high-school class pin’s missing,
mother,” Katharine reported from her
bedroom.
“When did you have it lastr"
“I’m not sure, but it couldn’t have
been long before I was taken in."
Mrs. Wilbur shook her head gravely.
“I should be very sorry to believe she
took it And I really don’t see what
she could want with a high-school pin.
It’s barely possible you lost it some
other way, or it may be found on some
waist Never suspect any one with-
out good reason.”. A
Answering a friend through the tele-
phone next day Mrs Wilbur said:
"Yes as a nurse—I can recommend
her highly. What! You noticed a
reservation? Well, I don’t like to My
any more, especially through the tele-
phone. Somebody might be listening,
and I believe in being careful about
injuring any one’s reputation.
“Oh, it isn’t really anything tangible,
only I used my best knives fdr dinner
the night before she left, and the maid
was away, so that I took them out of
the case myself, and I positively know
that the whole dozen was there when
I set the table. It isn’t a case of guess-
ing. If I hadn’t seen the entire dozen
that night I should think Augusta
might have lost one some other time.
“Well, after dinner one was gone
No, I don’t suspect Miss Darling, but
if I were to do so it wouldn’t be so
absurd as it seems at first thought.
She and two other young women live
in a flat together and naturally they
would have use for such things. Go-
ing from bouse to house, as a nurse
does, you know, one could actually
pick up a set.
“My feeling to this: -I wouldn’t
and he lifted me in his arms like a
etnFenenapimerdnntenatectpa
Divorce from mein wife! Ach! Gott
i?
“It did. The usher brought back I self, is so strange."
word that he would be pleased to meet ‘ "Mother! You don’t suspect Miss
the young gentlemen as requested. : Darling?" cried her daughter. “The
> "We hurried over to the cafe and very thought makes me creepy about
chose a table near the door. We chose her having been in my room for two
our seats and discussed a plan of weeks.”
campaign by which I was to hand him J “Don’t bo so extreme, child. Of
the summons and my friend was to course I don’t suspect her. She’s prob-
cover mv retreat in case nt need hv • ably as honest as you or I, but the
"However, we concocted a note in • to her convalescent daughter, "I want
which we told him how we admired ; you to look ovr your jewelry very
his performance and asked him to carefully and see whether you miss
meet us to talk over arrangements by • anything. I hate to put such an idea
w&nd, Jeaka and Rich, asked rif Which we could become his pupils.'into your head about an apparently
• Incidentally we mentioned a cafe near! lovely young woman, but the fact of
by where we would wait for him in! that pearl-handled, silver-mounted din-
case he would do us the honor of bav- I ner knife having mysteriously disap-
ing something to drink with us. We peared, right when I was doing the
thought this might fetch him. ’ work and handling all the dishes my-
Wl '
to if
both
come to mein arms, my trenas, he
bellowed. ‘She has begun at last, at
last! Kellner, Kellner! Pring a bot-
tle of wine—two bottles! To-nght we
shall have a hummer!’
“So we sat down and soothed our
nerves with champagne until the
wee small hours. He was the most
delighted Teuton giant^you ever saw..
To see his happiness was worth the
headache I had the next day.”
"He was really one of the most gi-
gantic human beings I’ve ever seen.
. ... He came toward us twirling his mus-
eatin to match thezown, embroldere tahein a very dignified manner and
eyed us rather severely with a rest
less, quick-moving gaze.
“After we had properly introduced
ourselves, we got him hedged la the
place we had intended. He would take
nothing but a glass of beer, so we or-
dered beer, and while we were eon-
myself to suspect her of taking it!”— ' stable windows and left against the
Chicago Daily'News. , -___ t......... -______:
“Suspect her? I should say not
Wilbur answered as he swung into ;
Popular Me-
from the dining-room on the night of
its disappearance. It had slipped over
behind and had ben wedged perpen--
diculgrly between the leg of the kitch-
! en table and the wall.
lowed the path of the invisible streams
of goodness that took their way toward a
the elouds. All one could see of that
was the cloud that rose ofa sunshiny 3e
ckc120d2d62mddkdaddmbsihksdig
wen nave some one else I should feel
easier. If you had her and then
missed anything valuable I couldn’t
help holding myself responsible.”
“Augusta, one of my best dinner
knives disappeared while you were
having your vacation,” Mrs. Wilbur In-
formed her maid, who was giving the
kitchen floor a thorough scrubbing on
the first day of her return. “I don’t
know where it went, And I don’t sus-
pect the nurse we had to take care of
Katharine, but—"
“Look at that!" exclaimed Augusta
as a clatter followed her moving of
the heavy kitchen table.
There on the flor lay the missing
knife—unwashed, just as it had come
Got a Stay Until Friday In Making.
His Argument.
he supported himself on his arms and kleptomania, I, suppose you’ve heard?’
legs. My friend looked at me and I. But Wilbur was halfway down the
at him. Neither of us fancied his steps and escaped "being crushed by
home in the state of Maine to New
York city to sell, writes W. W. Maxim ... __________.. .. a
in Farmers’ Volte. It was sold and, rorning from the piles byzthe side or
kept there in a stable for daily use fhe barn, telling surely of the fertility
Three years afterwards the same man that was wasting its substance on the .
took another horse there to sell. While ai.
-ringsnomg.oneknseinecan ,1
ovoreont, -ra m .«>. a0e0so our 1ana 7*^ “rjsjrx <
"-"2 I
before. The horse seemed overjoyed " "Pn22"
to see his old master. • . 2.. 212375
My five-year-old mare, which is a ,S0 We made uPou minds to change
highbred one (a granddaughter of the program so that this loss might be
Nelson, 2:09), was brought up to run stopped, continues this correspondent
with the cattle. When she was a of Farmers Review. And one day that
sucking colt, running with her mother, harn found itself traveling across the 93
there were two young coys with them, Teldsito a site
one of them having a red and white Wasset uPon a basement and*
heifer calf ranning with her. The colt about twice as larse as it had been
became very much attached to the Dekore: Ebe stables were De0W I
calf. The next summer she ran with ground floor, and faced away romtie 9
these same creatures wipout hershed.in.therear.sothatweeolin
mother, and the next summer she had thrWthemanure outunu fhe $29885
only the red and white “calf’ that had °* ’ pE5"2mEEIE8
become as large as a good-sized oow. Ie .4" HoUn ne 8WE
The heifer would run with her and mont8: .
“kick up” and play just as she did. । The horse stables were conveniept
When the heifer was taken out and to the cow stables, so that wecouded
sold in the fall the colt became almost use the strawy part of the home mAEU
frantic with grief. I nure for taking up the liquid mengreg < S
This was three years ago. This in the gutters behind the cown.
a new neighbor moved into We believe to be a good plan. JWBt
uea. house a few rods away, manure, f_stored ziteit"i du 2
bringing a large red and white cow g2out4.b uup.with tretn“9
that looked very much like the one De fd “ MA2U
she used to have for a playmate. This thehemKsts8Ar Ap4515
cow came down the road one day and ""u5 " ne 7
looked over the bars where the colt "eremsed f
was. The colt always makes quite a
sensation over cows when they come
our guest:
“‘Mr. Hoggenheimer, sometimes in
our legal pro"ession we have to do
disagreeable things.’
“ ‘Ha! Vot ia that? Why? said he.
“ ‘Because,’ said I. producing the
summons and shoving it into his
tremedous paw, I must now serve
you with a summons.’
“Wot fort said be. bristling.
Wo both edged farther away, c
"That’s the way we begin a law-
suit in America,’ my friend explained.
This to a suit brought against you
by your wife for an absolute divorce.’
“He rose to his feet and struggled
out from behind the table as we raced
for the door. I stumbled and fell
lege l had a place as clerk in a down-
town law office and went through the
period of serving process, as we all 1
have to do.
“One day the managing clerk ;
called to me and told me he’ wanted
me to serve a summons on an actor
appearing at an uptown music hall.
He told me his name was Emil Hog-
genheimer, or something like that,
and that he had eluded another man
from our. office so successfully that
there was $25 for me if I succeeded.
Aa the garment itself, or else if they
fire perfectly clean, they go into holes
bimost immediately on the washboard.
A small hand scrub to the way out;
-got half so hard on the buttons or on.
the cufts, and ft insures the absolute
eleaniinegs of the button.
New York, March, 1.—Albert
T. Patrick, life prisoner at Sing
Sing for the murder of Million
aire William Mush Rice, won a
small victory before the appel-
late division of the supreme court
at Brooklyn today when he ob-
tained a continuance until Friday
• of his desperate argument for
freedom.
He was defeated, however,, in
his demand that he be given into
the custody of the Sheriff or that
of Kings county. The court re-
manded him to Sing Sing, but
‛ directed that he have every op
portunty to confer with his
counsel.
Patrick started his argument
with a dramatic surprise for
Assistant District Attorn e 3
Robert C. Taylor of District At-
torney Jerome’s office. Rising
from his seat to plead his case,
Patrick turned and asked with
impressive slowness and direct-
ness: “Does counsel for the people
contend that the facts in ms
petition for habeas corpus art
untrue?”
Mr. Taylor made an evasive re
ply.
"Dpes counsel for the people
admit thatthe facts presented art
correct?” asked Patrick. ’
Mr. Taylor had recovered from
his surprise by this time and re
plied: “Your honor, we have ac
cepted the petition as containing
information upon which the
straying all over the meadow when
___ ______ they wire brought in from the pas-
(1 must be somewhere! 'And only ture. 1
er , think what an injustice I migt have 200 aaue
F COURBE, I done Miss Darling if.4 had’ allowed ter season wa sthrown
shouldn t think of
the Animals Are. 1 the spring the grass along the course
of that age, ’ , l , -___ ______ - - — ___——___
ahiv ihnkine That horses have memories which gren. There Was so much to be cred-
extend over a number of years has ited te the plan of storing the mani
been abundantly proved in many in
■ 'T'" j ' i * 7201311
TRANSPLANTING BASKET. 6
It Will Prove a Great Convenience to
the Gardenev.
This simple and' easily handna
transplanting basket is a great- con- 2
venience la trees- 1
planting voung
trees, shrubs, er-
namental growth*
and flowering
vegetable plants
It is made of gal-
vanized wire, Md
as it to construct-
. ed in two halves
exactly alike to
easily put to-
gether and taken .
forward to mar-
riage and a home
of her own— nat-
urally, it would be
FgusV, a temptation to
'll r r take, anything of
|l %. 1 the sort. They are
" 4 beautiful knives,
you know, Richard. I paid $25 a dozen
When we moved on our farm we
found a, small barn on the place, lo-
cated away out in the middle of the
field, some ffteen rods from the house,
with nd fence to keep the cattle from
Most users of sarcasm think pote l Theretthersnnwsbanprineodnastefon
•3 n- ”1 - 1 it it. There the sun beat down upon it
might render. , and the frosts did their part toward
MEMORY OF THE HORSE. stealngawaz.thecoodnessoftheter
- ! thizer made from day to day Away
. ,1 * .,0, . g, > * T. from those heaps of manure ran a lit-
Incidents Which Show How Intelligeni tle stream of rich liquid manure. In
9 to shoot My person under the belief
that such person to a deer or a canvas
""
fc.. -.....
. ■
■ ■- -f -c.ee
- £ e
< 1-: .1 ,
“When he appeared in the doorway,
gwe were about ready to give up. If
he had looked big on the stage, he
seemed epormous in street clothes.
an, and Ive searched every nook and ".th the demonstrations of joy that
chosen g table against th* | cranny in the house. I’ve even shemade over this ohe. After gazing I
yallend had left no seat for our guest’— ti *
except on the settee ale
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Blackshear, Ed F. The Examiner-Review. (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 4, 1909, newspaper, March 4, 1909; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1399041/m1/2/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Navasota Public Library.