The Wellington Leader (Wellington, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, March 9, 1923 Page: 3 of 18
eighteen pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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FRIDAY MARCH !>, PJ23.
* 1 \n.l th. pirit ut Berkley etill liver. |
American Railway Express Co
At The Welltex Theatre
. d (I . uhIiijh nt of education
;uv Ik's! Io p.»\ your bill'
Tuesday Night FEB, 15
i .>ii\c ind <•' plain
'"■I’h.
•ighbm
Our wagon does haulinr foi the public ,
I'lh'XI’ •>
In which the latest togs will be shown on living
J. W. KEITHLEY, Agent
models. First of the kind in the city
is
fl
Herr v r
The following dry goods and millinery
Origin of the Public School
all tli' people.
firms wilbparticipate in the Style Show
. *
K W*
i* tfle
mid
their i hi!
1‘
fA
•P.
Special Music by the Wellington Orchestra
Th
r rhil.be.
r.bi
r<A
Picture-“GOOD AND EVIL
■ t tl-.ei
for
.tier
ft
Admission 15 and 30 Cents
in
an.I
el! hr
soM *the
rd neat*.!
in
t-o
\l A IX Jl»X> s |>U>
the wavrt.! and print ft . divulged
if »s .mdet wi«hed to prove that
county
NOTICE
I
-
RADIO
>
rt
7^--
EVERYONE’S ENTERTAINER
i.
a
Don’t Throw Them Away
4*
Fraad a Cure ft Indigvotkm.
A
Buy a Radio set now I
—becattae thev are faded and soiled. Instead let u» clean or dye
I on Chamberlain’s Stomach imI
Our prices are lower—our service better.
WE KNOW OUR EGGS”
»' ■
♦pernbut
r? ■
^OGGERY
MB
— —---
-X-.
R
F
1
.■I';',
A,
pr»»-
th* -•
<>n the
o’clock
to the
t
I?
£
with th.'
triV 't inc
out a plan of education for ail the
people and a way to support it.
Between 1*25 and Ih.M) a wave of
of
»»
-.tune* ahe* the evert hr* ••
of the Roman purmnetil the
!:■
a
' rrt-ia-n w e*v D> a •
rm,” cottipartMf the .tnhi
ir worm that though ’ it ’- v
from iiwU*wti«B. 1 can cat almost
anything 1 want to, now,” writ**
they suit my caae better than any
dyspepsia remedy 1 have ever tried
and have used many different medi-
cine*. 1 atn nearly fifty one yearn of
Everyone from bnbv to grandpa is interested
in Radio. It is the wonder of the age!
cation »> a< growing
George " i-bin eton believed '■ • '
eating all the people Samuel \ditm-
‘devil” in the Herald office, un.l had
always through the intervening vears
been a great friend of this paper Ho
bad a nice little rnnch in <?ollings-
wortl and a home in Wellington He
was forty-seven year* old at the lune
of his death.
1’hc Herald .join- the man' friends
of the family in sincere condolence
and sympathy. He was a good man,
Notice is hereby given, that
10th day of March. 192 at 2
p. tn. of said day, 1 will sell
highest bidder for cash the -tock of
merchandise, fixtures, notes and
counts of Howell Brothers,
lington, Texas.
M 2p TM ROBINSON. Tru-teo.
. ——o--—
Read the want a«k in the Welling-
ton 1 cadrr.
intere-t in educati v-ept wet the
country Historv • -II* us it was the
breaking down •’ c’ i-- line in the
It bring to you interesting news event—re-
sults of athletic contests, stock quotations, mes-
sages from ship at sea, concerts and real dance
music. Its possibilities are unlimited.
the Church and State our
state <■)■.>..I y-tenl wu
T» r < ’ahani-t <• conception
H; rxcvUvni service to offer you. I'leaso call on
us when wanting information regarding your ship-
ments, large or small Our rates are no higher than
P: ’vol Past on long hauls. Y
look like new.
Our many year's experience accounts for the perfect work
we <to—and our methods will not hurt the cloth in any way.
Our price* are always a pleasant surprise—they are so as-
touudingiy reasonable when one considers the quality of work.
Church and wn* c inducted by Rev
Chas. T. Whaley, pa«tar it was
! irgeh ittdndnl, de-pitr the muddy
weather and bail day. Interment wax
at Fairview Cemetery
The deceased was almnvt reared in
this city. Hr wax born in Missouri,
but came here with his parent* whde
a mall boy. He grew to manhood
I ere. in 1 here marriesl Min File
III idc< daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T
R. Hindes To them were borti *ix
children, five daughters .till living.
He worked in boyhood as the first
;* k -I t>e iV’ne >Gi l> k
»t thr e .howr<l that >• 1 elv
th*-v 11.MO five ’• '>
*
home, t« »H
; he Famous
.1. B. Ellis
C. E. Stone & Co
lie.” Thoma* Jeffer-en believed
education and Reivami’ Franklin be
hevrd in I IGHT for the mind the
, 'ight /.>r the «arid \nd -top
bv »tep, year by year, and life by life.
■<
ending them to
n it dr- rlnped
li t • ’ c< .*
i hildm t1-*
Monday ii’emtng at an early hour
'.Ivin B Jone* died at the old family
home in this city, where death camo
to the mother and father in the pa-t
few rears. U* diet! of the dread di*-
»a*e from which the father and grand
Father had also <lie<l For onto weeks
it had been known that he could not
long ur'ivr, hut his death war none a patriotic citizen and a good hus-
thc l<< a -hock. He leave* < wife band, father and friend. Hr has
and five daughter*, beside* several adned that innumerable caravan, and
brothers and -d«ters, to inoum hi* we can only hope to meet him above
death Hi- funeral took place Mon- m the lord’* good time — Hall
WELLINGTON RADIO CO.
Mrs. R. L. Scott
R. V. McDavid
A. & W. Cash Store
ne-
at Wei-
•I ! ! A
FmV A* Ut
h’*
Be sure to attend this Style Show and pic
lure program.
v lust Ci fie
^ew!
f three ’ . pc >d chuol'
I'.c ’ii • " ., '.I ■ ■■da.-.I
r. til ut ..>■ hotihl upjwrt
’ common .'hool
FME WELLINGTON LBABBR
-——....... ■- ■-.-■a——a—— ....._ — . .
|SIMW WWBF 1.1 ifl yynywf w iMM—i—f—w ■■■—»■ **
Berkley wa- afraid knowledge would
disturb the political and -ocial order ■ _ __ —. ___ — _ w w
/■ r i f i J
... . r B H U
u. J ■ ■ ■_. ■ k K ■ w J
r i p<> s JV B jB B IBHVJHBV ni BI UK UK
little Ihunc School became one of the ,M
■it i elementarv ihool- in the colon M
I,.. |t i a- usually conducted in |3
.. orb.idv '• kitchen •" living loom l»y 3
t I. I i/’4* 1>U«I
t on TOC na<l »v pianim in i
'-ovrmment but t ■ • IDEAL of "Eqtuil '
Education for \ ' ct (• Bt red
tied. And thi » '‘r opportunity for
our day. Thi- i the contribution to
education that we who are back of
the public school in this generation
have a chance to make to our country.
Will we, like De Witt Clinton, live for .
It. and work for it; and fight for it, as
long as we live or will we for the
sake of a few dollars defeat the reaL
iration of this idea) for another gen-
eration?
the United State*, -aid I believe
i. rriicr knowledge to lie the mil f ;l Repub
condition
H .< tl • cat
a'C > ' :<' itloii
ccnicd
W'-.- ’'I
"* the people had a little m they [|
c-t t' c i <1 Idren private ’•chord-. ;i
’ C p , . if .-.i (dii’drc- wet,- rd
Pvopb' from all oction* of the coun-
try had moved into the new region-
in the West. Everybody was ,-trug-
glinv .d kr for tart ami a 1-ome.
•] Men .i«l then- ••• ■ .i.* equal- l*e
1 moer-.u-v drvelope and education fot
| all. or education i -r none liecanir the
demand Thi- bt kr up the Pauper
School and admitthe children of
the poor to the common .-chool which
had been develnpe
I] One of the m->-t <>ut-tanding char dnr .nt I M p. tn., from the Baptist Herald
■ acter- tn the fig!' for public -chool-
H wa* l»e Witt Clinton, for right years
■ 'Governor of New York. From 1-05
3 ■ until hi* death m -2- he worked un-
■ crasmgly for the eal.- of free public
3 school education a result of hi*
S efforts i-OO.OOO children had been edu-
S! rated and 1200 teacher* trained for
j! service by the year IK53, when the
T: school plant o*i -mated bv De Witt
■* Clinton w a« turned < ver to the public
-chool department of New York City.
4 T» c pint f 1* W>tt Clinton -till
4i lives in the Ma om* Lodge nnd again
4- this year the .........conducting an-
il ot*er educational ismp.iign in the
same pirit a* that of their illustrious
edtserrt -owsl level*«. Equal education .
<j‘ for all rhr children of the country. I
By Ih.YO the public chool -vstem as
4; we know it tod n id been thoroughly
3] r-*tabh*hed The idea of equal rduca-
■i^t ion for :iTT T a<T i>taiiin.t -m -our * .
■J? ‘ Awr-cten»iinr*» lull th
.- heart - .*•..- -und f men
-anely am! intelligently
r v -M be »ede*’-e! from -n
••e Ti e «bool and the ch
>t » >k together ha id in a-
I
I
a '
-VUc •chool, 1 ke »'« >
Hution. wa* comene!
>
r-.i >.f pesrrt) at. ' »
r cradle of tribulati
■t If
get air id view . * U:<-
but'-.
-rvwth and the p-v et
life
Slic chvol *s te-n we
■f
k back* ar 1 X ■'
.< V.?*'
but a hun-’ied tfa-
fl
y :
At fa
.* k « i ■ " <
Her th
■ onquen i tex-k a k -
«r
t ngland that i *
■ -.-I-:
kt
*i iu-t what k> |
r
hi kr
■ rrprs-scitet fbe -
if 'A'
n'estigatiOe wore filed
i?k
*
c 1
•
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"fl KwjAvJS
■PR vY
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Wells, J. Claude. The Wellington Leader (Wellington, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, March 9, 1923, newspaper, March 9, 1923; Wellington, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1187193/m1/3/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .