The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1929 Page: 2 of 8
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Leading the Field in Vallies I
$235°
Two Pant Suits . . . 28.50
Hats $495
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TOP COATS
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IN AUTUMN HUES
and
$40 Style, Fabric and
Workmanship, at
Pool’s
Noe-Rinkel
Cravats
For the man who
requires style plus
economy.
OF BEST LONG-WEAR
FABRICS
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195°
$2150
$1^50$
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% OU ’ LL not only be pleased with the
M perfect style, all-wool fabrics, and good
workmanship in these suits. You’ll be
delighted with the variety of smart, cleverly de-
signed patterns presented for your selection.
The new shipment of these popular suits which
we telegraphed for came in by express yesterday.
. . . - Come in now and see the newest.
________V I
More and more men are
turning to these hats •—
men who demand style and
yet are sensible enough to
insist on paying only a
reasonable price. Nothing
has been spared to make
these hats up-to-the-min-
ute in styles—neither do
they lack in quality.
$2350
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Colorful bits of Autumn
appear in these cleverly de-
signed , neckties.
They’ve an elastic wool
lining throughout that
adds to their service and
appearance.
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Nowhere
of the many
scribed below,
can you find better values than those listed below. They represent just a few
reasons why this is a “Val-U-Plus” store.^ After you’ve seen the garments de-
we know you’ll agree we live up to our name of giving “values plus.”
Solid Comfort
A •
They’re Real
Values Plus” at
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35c
25c
COTTON
LISLE
5Oc
75c
-GUARANTEED
SILK AND
RAYON
PURE
SILK
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They’re knit for wear from the tip of their
trippie knit toe to the last thread of the upper.
44
1 OU’LL not only enjoy the solid comfort of
these perfect fitting POOLKNIT sox—
you’ll like, too, that feeling of satis-
faction that comes from knowing you have on
sox that will last a long, long time.
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SOCKS |
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CLEANERS
DYERS
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W. E. Smith & Company
WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
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You’re Right
This is the time of the year whe
the large cookie companies are hunt-
ing winter quarters for their anima-,
crackers.
WASTAGE OF LIFE
That one-fourth million children
under 15 years of age die in the
United States every year seems in-
credible yet that is the figure given
by the statistical department of an
insurance company. In the school
age between 5 and 15 years no less
hardihood in the last two or three
generations? The breed is evidently
growing softer.—Denver Post.
deaths to births appears to be stead-
ily rising in the face of the vast
strides we have made in housing,
sanitation, medical science, nan mg,
hospitalization and hygiene. Under
pioneer conditions when conditions
were a great, deal ruder and cruder
the mortality rate was not so,high in
than 45,000 are sacrificed yearly,
one-fifth of which are by avoidable
accidents. Our loss in school chil-
dren almost equals our loss in ac-
tion in the World War. Our infant
mortality is so staggering that Pres-
ident Hoover has issued a call for a
conference at the White House to
discuss the problem. The ratio of proportion to births.
parents were rugged people and pro-
duced strong children. Although liv-
ing conditions were often primitive
they somehow seemed to bring their
offspring through with little loss
from accidents and disease. Conges-
tion in large cities may account for
ow, ... a part, but is it not true that there
Our pioneer'has been great decline in physical
WEAK SPELLS
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FALL WEEPS AS
JURY SAYS ‘GUILTY’
Pitiful Cases
The French executioner who had
to brush up on his necking.
American Tragedies
The college boy who didn’t know
what university he graduated from.
He forgot to look at his diploma.
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*T was so weak,” says Mrs.
Josephine Cockcroft, of Bal-
dock, S. C., "that I was not able
to do anything.
"At certain times,
I suffered dreadful-
ly with pains in my
back and sides. My
head would hurt —
felt like it would
split open. Spells
of weakness would
last for weeks.
"I read of Cardui.
I sent for a bottle
and began taking it.
My case was stub-
born, and at times I almost
lost hope, but I could see a
little improvement. At last I
began to feel much better.
Then I improved rapidly. For
the last year I have been in
better health than I ever
have been before.
"I give the credit to Cardui,
for after I had given
it a thorough
trial, I got
well.”
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STATEMENT
Of the ownership, management,
etc, required by the Act of Congress
of August 24, 1912, of the White-
wright Sun published weekly at
Whitewright, Grayson Co., 1' exas,
for October 1, 1929.
Before me, a notary public in and
for the State and county aforesaid,
personally appeared J. H. Waggoner,
who, having duly sworn according to
law, deposes and says that he is ed-
itor and owner of the Whitewright
Sun; that the name and address of
the publisher, editor and business
manager is J. H. Waggoner, White-
wright, Texas. That the bondholders,
mortgagees, and other security hold-
ers owning or holding 1 per cent or
more of total amount of bonds, mort-
gages, or other securities are: (If
there are none state) None.
J. H. WAGGONER, Owner.
- Sworn to and subscribed before
me this 25th day of October, 1929.
F. E. Douglas, notary public.
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J^HELPS
WOMEN
TO HEALTH
Take TheJUrd’a BLACK-DRAUGHT |
For CotMiipatMM, Indigedion, BSioiuneaa. J
WASHINGTON. — Two defiant
white-haired men—Albert B. Fall
and Edward L. Doheny — whose
youthful friendship of prospecting
days in the West persisted after one
had become a cabinet officer and the
other a millionaire oil -operator,
heard a $100,000 transaction be-
tween them in 1921 branded bribery
today by a federal jury.
Fall was judged guilty of accept-
ing that sum as Secretary of the In-
terior in return for granting the Elk
Hills oil lease to a Doheny company.
It was the first conviction for felony
by a cabinet officer in history, and
likewise the first in any of the crim-
inal cases growing out of the oil
scandals of the Harding Adiministra-
toin.
Owen J. Roberts, special Govern-
ment counsel, announced that efforts
would be made to try Doheny for-
giving a bribe next January.
Mercy Recommended.
A portentious stillness settled over
the jammed courtroom as tire jury
filed in. This was soon broken by
each of the eight men and four wom-
en jurors rising to say Fall had been
adjudged a dishonest man, but to
recommend that he be extended mer-
cy by the court. Throughout the trial
and previously he has been ill.
The 68-year-old invalid from New
Mexico, whom the Supreme Court
denounced as a “faithless public of-
ficer” because of the oil transactions,
slumped weakly in his tall chair, and,
with head bowed, wept. If the ver-
dict stands, he is liable to a fine up
to $300,000 and to imprisonment up
to three years. He was comforted
immediately by the woman he mar-
ried in 1883. Vigorously brushing
those between them aside, Mrs. Fall
threw her arms around him and wept
while he embraced her silently.
Tears also rolled down the cheeks
of Doheny, now 73. The California
oil man clapped his hands to his ears
while Justice William Hitz reviewed
to the jury the facts of Fall’s current
illness, which had been kept from
them while locked up during the
trial. After the judge had left the
bench, Doheny shook a clenched fist
in that direction and cried:
“It’s that damn court.”
The jury, which first had voted
seven to three for acquittal, with two
women not voting, and took seven
ballots in all, left the turbulent room
in a group.
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THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
Thursday, October 31, 1929
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The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1929, newspaper, October 31, 1929; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315470/m1/2/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.