The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 26, 1925 Page: 12 of 12
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THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
HONOR ROLL GROWING
3.
APPRECIATION
FOR SALE—Stove wood, $2.50' per
rick on ground, on C. B. Bryant place
2 y2 miles north of town.—J. H. Hop-
per. , 4dl0*
WANTED—A cook and housekeeper.
Will pay seven dollars per week.—
Dr. and Mrs. A. J. Ray. 2n26*
in
2.
CATTLE WANTED—Will buy any-
thing in cattle and hog line. See us
before you sell.—J. H. Graves & Son.
IN HONOR OF A GREAT EVENT
Birthdays are always important oc-
casions, especially if one is very
young or very old. Before long The
Youth’s Companion will be a hundred
years old, and the event is going to be
made a memorable one for The Com-
panion’s many friends. So, although
the date' is not until April 16, 1927,
preparations will begin with 1926.
In honoi’ of its birthday The Com-
panion will come to you next year at
the new low price of $2. It will be
dressed in its party clothes, with new
cover designs, enlarged illustrations,
new brilliantly clear type, and over
200 pages more than last year. It will
contain 9 book-length serial stories,
fascinating mystery stories, tales of
adventure on land and sea, the new
“Make-It and Do-It” pages, radio,
games, books, puzzles, interesting
special articles, and the ever-delight-
ful Children’s Page. Don’t miss this
great year of The Youth’s Compan-
ion; subscribe now and receive:
1. The Youth’s Companion—52 issues
1926, and
The remaining issues of 1925.
All for only $2.
Oi' include McCall’s Magazine, the
monthly authority on fashions. Both
publications, only $2.50.
THE YOUTH’S COMPANION
S N Dept., Boston, Mass.
Subscriptions Received at Sun Office
FOR SALE—Three good mules and
a farm wagon. See J. F. Lilley.
FOR SALE—Cut chrysanthemums;
variety of colors.—Mrs. W. J. Doss.
FOR SALE—Nice young Jersey cow.
—Ode Crowell.
The subscription list of The Sun
continues to grow. Many of our sub-
scribers are renewing their paper
and taking advantage of the special
club offers we now have on. Several
of the offers are advertised in this
issue of The Sun. Read them and se-
lect the one you want.
The following have paid their sub-
scriptions since our last report:
Joe Cameron.
D. B. Tate.
Mrs. T. B. Roberts.
Miss Pearl Edwards.
Mrs. J. A. Barnes.
G. W. Jones.
C- N. Ross.
W. W. Caylor.
J. W. Nicholson.
W. M. Samples.
F. S. Call.
Miss Edna Rathbun.
O. L. Sloan.
J. L. May.
Frank Montgomery.
Tom Lilley.
S. H. Jared.
W. L. Johns.
Mrs. Gladys Magar.
J. E. Russell.
O. M. McMillin.
Fain McMillin.
Sherman Chamber of Commerce.
J. F. Benton.
T. L. Cowart.
Mrs. C. A. Epperson.
A. D. Gailey.
E. Edens.
FOR SALE—Brand new 1926 model
Ford; balloon tires, demountable
rims; $15 under list price. See J. C.
Barbee at once.
FOR SALE—Flowers and pot plants.
Prompt attention given orders for
flowers for special occasions.—Mrs.
P. A. Short, telephone No. 198.
MONUMENTS—I am local agent for
the Love Monument Company of
Sherman. If interested in monu-
ments of any description, see me.—
Mark Montgomery.
Another Move
WILSON HARDWARE COMPANY
■ ’: ■ ■ ■
Stalk Cutters, Middle Breakers, Turning Plows, Har-
rows, Harness, Collars, Bridles and Lines. Everything
you will need to make your land ready for another crop,
and our prices are right.
Crops gathered—More than you really expected—
Most of it sold at a good price—Prosperity in our com-
munity. Debts paid, and money in the bank. Nineteen
Twenty-Five almost gone and its harvest salted down.
Start now for another prosperous year. Do your part
to make it what you think it ought to be. We have done
ours. We have stocked our store with all the kinds of
Hardware and Implements you are going to need.
Give us a chance and we will show you where is the best
place to buy.
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KINDNESS UNREWARDED
Prairie Hay
*
Coal
NEIGHBORLY, AS USUAL
We have a car of No. 1 Prairie
Hay on tracks. Price, $22.50 per
ton off the car.
The editor stood at the pearly gate,
His face looked worn and old;
He meekly asked the man of fate
For admission to the fold.
“What have you done,” asked Peter,
“To ask admission here?”
“Oh, I used to run a country paper
On earth for many years,”
The gate swung open sharply,
As Peter, touched a bell—
“Come in, my lad, take your harp,
You’ve had enough of hell.”
—Clipped.
STOVE WOOD—I have a quantity
of good dry stove wood for sale.—W.
R. Huckaby, one mile west of Pilot
Grove. 4dl7
A conservative politician is
office.—Columbia Record.
I"
EXPERT WATCH, clock and jewel-
ry repairing. Quick service. All
work guaranteed.—W. F. Brown,
jeweler, at Dyer & Jones’ drug store,
Whitewright. z tf
one in
Mr .and Mrs. Will Fleming and
daughter of Sherman spent Sunday
here with his father, J. R. Fleming.
Officers Lankford and Williams
brought in a quantity of choc, which
they found at a house occupied by
Joe Jackson, a negro, on the Badgett
farm northwest of town. Jackson
was arrested.
William came home with the state-
ment that he no longer intended to
be kind and helpful to others.
“Why do you say that?” his moth-
er asked.
“Because,” replied William, “I
saw Johnny putting a tack on the
teacher’s chair today, and just as she
was sitting down I pulled away the
chair. The teacher sat on the floor,
and when she got up she spanked me
for pulling away the chair. Then at
recess Johnny hit me for interfer-
ing with his fun.”
-------o-------
Mrs. A. M. Roberts spent Saturday
in Trenton, guest of her sister, Mrs.
George Anderson. '' i
Marvel
return
She never returns
■I
Gillett Grain Co
Do your shopping in Whitewright.
—I
It is said that many a child of sev-
en nowadays can read better than a
grown-up man of thirty years ago.
We often wondered where some of
these daily newspapers got their huge
circulations.—Punch.
Good^Corona Alabama Coal at
$10.50 per ton, off car.
Alabama Coal at $12.00, and
Henryetta Coal at $10.00 off car.
Mrs. A (on street)—“Who is that
you just bowed to?”
Mrs. B—“Oh, she’s our next-door
neighbor.”
Mrs. A—“But she didn’t
your bow.”
Mrs. B—“No !
anything.”
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J. F. LILLEY
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Overcoat Special
Just chock full of snappy style, these Overcoats have a dash and smart-
ness that will appeal to every man who wants to be well dressed, yet
have his clothes in perfect harmony with his surroundings. These’ Ov-
ercoats are worth much more than we’re going to sell them for in the
Annual Clearance Sale—
$11.95
A !
Now in Full Swing
A
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The Mighty Annual'
Clearance Sale
It’s a great Sale—great in volume and great in values!
Shrewd buyers are coming for miles around, snapping
up the Bargains we are offering. Hundreds of items
can not be catalogued. They will act wisely who will
attend this Sale every day.
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIAL
56-Inch All Wool Kasha Cloth—a full range of Fall
colors; regular $4.-25 seller; the yard........ . $2.45
SILK REMNANT SALE
Friday and Saturday—Big Special
One-Third to One-Half off on all Silk when there is less
than 4 yards in piece. Remnants run from 1J to 4 yds.
Materials are Crepe de Chine, Canton Crepe, Taffeta,
Faille, Satin, Satin-back Crepe and Missolini.
JUST TO GIVE YOU AN IDEA OF THE
WONDERFUL VALUES, WE QUOTE
Boys’ Weatherbird Shoes—Brown Calf, English last; half rubber heels;
a $4.00 value to go in the Clearance Shle at............................ $2.95
Children’s E-Z Union Suits—The genuine E-Z garment that is worth
$1.00 everywhere. Annual Clearance Sale price.............................. 79c
Men’s Shirt Special—A Close Out of Men’s Shirts, without collars ; nice,
desirable patterns, and most all sizes; values to $3.50....................$1.48
Boys’, and Girls’ Sweaters—Shaker or Rope Knit Wool Sweaters, coat
style; sizes 34 to 46; Red, Buff, Green. Clearance. Sale price...... $3.95
Silk and Linen Canton—A beautiful range of colors in Silk and Linen
Canton Crepe; regular $1.95 seller. Clearance Sale price............ $1.39
Boys’ School Shoes—Made from toughest of Leather, they will last
much longer than the ordinary shoes—yet they are neat and stylish in
appearance. Annual Clearance Sale price...................................... $2.39
Want Ad Column
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Waggoner, J. H. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 26, 1925, newspaper, November 26, 1925; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1295070/m1/12/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.