Honey Grove Signal. (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 17, Ed. 1 Friday, May 31, 1912 Page: 1 of 4
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Scottfs Emulsion
aids Digestion
djfijL nourishes the
N&rves
ljf'R and all the
Vital Forces
HONEY
GROVE
-—----
SIGNAL.
EVERYBODY
KNOWS
Scott's
Emulsion
INVIGORATES 38
28
VOLUME 22.
--:-\-----
Honey Grove, Texas, Friday, May 31, 1912.
-1--
1 m'Vw ,n , „„„„
NO. 17
First National Bank
Honey Grove, Texas
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS • • • $250,000.00
Shareholders Additional Liability • $125,000.00
We do business under the restrictions and safeguards of the
National Banking Law.
Your account is solicited, will be appreciated and will have
fcareful attention.
DIRECTORS:
W. D. WILKINS, EL.Q, WALCQTTr_
M. A. GALBRAITH, T. W. TROUT,
D. E. TAYLOR, G. W. McCLEARY
JNO. A. PIERCE
UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY
He Restores the Dead.
Dr. Samuel J. Meltzer of the
Rockefeller Institution for Medi-
cal Research, in the course of
recent experiments to discover
a successful method of artificial
respiration, restored to life two
animals which Re had caused to
be put to death and which were
dead in the common acceptance
of the term. Both recovered en-
tirely. He believes the method
to be equally applicable to man,
and urges that it be tried in all
cases of death; for it is quite
possible, he asserts, that in cases
Cow-Ease
(Trade Math Registered.)
MEANS MORE MILK
from the cow
AND MORE MONEY
.{or the fanner.
of death from acute illness the
actual cause of death might be
only of a temporary nature.
This laboratory worker, whose
reputation i s international, is
known to scientists as an ex-
tremely conservative man. His
positive statements, therefore,
regarding the results of his latest
discovery, have created a stir in
scientific circles.
Briefly, the method consists of
of the introduction of a catheter
into the pharynx, pulling out of
the tongue, forcing the back
part of the tongue against the
roof of the mouth by pressure
applied far back under the chin,
putting a weight on the abdomen
to keep air from being forced in-
to the stomach, connecting the
catheter with a bellows, and
pumping air into the lungs.
With very little instruction the
layman can learn these methods
as readily as the physicans. Dr.
Meltzer gives this explanation of
his reasons for beginning the
experiments which haye given
such promising results;
“Serving on the commission
y/AY TO PUT (T ON.
Manufactured by
CARPENTER-MORTON COMPANY,
Poston. Mass.. U. 3. A.
Sold by
Richardson-Blocker Hdw. Co
whether the method which I
have developed should and would
be recommended by the commis-
sion as the one which promises
the best results, it seemed to me
advisable to present it early to
the medical profession.
‘ ‘The method was studied and
found efficient on four species of
animals. But its real usefulness
will be established only after
standing the test in its applica-
tion oh human beings, and the
final judgment will have to come
from the physician and not from
the experimenter in the labora-
tory.”— New York Times.
Teddy, Who Eats ’Em Alive.
For President of the disunited
States of Mexico, Theodore
TRoosevelt. This should solve the
problem across the Rio Grande.
It is known that Roosevelt is
angry with Taft because the lat-
ter did not appoint him head of
the invading army of occupancy.
Had Roosevelt been President
during the friction between Eng-
land, Germany and France we
woutd now be in the midst of a
world-wide war. He would have
egged on one side or the other
and would have embroiled the
United States. He should be
made King of the Philippines or
President of China, if Mexico re-
fuses to have him. The people
of this country realize how dan-
gerous Teddy really is, and
should the Republicans nominate
him the Democrats could elect as
bad a runner as Bryan. In their
sober senses the masses do not
support anarchy of any kind.
This nation needs a sober, level-
headed man as its chief execu-
tive.—State Topics.
The Only Mowing
Machine that carries
the cutter bar on the
drive wheels Instead
of dragging
ground.
GET OUR SPECIAL
MOWER BOOK
You can find the most com-
plete line of refrigerators ever
brought to town at Richardson
Blocker Hdw. Co’s. Call in and
let us show you.
A TEXAS WONDER
The Texas Wonder cures kidney and
bladder troubles, removing gravel,
cures diabetes, weak and lame backs,-
rheumatism, and all irregularities of
. the kidneys and bladder in both men
on resuscitation from electric j an(j women. Regulates bladder troubles
shock, appointed by the American j in children. If not sold by your drug-
Medical association, I became
interested in this problem and
began to study its solution ex-
perimentally. I now have rea-
son to believe that I have already
attained very promising results.
gist, will be sent by mail on receipt of
$1.00. One small bottle is two months’
treatment, and seldom fails to-perfect a
cure. Send for testimonials from this
and other states. Dr. E. W. Hall, 2926
Olive Street, St. Louis, Mo. Sold by
druggists.
r~
| The thing that goes the farthest
j Towards making life worth while,
That costs tne least and does the most,
Is just a pleasant smile.
The smile that bubbles from a heart
That loves its fellow-men,
Will drive away the cloud of gloom
And coax the sun again.
It's full worth and goodness, too,
With manly kindness blent;
It’s worth a million dollars,
And doesn’t cost a cefit.
—Lutheran World.
Buy the Mower that*s Easy on
Your Horses
problems. You can mow all day with
it will be as easy for your horses as
for you. It is absolutely all right. It
the wheels—no neck weight, no side
We’ve solved the draft and the liandlin
a 4y2, 5 ft. or a 6 ft. New Standard,' ai
though you were plowing e,orn and a lot ei
is light draft because the weight is carri
draft, no sledding of the cutter bar.
WE WANT TO SEND YOU SOME PROOFS
of New Standard superiority. You ought to know how the New Standard dis-
tributes the strain, about the roller bearings, about the continuous knife-bar
■ . . .. • .. out gear when the cutter bar is folded
bearing, about how the mower is thrown ^ . ... T . ....... . _____ . _____
up, etc. Our book explains everything. ; Write for it today, and ask also for
i in which to keep your farm accounts.
book
Emerson Brantirtgham Plow Co.
DALLAS, TEXAS.
For sale by JNO. L. BROWN, Honey Grove
Flowers and Eats.
The daffodils are nice,
Serene and shy,
But what can beat a slice
Of rhubarb pie?
—Washington Herald.
The daffodil grows sweet
Within a bower,
But naught can beat
The cauliflower.
—Milwaukee Sentinel.
Thou’rt either full of prunes,
Or else thou kidst;
We’ve got strawberry short
Cake in our midst.
—Houston Post.
Neither of you know what
You talk about,
Give us plenty of b—uttermilk
And saur kraut.
Are We to Lose the Horse?
Will the horse soon become a
prehistoric animal? Instead of
breaking and cultivating land
with horses or mules, the work
on modern farms will all be done
with motor-driven machinery.
Agricultural students tell us that
the soil is being depleted and
that production will soon be far
behindconsumption. This being
the case, it will be necessary to
utilize machinery instead of farm
animals. The machinery does
not eat grain or meats or vege-
tables, all of which must come
from the soil. Furthermore, the
big gang plows do not eat when
not at work, while horses and
mules and oxen must be fed
whether they work or rest.
Automobiles have taken the
place of buggy and carriage
horses, auto trucks are gradually
putting the floats and drays out
of business in cities, and farm
animals will soon follow. The
day of horse-racing is a thing of
the past.- Automobile races and
flying machine exhibitions have
taken the place of the “sport of
kings.’f Verily, the world do
move.—State Topics.
In The Garden.
I toiled like a turk last summer,
I
with a shovel and hoe and rake.
“My Garden will be hummer,’’
I murmured, “and no mistake.’’
A roundelay blithely yellin’, I
labored in sweat awash, and
planted the stately mellon, and
also the queenly squash; and
quoting the words of Bunyan,
?md quotations from Pope and
Gray, I planted the fragrant
onion, ana succulent bale of hay.
And all through the sizzling
season, out there in my yard I
wrought, and often my feet were
freezin’ when otherwise I was
hot. When other folks went a
fishing or hiked to a three ring
show, I toiled in my garden
wishing that I with the rest
could go; but he who is bent on
raising abundance o f garden
sass, who hopes for a crop amaz-
ing of spinach and sparrow-grass,
must cut out all vain excursions,
steer clear of the giddy boys;
for him there are no diversions,
no fishing or other joys. And
this is a man’s Reward in the
day when the toil is done; a big
pile of weeds in the garden, and
a shortage of wholesome fun.
Walt Mason.
W. O. W. Picnic.
A basket picnic will be given
at Allen’s Point Thursday, July
11. There will be speakers from
over the county and a general
good time is expected. Come
and enjoy a day with your friends.
M. J. Whitlock,
J. L. Witcher,
M. F. Elkins,
Committee,
Economy in Painting
Your House
does not mean buying the paint sold at the
lowest price per gallon. It means getting the
paint that covers the most surface per gallon
and gives the greatest number of years of service
-—in other words, the best value for your dollar.
* ''2-
.\*s*
• v S- v
ACME QUALITY
HOUSE PAINT
M.
•r
costs less because it takes less and lasts longer.
Let us show you pleasing color combinations,
estimate quantity needed, or be of
any other service .we can, whether
you buy or not.
Come in and get an Acme Quality Painting
Guide Book and some color suggestions.
Honey Grove Pharmacy
Why spend 30 to 40
freezing cream when you can do
the work in 5 to 10 minutes with
the FREZO cream freezer,
sold by Smith-Poole Co.
“The Heavens Declare the Glory of
God,”
So wrote the Psalmist of Israel
in the long ago, when the world
was young and man’s knowledge
of the visible heavens still in its
infancy. From a practical pqint
of view David knew very little
about the universe. And yet;
the truth he enunciated is being
confirmed today every time an
astronomer looks through his
telescope at the sky.
From the earliest beginning
men have gazed in open-eyed
wonder at the stars. There is
about them a lofty fascination
which no nation or people has
been able to resist. Their isola-
tion, order, system and harmony
have cast an irresistible spell
over the mind of the race; and
many, like the Psalmist, see
therein the imperishable glory of
God.
Three centuries ago Galileo
gave us our first telescope. It
was a small affair, weighing
only a few ounces and easily car-
ried in the palm of the hand.
But it increased the capacity of
the human eye to see more than
one hundred times. It had a
magnifying power of thirty dia-
meters, or nine hundred areas.
Through it man saw for the first
time the mountains on the moon,
the spots on the sun, the rings
of Saturn, the satellites of Jupi-
ter and ttfat stupendous end un-
Typhoid Vaccine.
The attention of the country
las recently been largely center-
ed on vaccination against ty-
phoid.
Prof. Vincent, an eminent
scientist of Paris, is the dis- been the specter that haunted
coverer of this form of preven-
thinkable aggregation of star tion of the most malignant fever
dust which lines the Milky Way.
How rapidly the conquest of
the visible heavens is progress-
ing may be seen by contrasting
Galileo’s simple invention with
to which man is heir. After
ong and careful experimenta-
tion, Vincent perfected a serum,
or “vaccine” by a process of
sterilization which destroyed the
It’s binder and mower time.
I am stocked up with binder
twine and can fill all orders
promptly. Also have mower re-
pairs and binder repairs; in fact
am prepared to serve you prompt-
minutes ly through the harvesting season.
And if you are in the market for
a buggy or a cook stove, don’t
fail to see me. I have the goods
and the prices.—John L. Brown.
Prospects Good
For a Big Crop of
Feedstuff
WE HIVE THE TOOLS TO HANDLE IT WITH
niiUKsa nAIN
URin»»"™!S'i3 uHin
'MiV |
Perfectly Simple and Simply Perfect
Hay Ties
Fort Smith Wagons
Complete Line of
Deer Buggies
Always in Stock
Motoir Cars Between Dallas and Paris.
The order for two motor cars
for use on the Texas Midland
railroad from Paris to Dallas,
via Terrell, and the Texas &
Pacific railroad, has been placed
with the factory for the earliest
possible delivery. The cars will
cost $26,000 each and as soon as
they arrive in Texas, one will be
stationed at Dallas, the other at
Paris, and every morning at six
o’clock each car will start for
the other city as its destination.
Mr. Green, of the Midland, an
nounces that if the two cars are
profitable he will place four on
the same run between Paris anc
Dallas with an unbroken schedule
during the day, which woulc
give from an hour and a half to
a two-hour service each way be-
tween Dallas and Paris. — Paris
Advocate.
We have some coal.—Honey
Grove Lumber & Grain Co.
Satisfies
There never was a
thirst that Coca-Cola
couldn’t satisfy.
It goes, straight as an ar-
row, to the dry spot.
And besides this,
satisfies to a T the call for
.something purely delicious
and deliciously pure-
wholesome.
A
Whenever
Arrow th!
&
Delicious
Refreshing
Thirst-Quenching
Demand the Genuine as made by
THE COCA-COLA CO., Atlanta, ga.
~Our new booklet, telling of Coca-Cola
J* If vindication at Chattanooga, for the
asking. H
of the treatment is conclusively
favorable.
Added to this personal experi-
mental investigation of the dis-
coverer is the witness of the
civilized world. Typhoid has
the gijrantic new Hooker tele- bacilli. The minutia of his pro
scope being installed sit Mount
Wilson Observatory, California.
The lens of this instrument are
eight feet four inches in dia-
meter. It is thirteen inches
thick and weighs slightly more
than four and one-half tons. It
increases the natural power of
vision thirty-five thousand times.
It has a magnifying power of
ten thousand diameters, or one
hundred million areas. Looking
through this marvelous instru-
ment the moon will appear to be
only about eighty miles away,
whereas it is about 238,800. If
atmospheric and topographical
conditions were favorable one
could look through this telescope
from New York to San Francisco
and the two cities would appear
to be separated by a distance less
than three times the length of
Brooklyn Bridge.
It is freely predicted that this
latest and greatest achievement
of astronomers will reveal to the
human eye a vast and unap-
proachable glory of the heavans
such as neither poet or psalmist
has ever dreamed of. It will
sweep vast and incalculable
ceeds would probably be under-
stood only by doctors and scien-
tists. To the academic mind the
sufficiency of knowledge lies in
the fact that the vaccine is effi-
cacious in preventing the dis-
ease, and that inoculation does
not affect the inoculated serious-
A slight soreness of the
arm, and, in sporadic cases, a
ittle fever, are the usual results.
Prof. Vincent and his assist-
ants have personally applied
more than 5,000 cans of inocula-
tion, and they testify that in
none of them have any of those
thus inoculated ever constracted
the disease. As these experi-
ments extended over several
years and were made in various
looalities, the evidence in favor
every camp where soldiers were
herded, and no amount of sanita-
tion has been able to exclude it
entirely. But typhoid vaccine
has worked the seeming miracle,
and today the soldiers practi-
cally immune.
It was at first supposed that
the vaccine was only a preven-
tive, but now Prof. Vincent
claims that his serum will re-
duce the virulence of an attack
of fever if taken after a case
develops and is in the first
stages. This makes it a treat-
ment as well as a preventive,
and doubles its value to humani-
ty.
How’s This? %
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him
perfectly honorable in all business' transac-
tions and financially able to carry out any obli-
gations made by his firm.
Walding, Kinnan & Marvin,
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act-
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur-
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
reaches of the universe where KlS* ri?8
the eye of man has never fallen
before. It will disclose millions
upon millions of worlds, each in
a different sphere and rolling on
to a different destiny. And yet,
in all this it will discover noth-
ing but harmony, order, sym
metry, and design—the unfailing
signs of the presence ,and glory
of God.—Evangelist.
Miss Henderson Gives Recital.
Miss Imogene Henderson, as-
sisted by Miss Augusta Leeper,
of Oklahoma City, gaye a recital
at Ladonia Opera House last
Wednesday evening. Miss Hen-
derson has just closed a very suc-
cessful class in music, and as is
customary with most instructors
in music, a recital was given at
close of the school. The entire
programme was well rendered
and displayed careful and pains-
taking training on the part of
the teacher. The house was
crowded to overflowing, and all
who were so fortunate as to at-
tend were loud in their praise of
the entertainment. — Ladonia
News.
Have you seen Diedrick’s new
Onyx Soda Fountain?
Please
Remember
After this date our store
will close at 7 o’clock each
day except Saturday until
September 1. Please take
notice and do your shop-
ping so that you will not
be inconvenienced.
Williarason-Spelce Co.I
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Lowry, J. H. Honey Grove Signal. (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 17, Ed. 1 Friday, May 31, 1912, newspaper, May 31, 1912; Honey Grove, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth800798/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Honey Grove Preservation League.