Winnsboro Weekly News (Winnsboro, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, April 29, 1921 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
II
H
good living at tue ond of 192"
and a more aaiistied c'tixer
ship than w have hau in the
years that have post. Let'p tr,
to break loose from cottor.
(Collect up in some way suffic:
runner of 85/bOf all ienl stock. hogs, sheep, goats,
^ human ills. It brings c.am, t anything and eve: v
r on more suffering, th ng to eat up the surpliu
I moTC sleeple8SoeM, cropS KroWn and turn thes<
mora ill-temper than jn^0 moilPy instead of the
wnt of money from growing
II« uui IVw w**-. cotton, thus giving time am;
j RID of constipation.' opportunity tor the children to
11 Nor do you have to take attend our public schools an I
* any nauseating, griping enjoy some of the realities, ;•
4k medicincstodoit. Take thing that all must do to get
■w-% tv T \ .out of this life tor our All
J[ jfj m | j f\_ .A. I vV'se Creator intends we should
RICH-LAX is a new tnn'ment. It deans oul and do some
the system, ren-.ovesth -prisons from the thing aru l)e something as we
body, aud p*it« you in nhape to accomplish .^o aloiig through it. I/et'h
things. And RICH-LAX does this without ; nff pntliin no mi « mum
, Constipation is the iore-
BLINDNESS CAN BE AVERTED
.}
irk
iw
leaving JwT weak and" baif^cfcT nii~S«i Iilittve "Jetton as our main
always feel after taking ordinary luxaUves. Top and let it merely be a
Cu.n,«.w«ljitOuf S«or«. Wearrw.ureth.1 ! 'y-crop for ft fOW VOarp.
Klch l.j* will pit .r r you that wo want you to j
come to our wore irid f t a I."'tic and try it en- |
Orel* at our riak. It It doesn't suit you, II It tan t
th* boat laamivrt inc(!ici> « von ever ucd, ulrnrlv
tell u* ao and we will piompUy refuuJ Ojj 1—1
purcbaae prux.
W. A. Nabors.
DENNEY DRUG CO.
COTTON, THE CURSE OK
THE SOUTH
I have never been a very
enthusiastic cotton grower. 1
found out 23 years ago that
o tton at 5c and 6c per pound
would not iw y the cost of hands
to produce it. 1 have nevei
grown cotton with hired help
to amount to anything since
that time. I see from the best
authorities such as Geo. W.
Riddle of Dallas, a farmer
banker, the Texas Industrial
Congress and numuerous oth-
ers that the prospect for cot-
ton pr'ces another year would
possibly l>e cut in half to what
j 7§i
, f i
i't \;
n «
I
■
\u*
r]
<
AGRICULTURAL NOTES
The following has been sent
out by the East Texas Cham-
ber of Commerce at Tyler:
We wish to again urge upon
you the importance of cotton
reduction in your section; it is
foily for farmers in a section
where they were bothered with
boll weevils last year to plant
cotton again; the very mild
winter has failed to destroy
the weevils. If you can fin.;
any cotton stalks left with boEs
on them and will open them,'
you will find them full of wee
v.ils, and if the crop was both-
ered with the pest last year, it
is going to be impossible to
..... — destroy them.
they are now Thus will put; ln a numb#r of couutj t
us back on a 5c and 6c basis fu.mers t .
or our cotton next fall. They con) Smit^ * ^ , t
base these prices on a number rf i '
e r . • .1 i. r >«*' a luinihei ot furmers
s,run iSi''ai8,ng
were practically 121* million V / ^ !L «"V
bnlc< of cotton unmarketed and ,1..,,.' ' . . . . '
the European. heing bankrupt .'£?'%!'*?"« f'° • consider-
jernhh toP l,uy and the United '^.ehoo' ^'"'you^To
nianufucturing '"twer T& u,'8e T" Uu' ">
nianurietuiing P°XV01- 1 no corn; brooms are about the
best statistics are that there nn,v nrtw„ t,. lt , , ] . ine
will • carried o er for another ret,u<vd m pri
consumption ali the way u „ j, . , ...i ,,
r * m in: .11 • " ' o" n,,t ■' now whether
LI v ^ ^ or '«'* " successful in
ttl u-i!! g,JU- !>r a f,viKlit rate leduc-
f j ,/V if. f|, v tion for th* bunainiii- of thfp
i /S, .
f. tni sikJI. ir possible, in ewry
' '*
■ILM ( f pbtcem
'it' t> mnmm
" men;
ueeii so iMiaiyf Whv is it that nV"l. 7'Tlu "UM! 016 c311"
the producers of our country""? fnd, hu8'nesa mm is
will hold on to a crop that is JJ'f ';"ck. the m°ne/ th«t he
outlawed and one that takes ,,i canned fruits and
from 6 to 8 months to know JeS' Thl8 has worked
what the product'on will be JJ"5 ully,a number <
and almost constant working u?" ♦ "nd ther® 18 no trou
during all that time to bring I?,,,*,?'* ? market, for th'
the crop to maturitv. in the ?! ■ th.at 18 P^Pe^y canned
meant'me working all ages of u J,8 ™ry, expensive t>
children add menilwrs of the fi labels printed for
family to the limit and then J;1 ^ ur^e that y°>
get nothing as a result of the f matter your atten
labor ? Surely we ought to have lon'
sense enough to let alone at1 XT 7T71—
least a part of the crop that t N®1^0"8 fluttering or palpi-
we have every reason to be-' of,the heart; does not
lieve will make us poorer in-' n ^ heartjdisease, gener
stead of better off in this uily lt ,niea"8 disorder in the
world's goods. What is the * u ^5* • dlsrestion. Prickh
remedy? On our thinner soils B,tter8 :a « man's remedy
in East Texas we cannot grow1 L" f a,lments. It cleanses,
corn as a profit. Instead of S"*,? art(1 r®*u|ates the
growing 10 acres of corn on \v r and bowels, re
these thin lands and make 50 Lvmnf * Caufe 1of.,,the henrf
bushel, plant 5 of them in f P and. Guilds up a
stock peas and make 100 bushel pV.°"K<m ? V1^>r40"8 ^ b^y
of pe:is besides a ton or two Kp ' per lK>tble. Denney
of good hoy. Plant the other ^ Ug Co. SpecialAgents.
•> in peanuts and make 1501 WINNSRORO RAMn
bushel of peanuts with about b HO "^ND
'{ tons of the l>est hay that we a i.nnJ fnt. ttrinn , .
can grow. These peanuts ami ? r w,n.nsboro has
peas may have a market value °r^amzed by_ th^
tf we do not want to use them 1™, ■ p>mmerce. Regu-
all as feed. They are both in If p™c^ce ffKan last Tues
big demand at irood prices ^ night. Mr. J. W. Ros.s
notwithstanding 60 to 90 days !?Pre8enting the Dallas Band
ago you ciuld hardly find ' a !. W?8 f,r,e tw.'° days las'
buyer for same. On one or .s0,d eighteen m-
two acres plafit sorghum Iwth n!l!!!iien u- >?y.8, T,1°
for hay and for syrup. Or 5 ^"lbership at present is twen-
Or 10 JtCres of l.hr> 1 n>«t lntiH
two and several others will
AaMrtlon Mad* That Proper Pret.au
tlona Will Raduc* Cy« Accldanta
Fifty Par Cant
Iluir uf thf blindiuM otmiM I*
prncntcil if wtirknra in the Indus-
trial |>luntx would take-the life*-.in
pwiiutiona, according to llitiltlt
Director Furlitiah, aayx the 1'lnln
dt'lphin Hcciirtl. There are 80,000
vye accident* reported annually by
the Mtate department of lalxir ami
ilulu try in various Pennaylvunia
imluHtricn, inclmling 300 oaaea <>f
total Ion# of Hi^lit. In one lioxpital
in thin citv -1,000 injtiripft to eyt-n
arc tr atctl annually. Many acci-
tlciita of tliin nature are tlue to enre-
lesanesH ami failure to adopt precau-
tionary inciimreH of prevention.
Accitlents may 1h: largely avoid <1
l v protection of the even in aertain
occupations by goggles, by avoiding
the use of broken or old tool* and by
the proper equipment of protecting
devices. Doctor Furbimh says. Cer-
tain infectious dii-eaaea of the eyes
may be avoided by abandoning the
use of the common towttl and by im-
mediate consultation of a phy.-e ian
at the lirst sign of inflammation.
Persons with def ctlve eyc-'i^ht
should have their vision corrected
early in life so that more extensive
defects may lie avoided. This lmld-
true especially for nearsighted | er
sons. Taking all causes together
fully one-half can be prevented.
HER FAULT
Wind Storm
| The terror of the property!
owner is wind, merciless, des-
tructive wind that dcivofs
buildings, uproots trees, lays
waste fields of grain and kills
pien and leasts.
With it comes storm n'
rain.
Recent experience of sup-
posedly immune districts show
us that wind and tornado
where they will.
Insure against wind lo..s.
We have the right policy.
J. T. GIBSON & CO-
INSURANCE
M. A I'. Hunk I * i I Id In?
Winnsboro, Texas.
A TONIC
flrovc'a Tasteless chill Tonic restores
Kncrfty and Vitality by Purifying and
Lnriciiiiiil the Blood. When you feel its
sirenttthoiiing, invigorating effect, see how
it brink's color to the cheeks and how
it improves the apatite, you will then
appreciate its true tonic value.
drove's Tostel i chill Tonic is simply
Iron and Quinine suspended in syrup. So
pleasant even children like It. The IiIimnI
needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to
Enrich It. Destroys Malarial germs and
Grip germs by its Strengthening, Invigor -
ating Effect. 60c.
The coffee with n dolit ion*
nftM of It Hj.Tunco and flavor
all it*own thnt. Instantlynp-
pwdn t« tho most fuatidioua
—lhat'8
It is perfectly M e«l' t fi"'« tho
fluent e of fens obtnl) ' 'ie. CleHtnd,
rousted i '.'I lit a m .litury
plant.
At your rro' : ' and '• f-'1'*
tijt.it tin-. 1 'i• miu;a oujk>u la
cueil eat
MAGNOLIA COFFt-E CO.
Ilouiloni T«*i
The Winnsboro News and the Dalj
Semi-Weekly Farm News $2 a yes
ownrupdi
deHraaif
v *
'•"K
Wifey—No wonder you're not
wtU. You mustn't cat while amrry
or excited. That's why you get in-
digestion.
Hubby—Then stop telling nie
what tho food costs!
SEA GUIA-S FEAST ON PUjTTY
"The sf* gull.M of this sirctioji ha-'
such a i<road taal-e that it U uvci.-
aar" fn fasten tho windiWj- !,n#ny
•fuurfecri* *
m «1 :i«f ■ «(/ >f >
If^it-nanied
Irresistible
fowl.'"
This anno
mail of C
friv g'ht ngenfl
oiftc railway in Seattle, from his
Man Francisco headquarters recent-
ly. The news was circulated along
the water front by shippers antl in a
few hours, the sea gull hankering for
a putty dessert after a feast of .-.hip's
table scraps was magnified into a
potent menace. Ia near-beer liars
antl other such places of congrega-
tion for sailors the putty gull as-
sumed nature-faking proportions.—
Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
Better Than Traps For Rata
Writes Adam* Drux Co., Texas |
Th«y ray: "HAT-SNAP ludolnir tho wnrk
btkI tliurat iiiitlurtakcrii nro an busy nw pop
cum on a hot btovc." Try it on your rut*.
UAT-SNAP lua "money back"(ruaraiitee<l
nuru killer. Comm iea«ly for uu ; pomix-
ing with other fondB. Cnta nnd dote* wnn't
touch 1L Ituta rtrx up und leavu no amull.
Tim re sized: IISc for one room: 6Rc for
lioiiHo or cliickun yard; 11.26 (or bami and
outbulidinicH, Start klllinir ruta today,
i*" Sold >ad Guaranteed by
Tl p it
Kill That Cold With
CASCARA £? QUININE
~ -
Colds, Coughs Grippe
Neglected Colds are Dangerous
Take no chancts. Keep this standard remady handy for the first snwit.
Breaks up a cold in 24 hours — Relieves
Grippe In 3 days—Excellent for Headache
Quinine in this form do< si n^t affect the head—Cascara is best Tonic
I.uxativo—No Opioto in Mill's.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT
\ ti'lr"
TORONTO'S DISTINCTION.
Toronto is calletl a city of
churches and big enough to In come
a member of the major league I sse-
ball family. It also has another dia-
tinction—that of leading all other
Canadian cities in automobile reg-
istrations. Recently compiled sta-
tistics show the ten leading automo-
bile cities of our neighbor to be as
follows: Toronto, 32,334; Vancou-
ver, 15,000; Montreal, 13,500; Win-
nipeg, 10,663; Hamilton. 6,714;
Ottawa, 3,906; Quebec, 8,028; I>m-
don, 3,569; Regina, 3,088, and
Windsor, 3,132.
get in sbon. A twenty-two
WILLING TO SERVE.
"Is Oribble ths kind of a man
who would lay down his life 1o* hia
country?"
"I'm afraid not, but he would
lay down any private business he
had on hand to accept a go- i rn-
ment job."—Birmingham Age-Her-
ald.
may l.-ive planter! in corn, "f"
sweet pnftoe.s or other food , f°r a ,l°wn,the 8IZ,e
and feed crops according to _ 1W 'nn^,1ro 'sn 1 a hl[
the f.uicv of the man working a ld ^r- fannon tfje in- j
the land. Then on 1 or 5 acres /VP f T? h^ « akemont
plant diversitied truck crops if °. t i1'"1" ln E®®t Tex-
near enough to market to de- |*8 ou 0 Pr® ent mem-
liver in good time, if not near I8, i ^ , ,
enough to tuaiket plant this ..„-vone. to join can
much to cotton. This will *UI1 et in a8 ,there are 8tl11
aliout take up whrtt one plow 8evera' vacancies.
can cultivate and if a diversi- °' ^ow'er' "•> Sec-
fied fanning such as this
Should be put in practice all CoMa Cwh Orip and Influenza
SWEET INNOCENT.
"My wife is talking about raising
jack rosea."
"That so?"
"Yes, she asked me if I couldn't
get her a few jackpots to put Vm
in."—Enid (Okla.) News.
LARGEST HIGH 8CH<
The largest high 'school
in the United States is a di
Ki'iuirirk
A i (!«• mon
y
ryw.
4DDDR SEDAN
The Sedan has become a per-
manent part of the substantial
domestic life of the nation.
This could not be so if the car
were not deserving in the sense
of being good and economical.
*. v -
j:: S;-.
XT*™ CO€—,miplion OOMOally low.
Th« tirt milMfi |a nnaaaaiij b%k.
Winnsboro, Texas
Phone 106
I
j
I
I e*1!
jSir
I
I
111 I
I
m 'I
i
ball 1'
I the 1
fur
link I
i
"HI
iinpol
{T
out
.
Ill
ktllf I
IT 4
JPE
im Hal
ion o|
W Vj
I
I
(corn |>l
: HU'I
II In |
#(Kl|
III tl
: nil III
punt
|
lire
for
!
I
Bn-I
, the!
Mr
|!W-I, ; I
iter, *u
out flfril
| I
L" he si
l isn't
|
irv, von
'Siimii
knew
m's .i
litli J
PR* i |
pith S
f the
day i.|
I
I*'.I in I
I I
T> [
I
that '
*Yt
I |
)
Ph, tl
P r ill
•
pi at :
'
|
f - \tl
I x'r Knj
tlnl
hi- M||
1,1 hamll
k" I
!"'• BaJ
iThere
K®" haVJ
1 hol«l i j|
over Ktst Texas, we would laxative bkomo qiiininc tshm* r«now
have more money nnd more i. " "n,,,0O• B~,Dog^1,i,1"•
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Weir, Homer R. Winnsboro Weekly News (Winnsboro, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, April 29, 1921, newspaper, April 29, 1921; Winnsboro, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth268169/m1/2/: accessed May 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mineola Memorial Library.