The Hamilton Record and Rustler (Hamilton, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 26, 1914 Page: 7 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 20 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
-
SAVE IT! HOW?
vices trom this place, Mr. A. J. Hughes Drzught has done for me.
*,
I got so tad, I could not eat or steep, used by young and old, and should bo
Bring Your Seed and Leave Them!
MS
Get Your Feed When You Want It
Most People Who Eat
t
$
s
11
■
•k
W. W. Fowler, M. D.
2t
iv
07
VERY FINE
mS
a
Fresh Fruits and Vegeatbles
RECEIVED DAILY
LIGHT SERVICE!
g
0
• T
West Side Square
' ■
Conservative
In Management
In Its
MANN, Ollie STICKLAND.
4t
n
best commercial, bookkeeping,
band and typewriting ache
short-
7
Aft
Sool in
iging and Attentive
0
t
Have Your Homes Wired
Immediately and get One Month and a Half
)
V
’J
water, situated on
,W.
100,
Ek
)1[•-
One Ton of Seed will Get as Much Meal and Hulls
as Two Tons of Seed are Worth to You as Feed.
— ■
e
Thedford’s Black-Draught has been
found a verv valuable medicine nr da.
-MMAM M vwe J VMW-V #VNVWA Ivl Uv
rangemeutsotthe stomach and Iver. II
is composed of pure, vegetable herte.
acts gently, yet surely. It can be freely
4.
The Record wants to sell a schol-
arship in Tyler Commercial College,
Tyler, Texas, admitted to be the
We will give you for a ton of seed, more meal than it
will make and also three times as many hulls as a ton contains.
Take your seed to the Hamilton Oil Mill and get meal and
hulls and you will SAVE MONEY in TWO WAYS and make
money in four ways. This statement an be verified by most
any of the State or National Feed Experimental Stations.
kept in every tamily chest
Get s package today.
- Onfy a quarter.
This is to give notice that I will
beat the Phoenix drug store in
Hamilton, Friday and Saturday,
December the 4th and 5th. 1914,
and will be prepared to give atten-
tion to the treatment of the Eye,
Ear, Nose and Throat.
writes as follows: "I was down with
stomach trouble lor five (5) years and
would hnvy sick headache so tad, at
times, that I thought surely I would die.
I tried different treatments, but they
did not seem to do me any good.
1
ve
DR. W. W. FOWLER,
SPECIALIST,
The Texas
. Oat Crop
■ 1,17
-
■ sa
• 1
I I
di i
:3 a
CASTOR IA
Tor Infants and chilren.
The Uri Yu tai Ahnays Bongit
Bean the ? zz<Je 3F*
,eh,
6
" MUST HANDLE MAIL "i
DURINGHOLIDAYS
I •
v .
A Guaranty
Bank
; *
' '*■01
i.
■ ■ nf’l
pas
Phone or Send us Your Orders
& Shockley
ie Home of Pure Food
Majority W Fiiends Thought Mr.
Woa Die, But
Ome Helped Himt
oppiceks
SafeDepo
Boxes
...... * „
■ aua nd
i
ectrie
To avoid congestion of parcel
poet packages during the holiday
season. Superintendent S. M. Gaines
of the railway mail service for the
Eleventh division has mailed out in-
structions to all the postmasters in
the states of Texas, Oklahoma, Ar-
kansas, New Mexico and Arizona
for handling parcel post packages
from Dec. lOto 25.
Postmasters are requested to
make up mails into districts or
states as far as practicable. When
three or mere bulky packages ire
addressed to the same postoffice, a
direct sack should be made. When
three or more bulky parcels are re-
ceived for the same state, a state
should be made and labeled to
proper terminal railway postoffice.
Any parcel larger than an ordinary
pasteboard shoe box is considered
bulky.
Direct packages shold be made
when ten or more letters or post
cards are received addressed to the
same state.
Eggs for the first and second
zones, umbrellas and other mail of
like character are to be dispatched
outside of mail bags and delivered
to the mail clerk by the person
handling the mail.
SA B
"I hate to go to Mm with his MV,
he always grumbles and kicks so,"
What a useless and bad habit to ae-
quire. Think it over and conclude
that it to wiser to pay and smile. By
doing this much time can be saved
for the Telephone Company and that
will enable them to render better
service.-Gulf States Telephone Co
I H WIE
i.
America. We can sell you any
kind of a scholarship you may re-
quire in this school in either single
or double course, said scholarship
being good for life.. Inquire at the
Record Office, Hamilton, Texes.
--------------
We have a store full of the most
eatable of eats, and every purchase
you make impels you to make an-
other, and still others.
t 4
-i-nien-min-n-
New Shipment of
Not Waste Your Money!
Telephone 301
K
id
r
d
2
n
2w
Is
ul
_ A. mm A" a ■ -2
Money Saved Is Money Made !
The Hamilton Oil Mill
JOE L WILLIAMS, Manager
Are Particular What they Eat
We cater to such people—we buy
to please them, and we DO please
them.
ead This!
Fresh Salt Mackerl !
FOR FIVE YEARS
and all my triMds, except one, thought I
would die. He advised ew to try
Thedtord’s Black-Draugtt, Md qut
Posted: 456 acres south of Ham-
ilton; also, 420 and 320 acre tracts
adjoining. Trespassers will be
prosecuted to the full extent of the
tow. Frrz KRUEGER, Henry FELD-
g e
REE SERVICE!
--------------------
on Light & Power Company
..Phone 871.
The 1914 oat crop of Texas will
amount to approximately 24,500,000
bushels, compared with a total yield
of 32,500,000 bushels last year, ac-
cording to estimates given out by
the crop reporting board of the
United States department of agri-
culture. The acreage yield this
year is 25.0 bushels, and the pro-
duct is bringing the farmers around
45 cents per bushel. Last year the
average price was 48 cents per
bushel.
The oat crop of continental
United States this year is estimated
at 1,136,755.000 bushels or about
15,000,000 bushels more than last
season's yield. The average yield
per acre in 1914 for the entire na-
tion was 29.6 bushels and 29.9
bushels in 1913.
ss.n
s lumana ... '
--------------------------------------------•
All persons who have their houses wired
between the Present Date and January 1 st.
Will be Given Free Service
i0
2 f. Tr
,r
From the Time of Wiring Until
the Date Expires on January 1.
----------------------------------------- I I
Electric Lights are no longer considered luxurious
and comfortable alone, but greatly lessen the chances
of loss by fire from the use of kerosene lamps. '
<• ‘ - oeo
-
1 e ee ~-na
1 2 '• ea‘mnK/1AG8
ve
wadonta
In Its Service
The Hamilton Bank &
TrustCo,
Capital . . . *50,000.00
Snrplus. . . . $50,000.00
Auk-al
,2dco,gngk
. bc.0.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Peck, L. O. The Hamilton Record and Rustler (Hamilton, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 26, 1914, newspaper, November 26, 1914; Hamilton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1564580/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas State Library and Archives Commission.