The Cumby Rustler. (Cumby, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, February 9, 1912 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Hopkins County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Hopkins County Genealogical Society.
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■. '&y ■
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Doctors Said
Health Gone
Coffered with Throat Trouble
Mr. B. W.
D- Bar nea,
«k - Sheriff
at Warren
C • ■ b t y,
Tome,
fta a letter
from Mo-
ll i nnville,
T « meaaee,
*1 h a d
throat
t r o « b I •
Bid had
• hree doc-
ton treating
aae. A 1 1
failed to do
nao any
Itod, and
y r enounced
my health
gone. I eon-
ll« ded to
try Peruna, and after using four bottles
can my I was entirely cured."
Unable to Work.
Mr. Gustav Himmelreich, Hochheim,
Tens, writes:
“For a number of years I suffered when-
ever I took cold, with severe attacks of
which usually yielded to the corn-
home remedies.
act year, however, I suffered for eight
without interruption bo that I
not do any work at all. The va-
medicines that were prescribed
me no relief.
“After taking six bottles of Peruna.
co of La cup La and two of Manalin, I
an free of my trouble so that I can do
B my farm work again. I can heart-
(y recommend this medicine to any
who suffers with this annoying
r wilt
Farmers' Educational
aad Co-Operative
Union of America
Matters Especial Momeat to
the Progressive Agriculturist
Mr. B. W. D. Barnes.
mat they
good results.’
m
WM
1
Free Color
Plans
for any rooms yon
It want to decorate
You can have the pret-
tiest walls in your town,
at the least cost. Our
expert designers will
plan the work for\ you
FREE.
; Get This
20 Pretty Robins
—we will mail yon a copy Free.
U tell* how to tiave the best deco-
rating at least cost, is fail of new
color schemes and shows sixteen
of the exquisite Alabastine tints,
famous for their soft, refined
qualities.
“Ginger” is a good cure for failure.
It takes optimism to save the world.
It is easier to stir up than to build
up.
Frivolity and economy do not go to-
gether.
America expects every man to pay
his duty!
Opportunity is not success—merely
the shoes.
Elbow-grease makes brain power
profitable.
If you cannot love your enemy at
least do not hate him.
The more a man goes around, the
less he is apt to develop Into a crank.
Long hours of labor bring their
own reward; but laziness wins a
scant harvest.
The farmer should learn the art
of making one weed grow where a
dozen grew before.
As the churning of milk bringetb
forth butter; so the forcing of wrath
bringeth forth strife.
It isn’t a question of how much the
world owes you—the problem is how
much do you owe the world?
Much food Is In the tillage of the
poor; but there is that which Is de-
stroyed for want of judgment.
The man who waits for some one
else to turn his pancakes will likely
have them burned on one side.
Your reputation for veracity will
suffer if you boast of your tender
heart while you are driving a dock-
tailed horse.
DAIRY FARMS IN AUSTRALIA
\
AlaKsjflHfiP
The Beautiful Watt Tint
■.yr
wee in vogue In modem home*
i wait paper or paint and coats
Ion. AH katsomine colon are
ft aad erode beside Alabastine
L Mowtnlrfy sanitary, goes fur-
i not chip, peel or rub off.
Casy Sa nee - jnst mix with cold
*Skt nod pot on. Directions on
pft package. Fall 5-lb. package.
WUtt 50c; Regular Tina 55c.
Alabastine Company
■ fnsftMt tttd. Brad Ra#:fc, Ik*.
JtaTlfftai.Dc* t, 1*5 later Street
MEXICAN
MUSTANG
LINIMENT
far HORSES and MULES.
gg#
■ Mr. J. T. Tribble, Cartersville, Ga., writes:
"Mexican Mustang Liniment is the best
■ (miment in the country for a man to use
H oa» bis horses, mules or cattle, and I advise
S Others to give it a trial.”
[ 28c. 50c. $1 abottle at Drue A Gea’l Stoma
&• ■
MAKE YOUR CARDEN
YIELD ITS LIMIT
Plant thoroughbred seeds. Thor-
oughbred seeds do not happen.
They result from long and intelli-
gent breeding. They pre ‘
big crops of the best v
Jes. Use Ferry’s.
For sale everywhere.
Itlt SEED ANNUAL
NtEE ON REQUEST
». I. FBtTkCa.. mratt.HO.
fERRYS
SEEDS
Meningitis
(note Texas
TELEPHONE DANGERS .pl4e„J
t, tnberculQsia, consumption, pntumo-
lagrippe, Influenza lurk in the ordinary
■wrath piece of the telephone. Protect your
health by Installing the Flint Sanitary Detach-
able Mouthpiece. 25 cents postpaid, trade price
dozen delivered. Local agents wanted.
FARMER SHOULD KEEP BOOKS
Agriculturalist Is Only Business Man
in America That Does Not Keep
Record of Purchases.
feifeci mechanical, scientific, sanitary con-
■traction. State make of phone when ordering.
E. A. CAMERON, 135 Liberty Street, New York.
BIG MONEY
CAN BE 8AVED BY USING THE
“HAYNIE" COTTON CHOPPER
WRITE FOR CATALOG AND PRICES
Bffz974M, Atlanta. 6a. Box19M.Memphis.Tenn.
Box 491M, Fort Worth, Texas
fU- i
iso’:
"THjMJEg^EDIClNE
TuCHf b COLD!
Co-Operative Principle Has Brought
. About Improvement in Quality
of Product.
Co-operative dairy farming in Aus-
tralia has meant a striking improve-
ment In the quality of the product.
When butter is churned by 50 differ-
ent farmers In a district, it is Inevit-
able that the result will be many dif-
ferent classes of butter. Methods
vary, so do degrees of cleanliness and
skill. If the same flty farmers send
their product to a co-operative fac-
tory managed by an expert, the prod-
uct will be one or two grades of but-
ter, very even .In quality. The net
prices realized by the two different
classes of butter—that is, by 50 indi-
vidual home churnings and the bulk
output of the same 50 farmers’ supply
to the factory—will be very large in-
deed. This has been emphatically
demonstrated in Australia. At the
present time Australia milks nearly
2,000,000 dairy cows, and in addition
to supplying the local wants of 4,500,-
000 people, the export of butter for
the last year amounted in value to
no less than £3,953,000, approxi-
mately $19,500,000. Without the co-
operative system this would not have
beeh possible. The industry has re-
ceived generous support from the
state governments. It was recognized
that if Australian butter was to be-
come popular in Great Britain, it must
be manufactured along the most im-
proved lines. Today the whole of the
industry is under the strict super-,
vision of the state. Government of-
ficials check it all the way, from the
health of the cows to the tempera-
tures at which the butter is exported
and carried upon the state-subsidized
steamers and even on the wharves of
Tooley streets.
Veterinary surgeons Inspect the
dairy herds from time to time, and
have power to discard diseased ani-
mals. No milking is permitted except
In sheds, with concrete floors. The
separating must be done and the crea^n
kept in a specially constructed build-
ing standing apart from the rest of
the farm buildings. At the butter fac-
tory there is a rigorous inspection to
insure cleanliness. Before the butter
can leave the state it is finally sub-
jected to a compulsory system of
grading, and branded with the govern-
ment stamp as first, second or third
quality. This grading has had* a
marked effect upon the quality. A
factory manager wTbose product Is
graded as low is at once in danger
of losing his position, and he in turn
condemns with equal vigor cream
which for any reason Is not up to
standard.
It is satisfactory to be able to say
that although this strict supervision is
found* burdensome by careless farm-
ers, It has the most cordial support of
the whole co-operative movement. It
whips up the laggards. The govern-
ment, however, doe3 not stop at sup-
ervision, but assists the farmers in
every conceivable way to improve the
quality of their product. Thus in
some of the states large numbers of
the best dairy cattle obtainable in
Great Britain and other parts of the
world have been imported by the gov-
ernment and lent at nominal charges
to the farmers. The butler factory
manager who Is having trouble In
getting his output up to first grade
can obtain from the government the
services of a highly qualified expert
to advise him. This expert comes to
the factory and takes complete con-
trol of the butter-making operations
tor several days, and if there Is a
weak spot he does not leave until he
his discovered it and placed the man-
ager and the farmers upon the right
trick. , • /
To the Officers and Members of the
Farmers' Union::
The farmer is the only business
man in America who does not keep
books..
In a few portions of the country he
is learning the wisdom of mending his
ways in this regard, but the referm is
lamentably far from being a universal
one. Especially is he backward In the
southern states.
He plants his cotton, his grain, or
his forage crops at the regular time,
tends them, spends money for fertil-
izer, for wages, for food, for farm ma-
chinery, for animals, for upkeep for
himself and family, but does not once
set down these items in definite fig-
ures.
Let Not
Your Heart
Be
Troubled
Sabbath.
N nothrng be anxious;
but in everything by
prayer and supplication
with thanksgiving let
your requests be made
known unto God. And
the peace of God, which passetn all
jnderstanding, shall guard your hearts
Indeed, in many communities about and y°ur thoughts in Christ Jesus
the only bookkeeping done is that
done by the merchant when he ren-
ders the farmer every fall the bill that
has accumulated during the past sev-
eral months. And it violates every rflle
of business and common sense that
books should be kept only by one
part to a trade.
The farmer that records every pen-
ny that he spends and every penny
that he receives, and for what In both
cases, knojvs precisely where to lo-
cate leaks, ’where to place losses, how
to estimate profits; in a word, how to
sum up his entire business.
The farmer who does not keep
books is in dense ignorance regaidlng
just how much he clears or loses on
a bale of cotton or an acre of e*ain.
He knows in round numbers what it
has cost him to produce both. Bit so
many little side items are occurring
throughout the year that where a to-
tal of between $60 and $100 ii In-
volved, he will in all likelihood lose
sight of from $5 to $10 by a slipshod,
unbusinesslike method. Multiply this
apparently small sum by the number
of farmers who keep no records and
the sum total annually unaccotnted
for on American farms is appalling.
It is not as though the keepiig of
books necessitated a bookkeeper or
the sinking of money in expensive
equipment. All that Is necessary Is
for the average farmer to familrarize
himself with easily acquired first
principles of bookkeeping and to buy
the two or three books necessary.
After that comes, of course, the small
amount of extra labor involved in
keeping track of every source of out-
go and income. Less than half an
hour’s work a day will suffice for this
with the ‘average farmer.
If the average business man in
America ran his affairs along the hap-
py-go-lucky lines used by the farmer,
finance and industry generally In this
My God shall supply all your
aeed according to Pis ricHes in glory
by Christ Jesus. Phil. 4: 0, 7; Col.
4: 19.
Monday.
Offer unto God thanksgiving, and
pay by vows unto the most mgU: and
call upon me in the day oi trouble;
l will deliver thee, and thou sUalt
glorify me; Psalm 50: 14, 15.
. Tuesday.
Why sayest thou, O Jacob, and
speakest, O Israel, my way is hid from
‘.he Lord, and my judgmest is passed
over from my God? Hast thou not
known, has thou not neard, tnat tde
everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator
of the ends of the earth, fainteth not,
neither is weary? There is no searefl-
ing of his understanding. They that
wait upon the Lord shall renew tneir
strength; they shall mount up witn
wings as eagles; they, shall run and
not be weary, and they snail walk
and not faint. Isa. 40: 27-31.
Wednesday.
Thus saith the Lord that created
thee, O Jacob, and he that formed
thee, O Israel, fear not; for l nave
redeemed thee, I have called thee by
thy name; thou art mine. When thou
passest through the waters, 1 will be
with thee; and through the rivers,
they shall not overflow thee: when
thou walkest through the tire, thou
shaiit not be burned; neither shall the
flame kindle upon thee. For 1 am the
Lord thy God, the Holy One of Israel,
thy savior. Isa. 43: 1-3.
Thursday.
to them tha.t love
ork together for
im that are called
purpose. He that
spared not his own son, but delivered
him up for us all, how shall he not
also with him freely give us all tilings?
* * • Gird yourselves with humil-
ity, to serve one another: for God
We know
God all thin
good, even t
according to h
country would go to the dogs Inside restateth the proud, but glveth grace
to the humble. Humble yourselves
of a night.
I do not mean to say that keeping
books on the farm will cure every ill
to which our agricultural system Is
heir. But It will open the eyes of
the brethren generally to mistakes of
long duration, to weaknesses which
could be made strength, and to pit-
falls that might easily be avoided.
CHARLES S. BARRETT.
Union City, Ga.
GROWING COTTON IN
With Intelligent Farming 30,000,000
Acres Will Supply World With
Sufficient Amount.
The south, given a fairly good sea-
son, can raise more cotton than the
world needs. The acreage could be
increased to many times 35.000,000
(about what- was planned this last
season) and more intelligent farming
methods are constantly increasing
the average yield. 1
About 15,000,000 bales have been
growTn in the United States this sea- 1
son. In the season of ,1882-83 there
was a crop which was, at that time,
looked upon as quite as large as this
year’s crop is considered to be.
The penomenal crop of that sea-
son was about 7,000.000 tales, and this
was nearly 500,000 bales larger than
the previous record yield. The first
shipment of cotton from this country
to Europe was in 1784. The shipment
consisted of eight bags and was held
up by the customs officials at Liver-
pool because they had never heard of
cotton grown here. .
In 1785 only five bags of cotton wrere
exported from this country and only
six bags in 1786. It might be men-
tioned that these early shipments
were rather poor cotton, for it is re-
corded that they remained for some
therefore under the mighty band of
God that he may exalt you in due
time; casting all your anxiety upon
God, because he careth for you. Kom.
3: 28. 32; 1 Pet. 5: 5-7.
Friday.
Consider the lilies of the field how
they grow; they toil not, neither do
they spin, yet I say unto you that
even Solomon in all his glory was not
arrayed like one of these. If Gt«4
doth so clothe the grass of the field,
SOUTH 8ha11 be not muctl “ore clothe you,
I O ye of little faith? Be not therefore
anxious, saying. What shall we eat?
or, What shall we drink? or. Where-
with shall we be clothed? for your
heavenly father knoweth that ye have
need of all these things. But seek ye
first his kingdom, and his righteous-
ness; j^nd all these things shall be
added unto you Mrtt. 6: 28.33.
Saturday.
The Lord is my rock, and my fort-
i ress, and my deliverer; my God. my
strength, in whom I will trust; my
I buckler, and the horn of my salva-
tion, and my high tower -1 will call
upon the Lord, who is worthy to be
praised; so shall I be saved trom mine
enemies. Psalm 18: 2, 3.
DIDN’T THINK SHE WAS TIRED
Mr. Jinks’ Mean Insinuation When
Young Lady Dispossessed Him
of His Seat.
The Shepherd’s Rod.
The tenderness of Jesus Christ Is
never sentimental. It is always the
tenderness of perfect strength, and
perfect righteousness. The shepherd
has a rod as well as a staff. A story
is told of one who talked with a shep-
herd in the higher Alps While talk-
ing, the shepherd, gathered a handful
of, the best grass and went to a low
shelter nearby. “I have a sheep there
with a broken leg.” he said
“How did it happen?” qi^eried the
traveler. “It did not happen,” an-
swered the shepherd "I broke It in-
tentionally. That sheep was bead-
tlAe'ln" *wa r eh ou s esTin Yl ve r pool ” be- strong and unruiy jFdid notloveme,
fore a purchaser could be found.
The talk just now is of a great re-
duction in the coJLton acreage next
spring. If prices go below seven
cents there will probably be a largely
reduced acreage for one season; and
then the next season may see 2,000,-
000 bales more than the world needs.
According to a writer In Moody’s
Magazine, the best thing the south
can do is to start a > rebellion
and dethrone King Cotton; not that
he should be neglected, but simply
that he be firmly requested to take
his proper place in society along with
King Corn and the other monarch of
the world of agriculture. There is
more money in raising most other
things, if you understand how, than
in growing cotton.
With intelligent farming 30,000,000
acres will supply the1 world with
enough cotton for some years to
come. If nothing but very low priced
cotton will cause an awakening, a pe-
riod of low prices would In the end
be a blessing to the southern states,
for the south can raise more cot-
ton than is needed and it Is suicidal
1 for It to do so.
and was always leading the others
astray. Now it knows ‘i.s dependence
on me, and loves to eat from my hand.
When it Is well again it will keep
nearer to me than any of the sheep.”
—C. I. Schofield, D. D.
“My Times are In Thy Hand.”
“Desire only the will or God Sees
him alone, and you surely will find
peace; you shall enjoy it In spite oi
the world What is it that troubles
you? Poverty, neglect, want of suc-
cess, external or internal troubles?
Look upon everything as in the bands
of God and as real blessings that be
bestows upon his children, oi wbicb
you receive your portioiy Then the
world may turn its face from you, but
nothing will deprive you of peace.”—
Feneion.
Divorce.
When New York says max shall not
marry. Its reasons shouli hold in
Rhode Island, In Connecticut and in
the United States, because in the laws
or the United States mar'lage Is a na-
tional thing—Rev. J. P Johnstone,
Presbyterian, Hartford, Conn
“That was adding insult to injury,"
said Representative Mann, the minor-
ity leader of the house, apropos of a
political squabble. ‘It reminds me of
young Jinks.
“Late one night young Jinks sat in
a crowded trolley car, and, when a
girl he knew got aboard and stood
directly in front of him, he made no
sign. His face hidden by his news-
paper, he pretended that he didn’t
know the girl would like to have his
seat.
“After a while she spoke.
“ ‘Good evening. Mr. Jinks.’
“ Why, good evening.’
“ ‘I’ve been to the Primrose social
dance.’
“ ‘Indeed.’
“Then, after a pause, she added:
“ ‘It's a wonder, Mr. Jinks, you
wouldn’t offer me your seat!’
"Jinks then got up. He was very
angry. He said, as he hooked himself
to a strap:
“ ‘I thought you wouldn’t want it;
for as you said you’d been to a dance,
I knew you must have been sitting all
the evening.’ ”
SEVEN YEARS
OF MISERY
How Mrs. Bethune was Re-
stored to Health by Lydia
EL Pinkham’s Vegeta-
ble Compound.
YOUR SUCCESS AS A FARMER.
Yov- success as a farmer depends
upon your selection of a farm. We
are offering substantial farming
houses, so reliable in their nature and
on* such 3asy terms, that any thrifty
farmer can make the land pay itself
out in a short time. We are selling a
wonderfully fine body of land as own-
ers, guaranteeing perfect title, to the
homeseeker—consequently no selling
commission Increases the price to the
purchaser, who gets the last dollar of
value in the land.
Good crops were raised in this sec-
tion last season when so many locali-
ties made short crops. Send to us
for free illustrated booklets, giving
complete information. The farmer
who is now working land that he can
sell for high prices can re-invest in
lands just as productive, just as cer-
tain, getting a big increase in acreage
*1 this wonderful new country. The
renter can here become owner of a
home of his own. It is a solid op-
portunity for the rich farmer to be-
come richer and for the farmer with
small resources to become Indepen-
dent. Terms, one-fifth down, balance
in 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 years—Prices $12
per acre and upward—Notes payable
on or before maturity.
Address:
CHAS. A. JONES,
Manager S. M. Swenson & Sons,
Spur, Dickens County. Texas.
Sikeston, Mo, — “For seven years I
suffered everything. I was in bed for
and so weak I could
hardly walk. I had
cramps, backache
and headache, and
was so nervous and
H weak that I dreaded
to see anyone or
have anyone move in
the room. The doc-
tors gave me medi-
cine to ease me at
those times, and said that I ought to
have an operation. I would not listen to
that, and when a friend of my husband’s
told him about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg-
etable Compound and what it had done
for his wife, I was willing to take it.
Now I look the picture of health and feel
like it, too. I can do all my own house-
work, work in the garden and entertain
company and enjoy them, and can walk
as far as any ordinary woman, any day
in the week. I wish I could talk to every
suffering woman and girl, and tell them
what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound has done for me.’’—Mrs.
Dema Bethune, Sikeston, Mo.
Remember, the remedy which did this
was Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.
It has helped thousands of women who
have been troubled with displacements,
inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irreg-
ularities, periodic pains, backache, that
bearing down feeling, indigestion, and
nervous prostration, after all other means
have failed. Why don’t you try itt
150% INCREASE
That’s the experience of one farmer
who fertilized his land with
°/Q
When a man has occasion to ap-
pear before a police magistrate he is
apt to forget his own name.
Most men would rather give their
wives credit for what they do than
to give them money. 1
“BULL DOG” BRANDS FERTILIZER
You can increase your crop yields too. Simply
use the Best Fertilizer. Write for free Pocket
Memorandum Book showing the guaranteed
analysis of all “BULL DOG” Brands and also
testimonials. Address E. K. HUEY, Gen. Mgr.
NEW ORLEANS ACID & FERTILIZER CO.
921 Canal Street, New Orleans. Louisiana
SAVE YOUR MONEY.
One box of Tutt’s Pills save many dollars in doc-
tor’s bills. A remedy for diseases of the liver,
sick headache, dyspepsia, constipation ana
biliousness, a million people endorse
Tutt’s Pills
DEFIANCE STARCH—S.TS2
—other starches only 12 ounces—same price and
**DEFIANCE” IS SUPERIOR QUALITY.
Pettits Eve Salve
100 TEARS 010
QUICK REIKF
EVE TRTUtlES
i j
&
y
9 oo Drops
iiuiiiniiiiUliilJiullUiUllililililiullmimiillllllinilllTI
ALCOHOL-3 per cent
AVegefable Preparation Tor As -
similating ihe Food and Reg ula-
ting ihe Stomachs and Bowels of
■ K’l 111 ffTTWI
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful-
ness and Rest.Contains neither
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral
Not Narc otic
Prttpr of Old DrSA MU El fYfWE ft
Punythtn Seed -
j41x Senna —
fiocheUe Satis -
jjnise Seed *
fkpperm int -
fiilarlen a USctU% ♦
Harm Seed -
S/arStetl Sugar*
Wifnkrfrtin flavor *
A perfect Remedy forConslipa-
tion . Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish-
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP
GASTORIA
For Infants and Children/ ^
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
Fac Simile Signature of
The Centaur Company.
NEW YORK.
r
Al6 months old
35“
OSI*»
J5Cen'
Guaranteed under the Foodat^)
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
TMI OINTAUH OOMffANY, MBW YORK OITY.
From Nature’s Garden
NATURE IS THE HOME OF EVERY INGREDIENT OF
GRANDMA’S TEA
GRANDMA’S TEA is a Nature’s Remedy; it acts mildly and surely, in
harmony with nature.
GRANDMA’S TEA purifies the blood—pure blood means a rosy complexion.
GRANDMA'S TEA cures constipation and all irregularities of the bowels.
GRANDMA’S TEA is prescribed by doctors in every case where in diges-
tion, weak stomach and a torpid liver are indicated.
AX ALL DRUGGISTS. 25c.
■m
: I
M
v
i «?*•«
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Morton, George M. The Cumby Rustler. (Cumby, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, February 9, 1912, newspaper, February 9, 1912; Cumby, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth770707/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.