The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 47, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 25, 1913 Page: 1 of 8
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B4n«,i;r & i;it\viv Publisher*.}> A. !Paper Devoted to the best Interests of the People. ^ub«eripHoii, Sl.OO Per Annuo*)
VOL. 38. LINDEN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1013. NO. 47.
HANDLING MONEY OUR BUSINESS
f
THUS is our business
just the same as our
Merchants, pach have
their special lines. Not
unlike the Merchant, we
are constantly looking
for new Customers.
KEEP YOUR MONEY IN THE CASS COUNTY STATE BANK
Buy your goods at homo. Lot's cultivate the habit of do-
ing nil the business) wc can right here in Linden and keep
our money in Cans County.
CASS COUNTY STATE BANK
LINDEN, TEXAS
HOUSE SHOW PAGEANT.
Oriental Splendor Will Meet Oc-
cidental Fashion at Fort
Worth Show.
State Board of Examiners
Passes on Applications of
1725.
Austin, Texas, Nov. !>.—The
state board of examiners has
hilnploted its work of examin-
ing the papers ol 172"' applicants
who applied for certificates and
entered the examination for
teachers September 0 and 0 last.
*^hi order to hasten reports to
teachers and trustees for .the
opening ol rural schools, the
examining force Was increased;
Jn speaking of the certification
ol Texas touchers Superintend-
ent Doughty stated that approx-
imately 23,000 teachers were
engaged in thr public schools of
the state and that each year
about one-third are new teachers
in the profession.
EVERY DETAIL COMPLETE.
Nearly S\vrry t In Id Has
\Vorins-
Paleness, at times a Hushed face, tin
Natural hunger, picking the nose, great
(hirst; etc., are indications of worms.
Kiekapoo Worm Killer is a reliable,
thorough medicine for the removal of all
kinds of worms from children and adults.
Kiekapoo Worm Killer in pleasant
tandy form, aids digestion, tones system,
over-coming Constipation and increasing
the action of the liver. Is perfectly safe
for even the most delicate children.
Kiekapoo Worm Killer makes children
happy and healthy. 25c. Guaranteed,
'fry-it?— Drtig stores or by mail. Kieka-
poo Indian Medicine Co., Phidclbhia and
St. Louis.
Man's Body is Petrified.
Baltimore, M d., Oct. CI.—The
body of Patrick Dtigan, which
was exhumed to day for reinter-
ment in another cemetery, was
found to have become petrified,
ils weight was estimated at more
than 000 pounds. The lace and
hands were a light gray, while
fh* clothes, which also were pet-
rified, WerG several shades dark-
er.
Mr. Dugan Was buried nine
years ago.
Inst Arrived a car of "Sweet
I'tiro" Best Northern Flour
♦ very sack guaranteed at W. C.
Blalbck & Go.
ifational Foedcs' fnd Breeder*' Show at Fori
Worth to be Ureatost in Hlsioiy.
With every detail completed and
•lie most .magnificent array of ex-
hibits and attractions that it has
>ver offered the people of the South-
west, the National Feeders and
Breeders' Show Will throw open its
loors tor its eighteenth annual ex-
hibition, jon. tlie niqrning of N'ovem-
jer 22. It will last through Noveni:
ser 29, new features being offered
morning, noon and night.
While the central attraction is
perhaps the inogt. comprehensive and
extensive, livestock exposition ever
w itnessed in the Southwest, the man-
agement of the big show has neg-
lected no feature to attract the
crowds and interest those who per-
haps 'are not well versed in live-
stock".
Music lovers from nil over the
State are expected to attend thr show
for the express purpose of hearing
Irhaviu's great band, which will play
throughout the exhibition. This in
J >ne of the most famous bands of
IIhc country and the great, director
lias with 'him an operatic sextette
that has won renown throughout the
t United States.
There will be free attractions in
:hc Coliseum every afternoon dur-
tig the show arid one of tin1 best
' rarnival companies that travels the
South will throw up its tents on the
oliscum grounds.
Poultry fanciers from all over
l'".\as and other States are being
ittraefed by the advance notices of
| the magnificent exhibition that will
i be held at Fort Worth during the
ihow. More (ban $2,000 in prizes
md cups are being offered by the
Port Worth Poultry and Pigeon As-
I soeiation, $1,500 of which will be
' swarded in the poultry division,
j Poultry and pigeons are being entqr-
>d from all over the Southwest. The
State meetings of li\e prominent
poultry associations and the national
Meeting of another will be held here
during the show, thus adding moro
:hnn 1,000 birds. Last spring only
1 ?,.r)00 birds eould bo acc'immodiited
In the poultry budding, hut this year
:he space will he expanded so that
J,600 at least may be accommodated.
The most prominent poultry
fudges in the Southwest.—JL b. Sav-
ige of Briton and Tom It. Woods of
f'ayeUv, Mo.-—will handle that divi*-
lon of the show, while George Kvvald
#f Cincinnati, Ohio, the most promi-
nent pigeon judge in the country,
a ill gauge the respective merits of
the exhibits in that division.
If you want Fire and Tarnado
Insurance bee I. N. Marett.
Oriental pomp and splendor will
meet with Occidental fashion in the
gorgeous ceremonies that surround
the coronation of the Queen of the
Horse Show Pageant, vhieh will fea-
fiye the opening night of the Na-
tional Feeders and Breeders' Show,
which will be held at Fort Worth
November 22 to 29.
Following the beautiful custom in-
iugurated at last spring's show,
which caused the opening night to
6e a State-wide society event, un-
paralleled in brilliance, the manage-
ment of the National Feeders and
Breeders' Show is going to even
rreater expebae this fall to make the
ivent one long to be remembered iii
Texas society circles.
The magnificent spectacle of cor-
onation, which is being arranged by
i committee of Fort Worth society
women, will have to do with tho
reception of ten Oriental queens and
their retinues, garbed in the exact
ostunnes ot the different Eastern
,'ourts, before the Queen of the Horse
Show pageant, her maids of honor,
| princesses of the realm and loyal re
i twiners. For color, no Oriental ba-
Laar will outstrip itl for fashion of
the present day, the \\omeu of Texas
I need not go to cities afar.
More than fifty beautiful priri-
■■esses, representing an equal num-
ber of cities throughout 'lexas, will
eisit. the show and be members of
the roval party. A round of social en-
tertainment, more brilliant than, ever
before, has ,heMi arranged; Thesa
princesses will come from represen-
tative families in the different cities
and will be symbolical of the man-
ner in which the National Feeders
and Breeders' Show represents the
State.
The Queen of the Ilorse Show pa-
geant will be a Fort Worth girl,
whose identity will be a guarded se-
cret until the nij(lit of the corona-
tion, when her royal chariot, .sur-
rounded by gallant retainers, will be
Irawn into the vast Coliseum build-
ng. She will be accompanied by
Per maids of honor, who will be de-
Dutantes of the present season.
The management of the show
promise; an unrivaled spectacle, in
vhieh more than 300 people will
ake part and if is certain that the
•vent is one that will be long reniem-
>ered in State society circles. Tho
Doliseutn will be bedecked in appro-
priate fall colors.
A Painless Headache.
Is there such a thing as Painless Head-
ache, l'ainless Neuralgia, Painless Rheu-
matism. Hunt's Lightning Oil will
make the pain go away, and the suffering
(case. Th'at'e why Hunt's Lightning Oil
is so popular, and praised so much. Ask
your druggists.
(!ood roads can't be built
without money. Neither can
anything that is worth while.
Wo long to see tho day when
people will not be afraid to make
investments for the general good.
Private corporations and indi-
viduals spend money and make
great progress while many
things for the welfare of tho en
tire community are not done be-
cause the people do riot want to
spend the money.— YVills Point
Chronicle.
You talk tf<e right kind of
doctrina; aud the clay you long
for will come—it is drawing
nearer and nearer day by day.
When it arrives grand old Texas
will take a bouud forward that
will put her in the lead of all
states.-—Ex.
W. c. II LA LOCK
M. ft. fJlVBNS
. iifii
H
l7/hei?e y®u will find a full aM complete lii..e of Sta-'
pic and PaBGY Groceries, Di?y Goods and Potions."
COINS' DROSS SHIRTS A SPECIJIl^Y.
A F)ice liine of Ladies' and Geres' Bosio.py. \
A, full Hue of FIISFK'S oy^RAlLS. They wear
a pfg's nose.
Chops, Bran and Shorts. -
Ho.r.th Side Square, Li.n.don., Tssas
isaEsaaa
I
NOTICE TO TAX PAYERS
I will nieet the Tax Payers of Cass County at the following
places on the following dates, to-wit:
SECOND ROUND
Kildare " 24
Le
Viol;
Huffines.
Bivins ...
Aimira. .
Marietta.
Dec
-Z't
" £>(!
" 27
" 2H
1
Naples.
u :i
Dalton " 4
Bryans Mill " o
(Gusset a " ft
Bear Creek
Avinger
Concord, at L. L. Rhyrtes' residence
Galloway, at 1). II. Humphrey's i> to I, J. D. Boon's 2 to ">
Cornett
Hermitage, at W. P. Harrell's residence
Hughes Springs "1.8-10
Douglassville ..Dec. 22
Atlanta "
11
12
13
15
1«
17
(iueen City
Bloom burg
"23-21
Dec. 2!
" 8d
S. II. VANCE,
Tax (Collector, Cass f^ountv.
\OTI(l!
Midifl Sale
T1IE ST ATI? Oi'" Tft^AS, O'^nty of
Cass. Dy virtue of an order of salo,'
issued out of the Honorable District
Court of Cass County, on the 28th day of
Oct. A. D. 1918, by the Clerk thereof, in
the case of J. H. Stalnaker versus S. C.
Harper and J. T. Johnson No. 61131, and
to me, as Sheriff, and delivered, I will
procecd to sell for cash, within the hours
prescribed by the law of Sheriff Sales, on
the First Tuesday in December A. D.
1913, it being the 2nd day of said month,
before the Court House door of said Ca!>s
County, in the Town of Linden the fol-
lowing described property, to-wit:
A cert in lot or parcel of land situated
in Cass County Texas the same being 300
acres of the William Russell survey ful-
iy described in deed from A. A. Gary to
J. H. Stalnaker recorded in Cass County
Deed record Vol D-2 page tr>">9 and ior
futber and fuller dcscript ions t lie above
Deed is hereby refercd to, levid on as t Im-
properly of S. C. Harper and J, T ohn
son to satisfy A judgment amounting to
$2715.05 in favor of .f. H. Stalnaker and
costs of suit.
Giv*n Under My Hand, this 30tr da^
of Oct. A. D. 1913.
J. F. MITCHELL, Sheriff.
♦ . *
The Occupations of Men.
One of th(j questions giveti in
an examination to a third grade
geography class was:
"What are the four leading
occupations of man?"
"Chewing, smoking, drinking
and aweariag," replied a small
boy.
| William Sulzer of New York
I has ti family Bible which -be
savs has been in the Suizr-r
family 2.">3 years. It's a hundr-
ed to one shot that the last .if
the Sulzers never read it. nnd
profited by his readings. Had
he read it and lived up to its
teachings he wouldn't have been
deposed as governor of New
■ V ork. The very idea of u man
with a Bible 253 years old Col-
lecting ^100,002 for Campaign
purposes, turning :t o")er to tho
Wall street money devil and
then tahing refuge behind the
petticoat of hu wife. But be
has the Bible as bis consolation,
and should read it from cover to
cover. It will do him good.
Charles F. Murphy went down.,
but Stilzrr fell underneath tt.«
Tammany boss. A bird with a
broken wing never (lie* high
again.—Ex.
Nervous and fcicl* lleadnrltr
Torpid liver, constifaii in bowelr, trnt)
disordered stomach are thecsuse nJtbejr
headaches. Take D . Krng'j, l.ffr
Pills, you -will be surprised howsqafeilv
you will get relief iheystiimj-tete-rtit
diiTerert orjan:. to do Tbejr-work-prrvp >T
| 1y. No better remoter for Imr- end
j bowels, t ake 2oc end ievcit • in *
to-day. Ai all druggirtr nr-bywail
H. E. Bucklcn & Co. Philadelphh-W
St. LotiiK.
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Banger, J. E. A. & Erwin, W. L. The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 47, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 25, 1913, newspaper, November 25, 1913; Linden, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth341458/m1/1/: accessed May 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Atlanta Public Library.