The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 21, 1916 Page: 8 of 8
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I
THE PADUCAH POST
1 ~ wno nav
J. B. McCARLEY
rnrt«tm. ..._______
NEWTON
WAGONS
Positively no bettor
W agon on the mar-
ket. AVe have a big
supply of these now
on hand and will
take pleasure in
showing them to you.
If it's the best Wag-
on you can buy, it's
a Newton. Ask those
who have used them.
Phone No. 7
‘EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE”
Paducah, Texas
.SOMETHING OF INTEREST TO /5
EVERY FAMILY THAT tr
\ RAISES GARDENS
(Continued from last week)
Paducah, Texas, Sept. 21, 1916
T. M. Drummond
S. F. Drummond
Land For Sale
Some of Cottle County's choicest Farm and Ranch
lands are listed with us. We can furnish you prices
and terms on most any kind of Farm. Ranch or Town
Property you are looking for. We have some choice
improved Farms with prices and terms reasonable.
Before you invest, let us show you what we have.
PADUCAH LAND CO.
PADUCAH, TEXAS
losing hope now.
Onr blacksmith is sneing Si
Rubbin for damages. Si’s mule
stepped on the former’s toe Wed-
nesday and ruined his this year’s
j corn erop.
Mrs. Longneck of near Cucum-
berville is wearing mourning this
week. Her pet canary bird
( tried to swallow a pumpkin seed
Tuesday and choked. Her* hus-
jband has sent off for a seedless
canary to prevent further mis-
haps.
Snipe Supper by Band
The Pumpkin Hill Brass Band
will give a snipe supper at the
old Soapstone school house Fri-
day evening. Gentlemen are re-
quested to bring all the snipes
- ______ available. Mr. Rube Windbag
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ + + * + * ; , , ;-------——— rrcornf plfyer,7m.p,ay“Tur-
+ THE PUMPKIN HTT T urmi!* c' Hn< “ ease(^ "'^es. Lem "3 tbt“ <->ven with one lip.
* + Saucepan has Offered the services ,Everybody corae and see Rube
T , ,' " ****■' of his galvanized hog fence, over have a ‘ blowout.” Five cents
introductory which cablegrams will be reeeiv- 'Vl11 t,e charged at the door to
^adies and Fellow Pie Eaters: ed after supper, and Misss Pansy blly a new “ring” for the bell.
On this change of the moon 1 Strawberry, our postmaster's hyp- „ | --
•■"■gin publishing The Pumpkin ll0t!Z‘n£ daughter, will squib EXTRA! Watch this paper for
Hill News, a paper devoted ex dofwn society a»<l football fights. tIu‘ olm.iary on B. A. Gorde’s
clusivelv to the people of Pumn c .or,1,er that the People who marriage next week. Our report-
kin Hill and her boundary- line e l"„lnv,' w,fh this Publica- f,r. Pansy Strawberry, has a seas-
If vour. on the other side of 011 'vlH not tak,‘ their devotion ?n ,a‘kf'r ,to all weddings hooked
the*wash line jVmp t.m ropf and ?U,V 7 ^ editor’ mir *»P«*>r | P"'"pk>" Hill.
join our familv. hail ilas prevailed upon us to ~--
Pumpkin Hill ,s todav the face ?P,m thc fami,y.’s treas'ired pic- ' Bert Offers Reward
of Pieland and if von 'have nev- 1PVePy Pin this| ^rt Stukbblo "ays he will pay
er been there, grab vour buckle 1° your heart and if will never !fL3° f°r t,!e arrest of the fel-
take on breath and' SapTwice flll,ter' „ „ "ho shot hls ^od shed
before you look. The P„mDkin Condensed Local Monday.
Hill News will be issued once A?nos Snnpson, who has been j MORE BRITISH GAINS
suffering’ damage. To the crops!
which will be carried over for de-
velopment in the early spring
should be added salsify or oyster
Plant, which may be planted
practically any time during the
late summer or early fall.
The following specific direc-,
tions for fall planting of certain
seeds in the South have been pre-
pared by the department’s plant
specialists: 1
Beets
Beets planted in the South ini
August and early September will
produce a erop for late fall and
early winter use. Where land!
cultivation is to be given, sow
the seed in drills 14 to 18 inches
apart and cover to the depth of
about 1 inch. For horse culiva-
tiO'i the rows should be 2V2 feet
apart. As soon as the plants are
well established, thin them to a
stand 2 to 8 inches apart. Give
frequent shalow cultivation. The
beets may be left in the ground
through the winter to be pulled
when wanted.
Varieties recommended: C'ros-j
bv’s Egyptian, Bassano, Early
Eclipse, and Blood Turnip.
Turnips
J urnip seed may be sown dur-
ing the latter part of August
ami throughout September and
the first half of October. Sow
turnip seed thickly in rows 15
to 18 inches apart, and when the
plants reach a height of 4 or 5
inches begin thinning, using the
.voung plants for greens. For
good roots thin the plants to lV
about 3 inches apart in the row. ^
Keep the land well cultivated to
“I HAD NO IDEA YOU CARRIED
SUCH FINE FURNITURE AT SUCH
Low Prices
That is what a lady from Dallas re-
marked the other day after she had in-
spected our stock.
“Why ” she said, “Y ou have the
Hoosier Cabinet, Globe-Wernicke Sec-
tional Bookcases, Sealy Mattresses and
Columbia Window Shades, at the same
price they asked me in Dallas.”
And you will find it the same all
through our line. You can buy here just
as cheap as you can at other places and
have the satisfaction of getting your
goods delivered to your door in first-
class condition.
Youngblood Furniture &
Undertaking Company
were no
laun wen cultivated In ---
“u“ae “ DOR'io*iirf ?............
a small garden, cultivation with I , events of importance.”
a hand cultivator is thc most SOFIA, Sept.18 (via London ) I i, ,
practicable. Turnips may be left —‘‘Our advance in Dobrudia con-;, u l dlsease> Pneumonia and
in the ground until needed for tinues, ” says an official announce- p'b"cu osis cause more than 30
the table, or may be pulled as ment issued here todav , per cent of deaths.
soon as they are mature, and stor- "A brigade of the enemy ves-; ------------- ----------
od in a cellar or buried m banks terday attempted a eoun'ter-at-
°r pits. The varieties of turnips tack against our column on th<L ** *!™ley* Z a }*$£
commonly grown in the South extreme left toward the villi,n^'T 1,vl"g ,K,r,1“"',,st ?f
are Purple Top, Globe, White -of Pulutche, but w r T br0“ght ,il water “elton t0
Globe. Seven Top, White Milan, with great losses and left n onF “,h‘w day-
............. Ab'r<i»"’ t*-* ..........
... is,uru um-e Agnes Simpson, who has been
every week- we make ton much washing the dishes for her fath-
"Pi to come forth daily—but er this season, is going to Can-
* wui « * utia acoJuuil,
this one issue will record all the ville next week to take the job
doin s in this throat of the for- of bookkeeper in a bean factory',
est as dispatches carry them There have never been any strings
here \\ e have one lady report- on Agnes, -*-■--J-. v>:n:.
LONDON, Sept. 18.—In small
operations on the Somme front
last night the British gained fur-
- - fiber ground, the war office an-
but steady Billie is nounced today*.
s Me
\
TOBACCO IS PREPARED
FOR SMOKERS JNOERTHE
PROCESS DISCOVERED IN
MAKING EXPERIMENTS TO
PRODUCE THE MOST DE-
LIGHTFUL AND WHOLE*
\SOME TOBACCO FORCIG-
^ETTE AMD PIPE SMOKERS.
PROCESS PATENTED
JULY 30™ 1907
R. J. ReynoldsTobacco Company
Wmsros Saien.N.C.USA.
DOES NOT SITE THE TONGUE
■ : „
1 CKMETTE TOBACCO
tidy red
Print* Albert i, raid
fin., 10c; handsome pound and
hair pound l,n bum.dnrs and
that d.v.r cry.tal.,la.. pound
humidor with *Ponge - momtener
i ft j j heePj‘ toba"° •"
eplendtd condition
P. A. puts new joj
into the sport of
smoking!
may live to
be 110 and never
feel old enough to
vote, but it’s cer-
tain-sure you’ll not
know the joy and
contentment of a
friendly old jimmy
---— pipe or a hand rolled
cigarette unJess you get on talking-terms
with Prince Albert tobacco!
p. A comes to you with a real reason for all the
goodness and satisfaction it offers. It is made by
a patented process that removes bite and parch >
/°^.ca" smoke »* long and hard without acome-
oack. Prince Albert has always been sold without
coupons or premiums. We prefer to give quality!
Prince Albert affords the keenest pipe and cigarette
enjoyment. And that flavor and fragrance and
coolness is as good as that sounds. P A just
univePal demand for tobacco
Without bite, parch or kick-back!
Introduction to Prince Albert isn’t any harder
than to walk into the nearest place that sells
tobacco and as* for "a supply of P. A.” You pay
ut a little change, to be sure, but it’s the cheer-
tullest investment you ever made!
Collards
Colards can bo groyvn in tlie
same way as outlined for turnips
Kale
Kale can be groyvn in the open
throughout the winter in prac-
tically all parts of the south. Sow
the seed in September and Octo-
ber in drills 18 inches apart for
hand cultivation, and 30 inches
for horse cultivation. As soon
as the plants reach a height of
4 or 5 inches they should be thin-
ned. Thc plants pulled may be
used for greens. The cultivation
I tor kale should be the same as
for turnips.
Varieties recommended: Dwarf
Curled. Tall Scotch, and Siber-
ian.
Spinach
Spinach is one of the best crops
groyvn for greens and should be
found in every home garden. It
can be groyvn in the open during
thc autumn and winter in all sec-
tions south of Norfolk, Va. Sow
the seed in the latter part of Au-
gust, in September, or October,
in drills 15 to 18 inches apart at
the rate of one ounce to 100 feet
of row. When the plants begin
to crowd in the row they should
be thinned. The larger plants
are selected first, and the smaller
or later ones are thus given room
to develop.
as w,;!l as eight caissons, one g».L“" Dcput"^^ melon'‘up"'and
krU"S an<l oth,‘r m|d it to the highest bidder, it
“From M* numl.or killed JtZSt*
wounded and thc large quantity J_________________
of war material lying about, j Th(, r s Public Health Serv-
..ippears tile enemy sustained eno/ ■ .. n.,tjnn’s first lino of de-
mons losses during the fightii/ • ,
«n September 12, 13, and 14 »7ense agamst d,8ease’
TURK ATTACK FAILS
Subscribe tor The l’ost.
BETROGRAI), Sept. 18.—(Vi
London.)—‘‘Attempts by tF*
Turks to make an attack in ti T * ft
region of the village of Adidl*| C UTfi
the Caucasian front, wer
frustrated by our fire,” says thvonderful benefit 1 have re-
officia! announcement issued her>rd’s Black-Draught," writes
'oda-v- fdlls, Ky. ________
1 IIIIHII |»i
‘‘On the western (Russian and
Uiiiii
m
\m
si
m,
^RINGErALBERT
A J. H c CWtt|
BRITISH REPLY ON SEIZURE
OF MAILS COMING
WASHINGTON, September 18.
Britain s reply to thc American
not portesting against seizure and
censorship of netuar 1 mails is on
its way to Washington and is
understood to be largely a repe-
tition of arguments in * justifies
tion of the policy of the allies
contained in preliminary memor-
andum received here last Febru
ary.
At the British embassy today
it was stated that the allies de-
sired to lighten tin* censorship
as much as possible and that it
was with this end in view that
the series of conferences to be
held in New York this week be-
tween leading American exportrs
and Sir Richard Crawford, trade I
| adviser of the embassy, had been
i arranged.
, Low wages favor high disease
! rates.
-£j£) flirts,
&
I cl
| 50p acr,,s of choice land,
! all tillable, that I yvill sell in most
I any size tracts to suit the pur-
I chaser. Prioe and terms reas-
j onable. See me before you buy.
—W. Z. Drummond. 16-tf.
• 1
It
Make the living room-the room in which all mem-
bers of the family gather in the long evenings, cheerful and
cozy.
IVrl„ps i, need, th, »ddi,I„n „f „„|v one or mm
°' ■"»("’ » complete, or I, lnHV need
furnishing anew. *
In either event, you ........ amply repaid for the mod-
orate expendittye when you note the improvement You
will find everything needed here, and at the right prices.
HOME
FURNITURE COMPANY
TTT»meet
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Carlock, E. A. The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 21, 1916, newspaper, September 21, 1916; Paducah, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth755872/m1/8/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.