The Lynn County News (Tahoka, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 28, 1929 Page: 8 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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her w
tells
own h
Sunda
She
\Ve*te
the wi
injt t
Miss
sionarj
' bill I
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a’i<l a'.
1 XHOh \
GEMS OF LITER ATI RE
Locals
CARD OF Til WKS
At 1
n< w ins
• >unt v
1
'Joi.
W
Hood Tennis Shoe
num
attended
| injc
S. R. KEMP’S VARIETY STORE
the
world’
Four
L^r.^SlEiSidfSl S’. M'SitSTiSfiBSrainMr
ht fr
M« x
days
Fort
Burleson re-
nt a hunting
You have, it’s guaranteed,
them at
Gettyshure Address
sc re and seven vi
family m ved
We failed to
f the press
either over-
I, or under-
huinan character.
under (rod,
of freedom,
the people,
the people
I we cannot
;low this
living and
our fathers brought forth on this
■ eminent a new nation, conceived in
liberty and dedicated to the propo-
sition that all men are created equal.
attaining before us
honorei
was a call -
Friday, re-
lic report-
Market
Choice Meats
We wish to thank the 1
their kindness and word-
left Sunday
Royal
Lodge
years f uninterrupted
they.
the Iwreavement which we
feted in the death of our
We sincetely thank you.
now
Plains
ge .1 W Elliott
to attend the Grand
Chapter f the Masonic
sion .it Wae . this week
votion to that
gave the last
ti n; that we
•hat those dead shall not have died
in vain; and this nation,
shall have a new birth
and tltut government of
by the people and for
shall not perish from the earth.
sjSfaigfSEISfefclEiaiiPJfl; .iMeUS
•a)
I
we take increased de-
cause f r which they
full measure f devo-
here highly resolve
consecrate, we annot
ground. The brave
dead, who struggled
community than
He
>ut will present to the read
language of the client him
Messrs. Damewo d ami Bradford
of The Texas Utilities Company,
Lubbock, were here on business for
the Company Tuesday.
Waldiep of Wells
he News office
his subscription.
a little better in his
in many portions f
will gather about a
tunny deformed;
s n. we kn w
Column we will offer no brief of oui
client,
er the
self.
This
our dependence,
to present our
Who is he? He
Mr*. Alice Dawkins spent a few
this week visiting a friend n
Worth
two reason*
t<
MIMEOGRAPH PAPER at 25c per
. ired, or |L20 for 500.--The New*
-of Nat William*, principal of
school here f r three years but
superintendent of the Cross
a few hours
friends He
on a hunting
I war, testing whether that nation,
or any other nati n * > conceived and
so dedicated, can long endure. We
are met on a great battlefield of that
war. We have come to dedicate a
portion of that field as a final rest-
gave
lives that that nati n might
It is alt gether fitting and prop-
j er that we should do this. But in
i a larger sense we cannot dedicate,
hal-
men
here
our
power to add to or detract from. The
world will little note nor long remem-
ber what we say here. It is f r us, the
living, rather to be dedicated here to
the unfinished work which they who
fought here have thus far so nobly
advanced. It is rather for us to >«•
. Tarrance and
to Lubbock Monday,
get what lire of business he will en-
gage in there. Many friends here
regret that this good family is
leaving Tahoka.
Mrs. K F. Knight and brother.
Stuait Will ughby, return MoruUi.v
from San Angelo, where they spent
friends had
further west
Jackson &. Wright |
W. C. Thomas, w’ho resides near
Close City, better known as Rag- I
town, was here Tuesday selling a
bale of cotton and patronizing some
of our merchants Mr. Thomas
stated that he g t a far better price
: r his cotton here than he had been
i|_________
(By J. A. Humphries)
Dear Reader; We are glad to meet
and greet you who are the patrons(
of The News,
prompt the program we purpose
offer. One, the interest in, and the
i long, long
'friendship for the Editor; the
a sincere desire to place befo
public and particularly the youth of I mg place for th
our country the names of men and their
women of the world whose literature, u”“
law and aphorisms have contributed
to national and international better-
ment. The tendency
and the public is
praise on the one
value on the other,
The lives of men and women are too
o is. >rted by flattery or by cal-
about the real per-
but little, so in our
Rev. .1 A. Weathers of I. cknej
left Monday after spending severs
lays here visiting his brother. E. N
Weathers, and other relatives.
initial number will appear on
i Thanksgiving and because this is ><
(day that celebrates
we have decided
greatest American.
| is the man, who with one stroke of
.the pen liberated three milli n s cis.
and who a few months later stood
with furrowed face and solemn mien
I on the battlefield of Gettysburg and
t its dedication the follow-
minute speech — w
now known am< ng
LIGHT
POWER
I
I
+
♦
I T*
* Texas Utilities Co
We Light The Way”
offOVE poison out
Constipation Troubled Alabama
Lady Until She Had Taken
Black-Draugbt, Then
Felt Fine.
n.^ren'e. Ala—‘For two years. I
.'L.ed with pains in my buck and
ad.” writes Mrs J. E. Sloan. 819
,rk Stive t this city
T felt dull all the time, and was
>t able to do anything.
I was constipated most of the
My complexion was bad and
• mid no appetite.
An old lady advised my father
.-. •• me Black-Draught. As
.itii .is she told him. he got it for
me. I too': Black-Dra^'lit three
a day for three wW>ks, and I
.. n to feel like a different per-
> 'ii I developed a good appetite;
, e poison left my system, and I
J thought my trouble came from
c' tv np-ation. and as soon as th ?
e was removed. I got all right.
June tiiat time. I have tried to
.. p a Iajx of Black-Draught in the
,i.. as 1 find it corrects bilious-
at.d reLcves uck headache. It
t. our femily medicine”
Constipation dams up poisons ui
the bowels, causing their bad ef-
ii~'to to be felt tn other parts of tlie
tody.
At the first -sigTi of constipation,
teke Thedford'* Black-Dr;j.i^ht.
Costs only 1 cent a b/C-Sl*
Mrs. L. S. Kuykendall last week
nd visited in Lubbock with K Kuy- i
lendall and Mrs. Gladys Moore I
Lawrence Sanford returnd Monday i
tom a few days visit in Abilene.
Edith
Me are again very glad to report
a few items from our community, I
ns it is standing in the front ranks I
• .f pr gross. |
Cotton picking has been delayed
to a great extent on account of bad
weather. We haven’t m«de much
but are putting forth great efforts
to save what we have made.
There was singing at this place
Sunday night with a large crowd
present. A few Gar-Lynn singers
were present we al! had a good time.
Mr. Hora.e Krebbs, who some
three weeks ago underwent an op-
eration in the Lubbock Sanitarium
for appendictis, is back in our midst
again improveing nicely.
Mr Nels n, who has been ill for
some time, is able to be up again.
Next Sunday there will be singing
at Gar-Lynn, as it is their regular
Sunday to sing there.
Mi. Ira B. Krebbs and family and
Miss Marie Tredway spent tho day
with Mr. and M’-s. C. W. Krebbs
Sunday.
Be at Sunday School Sunday at
10:00 A. M.—Reporter.
!-■
WAPLES PLATTER COMPANY . T’ XKS • OKI AHOM \ . NEW MEXICO
ohe took
her husband
unawares
... and learned
a lot!”
and the a ft
of blending —each playing its important part
in achieving that uniform, delicious flavor
which has made \\ hite Swan so popular
wherever it is served.
By controlling every step in its preparation,
the \\ aples Platter Company importer,
roaster, packer and distributor -makes certain
tiiat every sealed tin of White Swan reaches
you with its full appetizing quality kept intact.
W hite Swan Coffee always comes t<> you
fresh. .After roasting and packing, distribution
is promptly made to its 10,000 dealers all
within convenient shipping distance of one or
more of the 22 strategically located \\ aples
Platter I louses. F leets of motor trucks operate
over a network of routes, making regular deliv-
eries from all the units of this institution of the
Southwest.
Now, and wlu never you need a fresh supply,
\\ hite Swan Coffee is available at your grocer’s
freshly packed in one and three pound cans.
FREE — Expert advice and
time-tested ret i[n s
Perhaps the custard separates in baking—part
deck and part water. Or you may have trouble
with sonv other dis’j y< ur family likes. Write
to Waples Platter Bet ter C ooking Bureau,
W aples Plat ter Co., I* i \\ .; .Texas. Expert
advice an 1 * nt FREE.
jN'XRS. KIRK’S husband wasn’t expecting her
back from Fort Worth until Sunday morning,
but she came home on Saturday night.
“I’ll surprise them,” she told herself, slip-
ping her key into the latch and entering the
house quietly.
Savory odors came from the kitchen and she
heard voices behind the closed door.
“Y es, sir; your mother’s the best cook on
earth,” she heard her busband saying to her
son, “but, my boy, she certainly doesn t make
good coffee. She’s such a dear, good woman,
though, that I have never liked to tell her so.”
“Well, it’s good that we found out about this
White Swan Coffee and laid in a good supply
while she was gone, Dad,” her boy said. ‘ I
think she’ll notice the improvement.”
Mrs. kirk was ‘a good sport’ and a wise
woman. She slipped back to the front door
again, slammed it and shouted, “Look who’s
here!”
Mr. Kirk and his son raced to meet her and
immediately after the embraces were ex-
changed, she said, “By the way, I ran across
the most wonderful coffee in Fort Worth. It s
called White Swan and . . .
Yes, indeed a wise woman!
No matter which member of the family may
have introduced \\ hite
Swan C ol lee or bx
what means the en-
thusiasts praise tor
its tempting an qiia and
satisfying flavor is
always upanimi>us.
WHITE SWAN
COFFEE
ural goodne^, more
than a h. 'I ccn t ury of
experience i> brought
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Hill, E. I. The Lynn County News (Tahoka, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 28, 1929, newspaper, November 28, 1929; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1212295/m1/8/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .