The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. [39], Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 29, 1914 Page: 1 of 8
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VOL. 39.
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LINDEN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBI
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To Log Texas Louisiana Road.
Longview, Texas, Sept. I.".—
The Texas, Arkansas and.Louis-
iana Highway Association start-
ed a logging car from here today
to Dallas, where they will start
the log of the road with Paul
fruttkay, Southern agent of the
American Automobile Associa-
tion, as logger and eng'.^er,
President J. II. Mcllaney. and
{Secretary F. B. Brown of the
highway w ill be piloted by W, E.
McHaney. The party expects to
reach Dallas tonight and start'
work from Dallas early to-mor-
row. The route will run through
Forney. Terrell, Wills Point,
tJrand Saline, Canton, Ben Wheel-
er, Tyler, Glad water. Long view,
Marshall and Shreveport. Tbel
route sill alHa run from Marshall
to Jefferson, Linden, Atlanta
and Texarkana.
Bond issues have been voted
nil along the proposed route and
several hundred men and teams
have been working along the
road since January and a first-
class uutomobile highway, it is
expected, will be the result. Au-
tomobiles from each town along
the road will meet the pathfind-
ers and escort them through
their respective counties.—Dallas
News.
The crew passed through here
last week on the route. W
think the Automobile hij
will be of great benefit
state.
te. We
highway
to each
U. S. JURY.
The following names have been
drawn to serve as Grand and
Petit Jurors for theOctober term
of the District Court of the U. S.
for the Eastern District of Texas,
from Cass County.
II. M. Guinn and Jim Reader,
Hughes Springs.
B. II. Singletery, W. P. Rich-
ardson and 0. L. Johnson, At-
lanta.
Henry Robinson, Kildare.
Alvin Frost and. Buck Henson,
Bryans Mill.
C. Powell and Jim Daniels, Lin-
den.
J. J. Shaddix, Marietta.
Good Paint
is cheap; and Devoe is not the
only good paint; it is cue of a
dozen; and, very likely, the only
One in your town—there are hun-
dreds of middling and bad.
You can see what chkiiee there
is of another good one there;
perhaps one in ten at the most.
Bad paint is dearest; middling
is dear; costs '2 or .'1 times as
much us t lie best.
No matter about the cost a
gallon; that isn't it; the cost a
square foot.'the cost a job; bet-
ter vet; the cost a year.
There's a whole education
in
paint in this advprtispmeut.
DEVOE
Linden Hardware and Furni
f ure Co. sells it.
An X after your name on
V< Ur (taper indicates that votir
subscription ha's expired,, and
that you must renew at one© rt
Vou wjut you- ptpcr contiuucd
FARMER LEADERS ENOORSE
HENRY BILL
Washington, D. C. Sept.—The
Legislative Committee of the
National Fanners' Union, com-!
posed of President C. S. Barrett
of Georgia, Peter Radford of Tex-
as, If. S, Mobley sf Arkansas, E. ,
W Dabbs of South Carolina and
J. T. Douglass of Missouri, to-
day announced that the impor-
tance of passing* the Henry Bill
will be urged upon every member
of Congress by Farmers' Union
leaders throughout the entire
country.
This announcement came after
a lengthy conference between the
farmers' committee and members
of Congress who are behind the
measure.
The bill referred to was intro-
duced by It. L. Henry of Texas
on August Gth and is now in the
hands of the committee on bank-
ing and currency. This bill was
drafted with the assistance of
prominent members of the Na-
tional Farmers' Union and is un-
derstood to meet with the full
approval of President Barrett.
It is claimed by advocates of
this bill that the passage of the
measure will insure reasonable
prices for cotton and other farm
products, guarantee a market
and automatically reduce the
crop of 1915.
Since the refusal of administra-
tion officials to give direct aid in
financing the cotton crop, it is
understood that the farmers
have centered their attention on
the Henry Bill as a temporary
relief measure.
Tlic 11U-K Washing ftiiirk
The Magic Washing Slick is not a
soap, nor is it a washing powder, but a
very peculiar art icle which makes dirty
clothes clcan and snowy white without a
bit of rubbing, thus doing away with the
hard work oh washday. Washes colored
clothcs without fading, woolens without
shrinking or hardening, and for lace and
lace cuitains it is simply fine. Guaran-
teed perlcetlv harmless and can be used
with petfoct safety on the most delicate
fabric. Price 10c per Magic Stick or
three for 2.5c. If dealer can't supply
s?nd stamps oi iii'.ney order to A. B.
Richards Co., Sherman, Texas.
■1 . i ♦ Oi ♦ —— -—
"Buy a Bale" Reminders
Buy a bale nrid lift a mortgage.
Rally 'round the fanner and
buy a bale.
Texans are leaders, not follow-
ers. The plan *\as born in this
StatK
•loin the ''Texas Cotton Club,''
buy a bale and become a publ c
benefactor.
Texas produces a bale of cot-
ton per capita. Why not buy a
bale pereapita?
Wood row Wilson has approv-
ed tlie "Buy-A-Bale" plan by
purchasing a bale of Texas cot-
ton himself.
In the"Buv-A-Bale" movement
there is immediate relief for the
farmer. Have you purchased
VOUt'S?
Every cirizen that purchases a
bale of cotton during this crisis
is a patriot in the true sense of
the word.
It May Not Be Your Bes
BUT to sav
is very co
have a Bai
times of net
WHEN HEALTH AND PRO
fare bringing a good income, you may not ren
there may come a time. Start an accouu
CASS COUNTY STATE .
UNDEN,
TEXAS FACTS
Population.
Texas had 3,896,542 people in
1910, according to the Federal Cen-
sus,
Our population at the present
time i3 approximately 4,300,000.
The first Texas Census, taken in
1850, showed 212,505 persons in the
state.
Texas ranks fifth with other
states in population, having wrest-
ed that place from Missouri dur-
ing the past decade.
In 1850 Texas ranked twenty-
fifth with other states in popula-
tion.
The 1010 population classifies—
3,204.848 white, 090,019 negroes,
702 Indians, 595 Chinese, 340 Jap-
anese, G Filipinos and 2 Hindus.
Eighty-two and two-tenths per
cent of our population is white, 17.7
negro, and 1 per cent Indians,
Chinese, Japanese and others.
There are 242,000 persons in
Texas who were horn in foreign
countries.
Seventy-six per cent of our pop-
ulation is rural and 24 per cent
urban. There pre 2,017,fi2t> males
and 1,878,916 females in Texas.
We have 109 white males to ev-
ery 100 white females in Texas.
We have a million persons in
Texas who hare moved here from
other states. Most of them came
from Tennessee, Alabama, Mississip-
pi and Arkansas.
There are 20,000 negroes in
Texas who came here from Louisi-
ana.
Seventy-five per cent of the na-
tive white population in Texas were
born in this state.
• For every person who leaves Texas
and moves to some other state in
I he Union, we get eight in re-
turn.
Cochran county in 1910 had only
G5 persona living within its bor-
ders.
... -i
Cotton Seed Oii
V
A scientific jo
seed oil has ten
merit value of bi
only half as ma
splendid oppor
South to Cutlivi
ty per cent and
other ways. It,
take a drink of
out J a bite of
And when a foil,
doesn't have to
picking his teet
times are tent
things in the wo
ing and the con
crgies.—Honey
Slop Tlial Fii
Check your fall c
don't wait— it maj
trouble, weaken y<
vclopa chronic lu
bottle of Dr. Bell
day; it is pure and
ly for that fall cot!
or Chi ldren are siel>
will relieve quickh
soothes the irritat
air pa a sages. Loo:
septic and fortifies
colds. It surely
rom Retting a hold
2ocat yourDruggi:
THE WAY TO
Whoa you 11
him. After yot
dy him. If he
hitn. If he is gt
ate him. Wh
amuse him. \
cheer him. Wh
listen to him.
relsome, ignore
confidential, en
he is secretive,
is jealous, cure
nought for plea
If he favors so'
him. If he dr
thank hiui. \\
biss him. Let
well you unde,
never let him
him
(io to I. N. \iurett foi Fire
nu'i Tornado 'Instfrtfuce;
Oaiaas at Sa.no Fanl's.
"manage'
Hot Chili, ty0uul
Drinks, and Co
h >bi« use 35ct1 I^
hit
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tio
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Banger, J. E. A. & Erwin, W. L. The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. [39], Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 29, 1914, newspaper, September 29, 1914; Linden, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth341452/m1/1/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Atlanta Public Library.