The Eldorado Success (Eldorado, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, August 10, 1928 Page: 4 of 6
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The Eldorado Success
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
A. T. Wright, Owner. L. T. Barber, Editor and Publisher.
Subscription Rate One Year____________________$1.25.
Entered as Second Class matter July 9th, 1906, at the post
office at El Dorado, Texas, under Act of Congress gf March
3rd, 1879.
Friday Aug 13,1928
=r
The wages of yin is also death. HERE IS A JOB FOR A____
REAL he-man.
Elimination of waste expands
the waist.
Knowledge is power. The pub
utilities tried to make propa
; anda power.
-----o-
Mexico eliminates her candi-
date j by the bullet. America ex
terminates hers by the ballot
Moth presidental candidate.!
took 41 holiday the other day.
t/.ie of them will yet a longer
o,.e November 6.
Garbage collectors are com-
plaining of glass in yarbaye fed
to hoys. No hoy likes ylass. not
ev til a road hoy.
Lindbergh rescued three girls
when their boat capsized. Beats
all what girls will do to get
Lindy’s attention.
If you have aspirations to tc
do someth:ng wild anu danger-
'US, try to do something useful
instecd of drowning on a trans-
oceanic flight or catching cold,
lust and dirt on tne top of a
WHAT TEXAS DOES.
For nine years Texas has leu
all other states in farm pro-
ducts, as a cattle producer, in
new railroad milage, and loi
past three months It'd all states
in oil production.
lexus within recent years leu
in building large modern hotels
modern water works and purify-
ing plant*, and in building 01.
pipe, natural gas and powe*
lines.
lexas is the only state that
has twice produced more than
$1,000,000,Oou worth of crops
year, in 1919 and 1923, anu in
creased values pf farm crop.-
lrom $298,133,406 in 1909 tc
$729,764,000 in l»z7.
.Meanwhile the value of the
manufactured products kepi
pace, growing from $3bl,z<9,
303 in 1914 to $l,23i,952,4t>9 in
1925. Next to Missouri it leads
the South in the value of its
today,
iiaypole. Hye is a ryaf iob fo: ...„ ... *„v
adventurous/spirits: Climb tel manufactured products
the top of Mount McKinley anu ‘ranking twelfth in the Nation.
bring back the self-fvgistering The value of its mineral pro-
thermometer left on the peak ducts wgs $47,711,000 in luit
fifteen years ago by Harry Kar- and $420,380,000 in 1920.
•itenes, superintendent of Me-1
Kinley National Park. He wants! 0 1
.0 know how cold it really got* Mrs. A. 0. Beavers and dau
ut tht elevation of 2u,^00 feet rado Thursday and Friday on
ui Alaska. He suspects that their return home to Abilene,
the thermometer will revea. after a several weeks stay a;
temperatures low* r than any re Galveston for Mrs. Beavers
corued outside of a labatory health. She is reported to b-
out he won’t be sure until that greatly improved. While hen.
:nermometer is back. So get was the guest of Mr. and Mrs
your ice pick and start. w M Bearce
The trip to the top was mad, *
oy Karstens and two others u. i -*——0
-ne summer of 1913,
TUNNEY’S RETIREMENT
Gene Tunnev. world’s weight
boxer, has quit the ring. No
one can blame him too much
for his decision. It is no more
wainst a man to quit the prize
ring than it is for a man to quit
Wall Street, quit the farm, the
movies or the proffession after
he has made enough money to
live comfortably. Tunney cer-
tainly has done that.
Tunnev will go down in his-
tory. if he eoes down at all, as
the boxer who was a gentleman
and a scholar. Whether the man
ly art of boxing helps or hinders
humanity: whether two humans
beating up on each other before
20,000 spectators for purse ad-
vances the cause of civilization
jr retards it - -these are indeed
strange questions. One thing is
sure; Tunney fought fair and
according to the rules as he un-
derstood them. Any man is en-
titled to retire at any time he
wants to do so. That is his right
It is just as good sportsmanship
to quit clean as it is to go on and
make a fool out of one’s self
Some seem to think that he
was retiring for fear of Jack
Demsey coming back and knock-
ing him for a gaol but I do not
think Jack was coming back as
long as Mr. Tunney had the belt.
Two nice maulings seems as if
it should be enougn for any sen-
sible man to quit on.
. .
-■j.
OnlyBuick***
cou Id give value
OnlyBuick***
could build such a car
Hoover hated English when
in Stanford University, and
barely passed. Still some peo-
ple think he is pro-Britfish.
This campaign is surely get-
ting nasty. There are mane Re-
publicans who associate A1
Smith’s brown derby with wh..t
they think will be his taste the
morning after.
Mrs. Rob Ross and two daugh-
frimative Baptist Association.
A California woman motor-
ist was disfigured for life the
other day. The accident was
canned by her trying to read a
“school girl complexion" bill-
board along the highway.
Gene Tunney says he wants
to quit the ring because he doe-
11 t like tile social contacts of »"*«*■ *vuv/»tu»jj nun tiruuiiu.
the proffession. His opponents likes to let people know he
haven’t |»articularly liked his :riahea, wears old clothes and
fistic contacts, either. jw'alks thru woods and into
{streams just like all the com
0 ;mon people. As an excuse foi
In Anglewood, California, pas ,pomp a,nd <Ji«nity he mu3t
tors offers cut rat e marriage dl9play on t^ie platform, he gets
prices. For a $5 dollar bill he down *° ear*h like the re3t of us
hands the groom a two-cent ‘nr^etween times,
tamp in change and the bride 1 *here H serious side to this
a kiss. We'd be willing to go rather ll*ht reasoning. It is
thut preacher one better If nian is by origin and nat-
tkey’d b-t us kiss the bride we’d l,re a fi?herman, a hunter, a
•See all the money back and ,vo°dsman. Such vacation
throw in a $10 bill to make the iau.,it<} as «re now being engay
down payment on their furni *n ^-v *bose in high and netu
tore. high estate are merely expres-
sions of the original man climb
°~--- ihg and hunting and casting
F II Sweatt who has been in anJ sticks- Children dis
♦ ’ Temple Sanitarium for six ''hy t.ht‘ae traits openly and vi*
' - ks. was able to return home ?rou8ly' V.row"-upa cal1 them
■ un.lhv. He was welcomed home sacationa, and get by with it
hn many friends and wa.- ----o-_
busy greeting them Monday. D ..... . ,
7 Barry Miller stands for A1
---o--Smith and Tammany, do you
xrtfzrirs*' jt1 tbem
to i.»r. and Mrs. Reuben
Dickens, a line baby girl. Eoth --0-
■ oin > nicely and Rueben i3 some J- R- Hext was in the city
tvtter- Monday looking after business
__ ____ , t. a a. sue lauinuiny uieui on tup in
en the winner.-August Sunset. (Texaa. The voters in Tex^ do
--o- Dot think as Tammany does and
FJHHK’HVIAMN! iiTrw I we do not believe a majority
r isnr.n.nA-v LlAK will vote as Tammany says. Several Eldorado people atten-
Mr.* Hoover fished for five Smitb has repudiated the Dem-jded the Bull Fight in Old Mex-
hours/fthe other day without get °'-ratic platform, and is no wor- ico last Sunday. Those attend*
ting it bite. The reason was, he ™y ^eader. With his belief he ing were, Messers. John I. King
should not have accepted the S; D. Harper, Joe Tisdale, Rob-
_____________nomination. Let’s repudiate him. ert Milligan, Bill Booth and John
be elected, two fish would bite! —--0- Itae.
where none bit before. Those ' n „ j . u * u ™ -0-
California fish know their Pre»-' to sav abou^the Spn Subscribe for the Success.
dents from candidates. The abi?UtMthebSen'-----
chances are A1 Smith couldn’t ZZJ „k*L°W
catch any fish either. J™* 19 ^>out;
What we can’t understand is, Tr Stator May-
why a candidate for such a high ^ dd ^ynnall}.
off ice as President wants |0fPead his statement in this issue.
fool around fishing when the
time is so short. To paraphrase
the Bible (provided it is not con
sidered wrong to do so) these
candidates ought to be fishing
for men instead of fish.
There is something human
even about a candidate. He likes
the reporters and photogra-
phers following him around.
116 lovb W heel Base
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1
THE SILVER AIM Ml VERSARV
BUICK
i
WITH MASTKBriKCB SOD1BS BT mtlk
HENDERSON-EDE CO.
San Angelo, Texas.
1FHFN HL-TTTH 4nX>MOBlLES AB2 KUTLt
Why not let your next Stor-
age tank be a re-enforced con-
crete and forget your water
troubles. EHc Matthews, Jr.,
contractor.
Phone 3211, El Dorado, Texas
i
DR. W. N. JONES
Dentist, office over
First National Bank,
San Angelo, Texas
Don’t worry about high pric-
es any longer. Come and buy
where cash gets it cheap.
Wright’s Cash Store.
Virgil Yancy, who was oper-
ated on in San Angelo kmutty
July 31, was able to return koine
Monday, August 6. • •• - •
- —-» ■ ■ . ■
List with me your
LIVE STOCK.
General Commission
H. S. ESPY
MILLION
• j v-r * 1
RUBBER TREES
T OF n? Granted that Dun-
lop does require all the rubber that 55,000,000
rubber tries can supply . . . What difference
does that make to my car?”
Simply tills: Dunlop tires must be better
tires. Othi rwise Dunlop could never have
grown so great. Otherwise there could
not be 26,000,000 Dunlop tires now in use.
Millions of motorists have tdA to lwv»p
year in and year out. Their friends have
amazed at the quality of Dunlop*,
year, thousands of new user* have
Dunlops. t
That is how Dunlop has grown so gtcafc. . ,
so great that, last year, the rubber
5 5,000,000 trees was required.
Magnolia Products
(«as. Oils, Tires, Tubes and Accessories.
Serv ice when you want it Drive in and
we will attend to you needs.
EL DORADO SERVICE STATION
Where YOU and SERVICE Meet
Phone 100 VAN McCORMICK
t
- -if
«
A
\
26,000,000 Dunlop tires are now la wa
If you would profit from the expeckswe of
these millions of motprists, your
will be Dunlops.
I.
- .'
• r
J
•t. ■
k
Mill
;« n
V’ w . >
-. • -
••
DUNLOP CITY*
r:
DUNLOP TIRES AND TUBES ARE RECOMMENDED AND SOLD BY
"Ti Rock Riling Station t;
Car Tur
While enroute
dav afternoon, M
let* her car run it
rocks on the sid*
way, blowing out
turning tne car c
tely no one was
They Were going
Rev. Hardt, pasto
odist here, is hold
While driving dow
her attention wa
tne road by one c
who sitting on
with her. causin.
S-:-
y
/■
:
DON’V suffer headach
those pains that Bayer
end in a hurry I Physici
it, and approve its
does not aflect the heart,
gist has it, but don't fai
druggist for Bayer. An;
any but the b >x that says
the word gene ine printed
Aaplrta «•
Jk* trad* mark of
Barer Mauufactur*
j M»noacatl<acld«ater of
Lum
v P
j Cash S
Where Texas
Texas and Me
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Barber, L. T. The Eldorado Success (Eldorado, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, August 10, 1928, newspaper, August 10, 1928; Eldorado, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1123804/m1/4/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .