The Cumby Rustler. (Cumby, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, September 18, 1914 Page: 8 of 8
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Y’ QuMr Fish.
"Which flab have the power of float-
kg and swimming back downward?
This peculiar property is possessed
only by the diodon and the tetrodon.
two allied families of tropical fishes
which are popularly known as globe-
fish. The tetrodoh is also found off the
coasts of Cornwall and Ireland. The
taculty is due to the fact that the skin
on the abdomen of these fishes is much
looser than it is on the back, and they
have the power to inflate this loose
•kin by swallowing air through the
gullet. This of course enables them to
torn over at will, and, although the
great French naturalist Cuvier did not
believe that when in this position they
could swim as they pleased, Darwin
corrected him and proved that they
could swim both forward and back-
ward in this position.
It is of course well known that the
•hark and the dogfish, owing to the
peculiar position of the nnderjaw, are
obliged to turn on their backs before
they can seize their prey, and while In
this position they are ahle to swim for
a very considerable distance. This,
however, is done by the muscular force
of the fins and tail and not through
any special apparatus, such as the
globefish possesses. — St. James’ Ga-
aette.
FARMERS OF TEXAS
WELL CARED FOR
State Fair Offers Rich Premi-
ums in Agricultural Classes.
Democratic Nominees.
A MAMMOTH DISPLAY.
Awards In Individual Farm Exhibit
Class Increased to $300—Unci*
Sam Will Judge Cotton.
The Cupboard Was Bara.
The late Dr. Masters, who was for-
merly a missionary in Canton, China,
afterward lived in Berkeley, CaL His
friend and fellow missionary. Dr.
Boone, returning on furlough, was ex-
pected to arrive in San Francisco on
a certain day. Dr. Masters crossed the
bay to the city; he meant to meet Dr.
Boone and his party, and, after spend-
ing the day In sightseeing, to take
them to dinner at a well known restau-
rant.
The steamer, however, had reached
port earlier than had been expected,
and when Dr. Masters got to the dock.
Mg friends had left. He made in-
quiries at the principal hotels, but
could not find them. In order to notify
Mg family In Berkeley of the neces-
sary ehange in plans. Dr. Masters sent
them a telegram. Here is the some-
what damaged message that Airs.
Masters finally read:
“Can’t find the bones. Will come
home to dinner.”—Youth’s Companion.
Dallas.—Farmers of Texas are well
cared for this year by the man-
agement of the 1914 State Fair
of Texas, which begins Saturday,
October 17. Thousands of dol-
lars have been set aside for awards
for exhibits of farms, orchard and gar-
den products.
The mammoth agricultural building
| has been equipped with new and mod-
ern exhibit booths for the farm and
mill, cotton, corn and other divisions.
As usual cotton comes in for a rich
■hare of the prizes and will be as-
sembled and judged under the super-
vision of the United States Department
of Agriculture. Cash awards around
$300 and diplomas^ cover the prize of-
ferings for exhibits of short and long
staple cotton.
In the corn division, open to Texas
only, prizes aggregating $500 are of-
l fered for all variaties of Dent corn,
j Laguna or June corn, prolific corn and
gourd seed corn.
The big feature and one in which
much interest is manifested is the in-
dividual farm exhibit class. The man-
agement regards this of such import-
ance that the prize offerings have been
Increased to $300. Every farmer in
Texas has a chance at this rich purse
and by assembling an exhibit of corn,
cotton, small grain and other products
grown on his farm this year, his chance
Df winning a -rich share of this purse
Is as good as the next one.
The Texas Land and Mortgage Com-
pany offers rich special premiums ia
the Agricultural Department this year
Atavism In Dogs.
Dogs, probably the earliest of do-
mesticated animals, when transferred
to a tropical country, such as central
Africa, lose in a few generations most
of the characteristics they have ac-
quired in Europe, and revert more and
more to the type of the jackal and the
wolf. Then their ears, whatever their
breed, tend to become pointed, their
* coats turn sandy or rufous and their
bark becomes a howL Some attempt
been made to show that this is
the result of disease and resembles
the effect of malaria on the human
constitution. Yet the Egyptian dog of
pharaonic times possessed, as is seen
by the monuments, these very char-
acteristics, and as he was certainly
domesticated before the European ani-
mal it is probable that these are orig-
inal features of the race.—New York
Bun. _
English 8choolboy “Howlers.’*
The following answers were given in
an examination in an English school:
“James the First claimed the throne
of England through his grandmother
because he had no father.”
“Monarchy is the state in which a
man has but one wife.”
“Joan of Arc was the wife of Noah.”
*Mulius Caesar had a cadaverous ap-
petite, and before be died he ate two
brutes.”
“In the London parks the law of
gravity is twelve miles an hour.”
“Gastronomy Is the study of the
■tars and heavenly lights.”
“Quinine is the bark of a tree; canine
Is the bark of a dog.”
“The Mediterranean and the Red sea
■re connected by the Sewage canal.”—
London Globe-
Mouth of a Whale.
The whale rarely. If ever, swallows
■nything larger than a herring. Al-
though the head is of enormous size,
from one-quarter to one-third the length
of the body, and the mouth fifteen to
twenty feet long and six to eight feet
wide, the opening of the gullet is not
larger than a man’s fist.
8weet Oil.
“Gertie,” said a mother to her five-
year-old daughter, “here’s a dime. Run
down to the drug store and get me a
bottle of sweet oil.”
Gertie started down the street, but
■oon came running back to ask. “About
bow sweet do you want It, mamma?”—
Chicago News.
8tartled Him.
“I was outspoken in my sentiments
■t the club this afternoon.” said Mrs.
Garrulous to her husband the other
evening.
With a look of astonishment he re-
plied: “I can’t believe It, my dear. Who
outspoke you?”—National Monthly.
ANGORA GOAT DISPLAY.
Record-Breaking Showing Promised
For Coming State Fair.
Dallas.—Texas furnishes half the mo-
hair produced annually in the United
States, or more tha_n 3,000,00 pounds.
The grade is just ,as fine in texture as
the imported article, and there is about
4,000,00 pounds imported into the Unit-
ed States each year.
The management of the 1914 State
Fair of Texas is going to impress upon
visitors the fact that Texas can pro-
duce twice as much mohair if more at-
tention is given to the Angora goat in-
dustry.
Hence the rich prizes offered not
only by the Fair management but by
the American Angora Goat Breeders’
Association and the American Milch
Goat Record Association.
The Angora exhibit last year was
conceded to be the best since the St.
Louis 'World’s Fair and the exhibit
this year promises to eclipse even that
of 1913
Breeders declare that while the An-
gora prefers rough pasture, and is par-
ticularly happy when clearing thick
brush land, yet after a few years on
the very roughest land the owner will
be able to double and often quadruple
the number of head of sheep, cattle
•r horses on the same land, and not
In the least interfere with the Angora.
For Congressman-at-Large :
J. H. (Cyclone) DAVIS.
For Congressman:
EUGENE BLACK.
For District Clerk:
L. E. TEER.
For County Sheriff:
J. B. BUTLER.
For County Clerk:
OBED E. WALTERS.
For Tax Collector:
T. C. DODSON.
For Tax Assessor:
J. H. RIPPY.
For Floater:
W. I. (Ike) WYNN.
For County Commissioner:
H. T. (Pete) HELM.
For Representative1
R. R, WILLIAMS.
For County Treasurer:
NORMAN B. LANIER.
For County Judge:
DAN R. JUNELL.
For County Attorney:
HENRY E. PI1ARR.
For Cotton Weigher:
J. M YOUNG.
For Justice of the Peace;
V. C. (Claude) BIRD.
j*
RUB-MY-TISM
Will cure Rheumatism, Neu-
ralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic
Sprains, Bruises, Cuts, Burns, Old
Sores, Tetter, Ring-Worm, Ec-
zema, etc. Antiseptic Anodyne,
used internally or externally. 25c
AMUSEMENTS ARE
_ EMMIE
For Sixth National Corn Expo-
sition at Dallas^j
TO BE UNUSUALLY GOOD
Aiber’s Eight Polar Bears to Be Seen
in the Circus Royal—Greatest Amuse-
ment Feature Ever Shown in the
Southwest Will Thrill and Entertain
OPERATES
Gas-Electric
MOTOR CARS
between Sf'"’
Dallas and Paris
via
BABY SHOW AT FAIR.
Five Hundred Youngsters Will Par-
ticipate in Scientific Test.
Dallas.—Five hundred babies all In a
row, going through scientific inspection
and a test that is bound to make some
of them mad, is a unique exhibit for the
coming State Fair of Texas, which be-
gins Saturday, October 17 and con-
tinues sixteen days.
It is held for the good of the babies
of the state, our most precious asset,
and great physicians in attendance will
tell the mothers what is best for their
little ones in the way of proper feed-
ing, clothing, exercise and hygiene.
October 28 is Better Babies’ Rally
Day and all babies should be there.
The contest is limited to 500 and it will
be held in special quarters on the
ground floor of the Coliseum.
Miss Rich of the Home Welfare Di-
vision of the University of Texas is in
charge of the contest, which is held
under the auspices of the university.
The State Fair management con-
tributes $250 in prizes.
Terrell, Greenville,
and Commerce
Also
STEAM TRAINS
between
Ennis and Paris
Ask for Tickets over the
Midland
F. B. McKAY, G. P. A.
Terrell, Texas.
BUSY BEE AT FAIR.
Exhibit of Great Educational Import-
ance Is Now Being Assembled.
Dallas—Down there in Southwest Tex-
as, where the flowers are ever blooming,
beekeepers are getting up an exhib)t
of bees and bee products that will be
one of the most Instructive features of
the 1914 State Fair of Texas, which
begins Saturday, October 17. All the
various varieties known in Texas will
be shown to State Fair visitors in glass
observatory hives, where their habits
can be studied with the greatest of
ease, and, while one is doing this, the
expert in charge is adding other in-
formation that will convince the hearer
that Texas is the home of the bee in-
dustry.
No department of the F*air Is of more
Interest than this. The various uses
that can be made of honey will be ex-
ceedingly instructive to the housewife.
There will be a miscellaneous display,
bees In every conceivable shape, curia
hives and beekeepers’ supplies
The motto of this exhibit will be
that “every farmer should have a bee
hive.”
□□□□□□□
rpHE VALUE
of well-printed
neat-appearing
stationery as a
means of getting and
holding desirable busi-
ness has been amply
demonstrated. Consult
us before going
elsewhere
□□□□□□□
Program already arranged gives
promise of unusual attractions. The
especial feature different from those
ever given before in Dallas is the Circus
Royal, comprising the biggest and
grandest circus acts secured from all
of the large circuses. A partial list of
the features are as follows: Alber’s
Eight Polar Bears, which proves to be
the biggest and most talked of sensa-
tiaonai novelty ever seen in the South.
Alber's eight full grown Polar bears
are monsters that will be seen in as-
tounding performances. These won-
derful animals, while they may seein
to the public ungainly and awkward,
and while it is generally conceived that
Polar bears are. as he is, ferocious and
dangerous, nevertheless, they perform
with a dexterity in skill the most dif-
ficult tricks, forming pyramids, throw-
ing and balancing brands and balls of
fire, doing acrobatic Itunts, roller skat-
ink and comedy tricks that are almost
human. Under the direction of Pro-
fessor Albers they are, without doubt,
the most remarkable trained animals
in the world. Coming direct to Dallas
from the great Hagenbeek & Wallace
Animal Show. The Riding Crandalls,
America’s premier equestriens, per-
form somersaults on galloping horses,
vaulting from the ground to the backs
of their beautiful thoroughbreds. The
men riders performing marvelous acts.
They are aided by Marsells, who intro-
duces his high-ciass circus clowing as
ring master.
The famous Aerial Lameyg are stars
of the circus arena, performing incred-
ulous feats of athletic and aerial
achievements, filling the air with flying
forms and flashing like meteors through
space they present a bewildering spec-
tacle.
Pmiletta Brothers and Mora. tha
famous triple comedy bar experts, pre-
sent a wonderful panomemie exposition
of madcap fun and fro’ic intermingled
with comedy and wonderful dexterity
of flying from bar to bar, makes this
feature startling as well as extremely
funny. Burns Kohl, dog. pony arid
monkey circus is in a class all bv itself.
These wonderful animals do everything
but talk. Numerous tricks performed
by these intelligent creatures are al-
most human and will prove to be a real
treat to both old and young.
The Four Lamys are acrobatic mar-
vels, and execute difficult and high
lofty sensational tumbling, with triple
and double backward and forward som-
ersaults to and from the ground to
shoulders. They are a startling acro-
bacit novelty, unusually attractive as a
circus stunt.
Murray, Ward and Marsel, the three
famous circus clowns, will lie seen every
day during the entire circus burlesquing
each and every act. and will show the
people of the Southwest brand new
frolic and comedy that will be one of
the very entertaining features of the
Circus Royal. Madamoiselle Oranriell.
known as one of the youngest and pret-
tiest bareback riders, will appear daily
as one of the feature^ of the Circus
Royal. Madamoiselle Crandell is known
and recognized for her fearlessness as
a bareback performer, as no other wom-
an has heretofore attempted the feats
performed by her.
that s
. ^I|g, lf
Clties
JpgSs, the Katy
can ?e£ve
jyou best, either
" as a traveler or as a
shipper of freight.
The Microbe Menace.
Our wide general information. In this
day of the Sunday newspaper, tells us
that the real danger of the time is the
quiet microbe. We could even wish
that microbes clanked chains, and then
we would know they were about and
speed for the prophylactic. The in-
numerable devils of the middle ages,
invisible but always somewhere in the
neighborhood, have been neatly re-
placed by the discoveries of bacteri-
ology and if we hadn’t got used to
them. Living would be an almost im-
possible anxious performance. The
vacationist, reading the warning is-
sued by his government against the
bacterial dangers of simple country
living, would stay hopelessiy in the
city—and then, learning of the bacterial
dangers of summer life in town, would
eventually be driven to suicide by
drowning as the coolest way out of his
troubles.
Microbes, microbes everywhere.
In the water, in the air!
Kicking up a deadly row.
In the product of the cow.
You can almost hear them mutter
In the milk and in the butter.
—Atlantic Monthly.
FREE ATTRACTIONS.
The National Corn Exposition at Dallas
Furnishes Many Forms of Free
Amusement and Entertainment.
Aviation meet. Flights every day by
five aviators.
Daily balloon ascension, and six
break-away parachute drops.
Weber’s Prize Band of thirty-five
artists.
Dallas Concert Band of twenty-five,
giving six concerts daily.
Bronco breaking and championship
riding contest.
Intercollegiate track meet.
Amateur bang contest.
Circus Royal, consisting of eight
high class circus acts
Alber’s eight Polar bears.
The educational exhibits from thirty-
seven different states.
Hundreds of competition exhibits
from the United States and Canada.
The United States goi’ernm°nt ex-
hibit occupying 12,f‘ho square feet of
floor space: one-third of the entire
auto building.
Four rational conventions.
Nine state conventions.
Cotton seed products exhibit occupying
2000 square feet of floor spaee
Government good roads exhibit, the
best ever made in the Wc-st
Speakers of national reputation, and.
The gregt city of Dallas with all of
Its varied amusements and pleasures.
SILVER CUPS AND TROPHIES.
First Beet Extract Factory.
Something over u hundred years ago
the baeendados (ranchmen) of Uruguay
complained to the government that
over 450,000 head of cattle were being
killed annually for their hides alone.
The carcasses were thrown to the dogs
or left on the rolling pampas for the
vultures to devour. Beef in Uruguay
was so plentiful that it was something
of a nuisance evidently. Of course
that day has passed, but they still nave
cattle enough down there to convert
some 700,000 head into 113,000.000
pounds of jerked beef in one year,
most of which is sold to Brazil, Cuba,
Porto Rico and other tropical countries.
Perhaps but few people know that the
first great factory for the production of
beef extract was established at Fray
Bentos, a little city on the Uruguay
river about a hundred miles above
Buenos Aires, the cosmopolitan capital
of Argentina, and that it is still oper-
ating. Fray Bentos has been called
the greatest kitchen in the world. On
some days 2,500 head of cattle are
slaughtered.—Argonaut.
$12,500 in S:'ver Cups and Tro-
phies Will Be Given for Exhibits
at National C^rn Exposi-
tion at Dallas.
COUNTIES AFTER CUP.
Heredity.
This Information is gleaned from cir-
cus stuff: “The acrobat of today is
turning the same somersaults his great
grandfather did In the little circus of
yesteryears.” Seems remarkable that
■omersauits are hereditary. — Toledo
Blade.
The Limit.
Gab©—They tell me that Blank is an
awful grouch. Steve—He sure Is. He
Is the kind of fellow who blames his
ffcce because it needs a shuve.—Cincin
■atl Enquirer.
Doubt of any sort cannot be remov-
ed except by action.—Goethe.
Silver Trophy Up Again at State Fair
For Best Showing.
Dallas—What county is going to win
the much-sought trophy cup awarded
at each Fair for the best and most di-
versified county exhibit? Cooke, Hunt
and Hopkins, winners of previous years.
Ire all getting their exhibits ready
for the 1914 State Fair of Texas, which
begins Saturday. Oct. 17. Each has
sent in word that the cup is already
won. Meantime thirty or more other
counties of the state are making the
same preparations, not only to win the
cup but to get a look-in on more than
$1200 in cash prizes offered in the
county exhibit division.
! The Purpose of an
f Advertisement
V.'***** ."a-s..*.vw
is to serve your needs.
It will help sell your
goods — talk to the
people you want to
reach. An advertise-
ment in this paper
is a reference guide
to those whose wants
are worth supplying.
Among the valuable and interesting
tropies to he given during the (’urn i
Exposition at Dallas, February 10-24.1
is the Indiana Corn Trophy, valued at
$1000, which is offered for the best
ten ears of corn in the world’s classes:
the Kellogg Corn Trophy, valued at
$1000. offered by the \V Tv. Kellogg!
Company for the best single ear of
corn; the Colorado International Oat!
Trophy, made of Colorado mine sil- |
ver. valued at $1500, offered for the]
best peck of oats exhibited These lire
but a few of the valuable trophies in
nips, medals, etc., to lie given as prizes
during tiie Corn Exposition.
Theater Headaches.
The most frequent cause of head
aches occurring during or after the
theater is eye strain. People who use
the full energy of the delicate eye
muscles to obtain perfect vision are
often unconscious of this strain. In
the theater the continuous effort to
keep everything constantly focused ex-
hausts the nerve centers and headache
results. The practice of seating the
audience in total darkness while they
are staring into an intensely lighted
stage is another serious factor. The
pupils, being widely dilated in the
dark, admit the excess of light from
the stage, often producing Irritation of
the eyes which lasts sometimes for
days.
Those subject to headaches should
never sit where it is necessary to raise
the eyes to watch the stage. This un-
natural position of the eyes ia very
tiresome even to those who never have
trouble at other times.—Journal Amer-
ican Medical Association.
Saddle horse classes at the 1914
State Fair of Texas, Dallas, Oct. 17-
Nov. 1, are exceedingly rich and will
comprise the greatest quality exhibit
in the annals of the Fair. The Ameri-
can Saddle Horse Breeders’ Associa-
tion $100 trophy, will bring out the
cream of the bunch.
.Wx. %
DO IT NOW
Snbscrike
for THIS
PAPER
Amateur Band Contest.
During the Corn Exposition, and on ;
February 11. at Dallas, the prize of a '
complete set of uniforms is offered for i
the host amateur band in the South- (
west. There are over 1(10 amateur j
hands in Texas alone, and some forty '
of these have already applied for a
"place In this contest There will he
music of e-'ery part of the great exposi- :
ticn grounds of 127 am s, and tin' city
ot Dallas. John Weber of Cincinnati,
the noted band loader, who will direcr
his cvti hand every day for two con- i
r.erts daily, will he judge t>f the ama- ;
tour hand contest. No professional j
hand v ill he allowed to compete. W. \.
McDaniel of Dallas is chairman of the
couanilt'e that has the amateur hand j
contest in eharir*\ and extra amateur
hand in file Ft ate of Texas is invited
to send in its application to compete.
Prizes will he awardej on many feat-
jres, not only rendition of music, but
appearance <m parade and in concert.
tPrl all of the other details that go to
ij&ke up good amateur band work.
Fhgbt ot the Housefly.
Dr Ilindle of London finds that
houseflies tend to travel either against
or across the wind. This direction
may be directly determined by the ac
tion of the w ind, or indirectly, owing to
the flies being attracted by odors
borne by the wind Fine weather and
warmth favor dispersal. and files
travel further m tile open country than
in towns—probably because the houses
offer food and shelter In thtcklV
housed localities the usual maximum
flight isuibout a quarter of a mile, hut
in one case a single Uy was recovered
at a distance of 770 yards —[tartly over
open feu la ml. When set free in the
afternoon tlies do not scatter so well
as in the morning. Liberated flies ot
ten mount almost vertically to a height
of forty live feet or more.
Trouble Ahead.
“That speech you made placing me
In nomination was a splendid state-
ment of the case,” said the grateful
candidate.
“Yes,” replied the old campaigner,
“it was a fine statement. But we’re
going to have a dickens of a time prov-
ing it.”— Washington Star.'
Modern Seamen.
The new ship has transformed the
sailor with itself. He works among a
subtle and Intricate network of ma-
chinery. His brain is quickened by the
effort to understand the new force©
and appliances that he contrete. He la
drawn no longer from the lotrer strata
of the population of our ports, but life
increasing proportions from the r&nk©
of skilled .mechanics. The electrician©
and machinists, who are the aristoc-
racy of the crew, bring with them the
notions which prevail among the ari^
tocracy of labor out of uniform. They
possess more reading and more science
than did nine out of ten of the officer©
in the old days. They have a respect
for themselves and their class, which*
has revolutionized the morals and man-
ners of the modern warship. The grad-
ual reform of the service regulation©
h:is sought to keep pace with this
transformation, and officers have been
educated iu a wholly new conception
of their relationship to their men. l)he-
buHying and hectoring which was the
rule of tiie sea in the old days Is toda;f
the rare exception. Instinct and “gooti
form" condemn that kind of thing as
severely as the regulations.—Nation.
If an Ant Were as Big aa a Man.
An ant can carry a grain of com
ten times the weight of its body, while
a man or horse can carry loads only
about equal to Its bodily weight- Ifc
is not a fact, however, that the ant i©
greatly superior in strength. If an ant
should grow to twice its original sfcsa,
still retaining Its geometrical and hto-
tologieal structure, its volume, and ac-
cordingly the weight of its body, would
increase eightfold. Although the mus-
cles grow to twice their original di-
mensions. the increase in length does
not increase the strength, which Is
proportional to their cross section, and
the ant wonld only be four times as
strong as before. As It now carries
but five times its weight, however, it
is relatively only half as strong. It
is calculated that the same ant devel-
oped to the size of a man would only
be able to carry one one-hundredth of
Its own weight instead of ten times It©
own weight.
Thrashing Wheat In Cyprus.
The ancient Roman tribulum, a©
nsed for thrashing, may still be seen in
the island of Cyprus. It is a board
about six feet long and two feet wide,
studded with sharp edged flakes Of
flint In use it is dragged by oxen or
donkeys over the corn spread ont on
the hard earthen thrashing floor, sepa-
rating the grain and at the same tim©
bruising and chopping up the straw.
Thrashing time is enjoyed alike by
children and animals, the former riding
on the primitive implement and the lat-
ter gorging themselves with a hearty
meal, for in Cyprus the Biblical com-
mand. “Thou shalt not muzzle the o*
that treadeth out the corn,” Is still
faithfully observed. Although the gov-
ernment offers to thrash by machine at
nominal cost, the conservative Cypriot©
prefers the old method. He says that
the animals will not eat machine chaff-
ed straw, and straw they must eat, foe
there is no hay in Cyprus.—Wide World
Magazine.
First Fiction Known.
The “Tale of Two Brothers,” written
3.2(H) years ago by the Theban ©crib©
Ennann, librarian of the palace to King
Mereuptnh, the supposed Pharaoh of
the Exodus, is the oldest work of Ac-
tion extant
The t;ile was written apparently
the entertainment of the crown print
who subsequently reigned as Setl
IIis name appears in two places on
manuscript, probably the only surviv^
ing autograph signatures of an Egj
tian king.
This piece of antique fiction, writt
on nineteen sheets of papyrus in a boR
hieratic hand, was purchased in Italj
by Mine. d’Orbiney, who sold it in 1851
to the authorities of the British mt
sen in, where it is now’ known as th|
D’Orbiney papyrus.
Which?
Wife—I hired a new cook todayj
Lena Stout. Hub—You did! Ai
which is she?. Wife—Which what!
Hub—Lean or stout?--Boston Trai
cript
All the Details.'
Belle—Get a letter from Betty.
Beulah—Did she forget anything?
“1 guess not. It’s got nineteen
scripts on SL”—Yonkers Stntesqjan.
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Morton, George M. The Cumby Rustler. (Cumby, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, September 18, 1914, newspaper, September 18, 1914; Cumby, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth770323/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.