The Lufkin News (Lufkin, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, July 22, 1921 Page: 6 of 6
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SPE
And the Rest
*15
*12
1-41,
and
tto
S'®
L
,01
_
BOND
they have been sold this
the courthouse
pre-
pre-
j
•>
A man may labor
a.M
aster?
th
A
D)
V (
\ •
‘h B .’ ,
3 r
-•1
tr-
ied
:v
SA
ewr
i
Apparel
Comfort
I
**
, ,.7j
■ »' zS
not, and cannot
----In my op in
I very
Singleton E/&vcs
“THE GOOD CLOTHIERS”
-fl
-5
F’
R-.
’A T
B. - ;
Is* any time
unfavorable
—I more
l w
sovernaenL—Hon. W«
Baehr.
I * t •.
Subscribe for the fl
but we
received for
mer Suits
* ...
to-
j
Mu •
'»h . \
’ estimated at from 30
:to 100 per cent, P
e even published estimat- - •
crop in the ablest
** ■
’ J
Mexico,
ive of the H
----with the altimate i
iut ether*, he is a 1
he works for hi
rn graving -ith no thought f«
▼«!» iahneaa to the vei? ■
10-hTr.r engine; Of *®od 1
---j to install
Lufkin Grist Mill.
18-Owl!
s must havi
Dr. B. Ka
EXPERT OPTO “ .
F«OM DALLAS
•mt *’*TOrday. AJao
B!
■er it would be at all
[to market a tomato
jry considerable size from L
■ this year. If was point- the <
|t that the depleted buy- j--~
|ower of the consuming show
L together with increased .
jortation charges, would -h iv. 91
:or exceedingly low pric-
-to^Then us the season ad-
[vwed jt was seen that there
would be a heavy production
of tomatoes from almost every jt was jq-j
the/ountry: The erease of '17 per' cent in dis.i
]W0toe production in the trihutinn in 1921 over 1920. |
a beginning of!
With the
More than l,m|
ch*°d!!‘* were “*
“|Bont«r^ Monday*
Don’t it beat the band?
good °Wn »“t«riai
cool Clothe*. g *•-- —
p. Blottin, optician
watch repairing and r
at just prices. Work
teed, send your wot!
raail. Lufkin Jeweler.
for SALE—Good r*“--
reason tor retting. des,ire
motor.
So why not dress to ward off Old Sol’s attack?
They’re great Suits—these Palm Beaches—
for every occasion.
I
El
i
>t doing the impossible.
whose criticism is sup- considerable portion
to have any weight Crop at any price at all.
always criticise it in the fact js> the crop has been
d
f -
“* •’■■d after Ooe bot-
*** M Ordui I wm
adds Mrs.
Cmsewlitte. "Sx bo<-
MaefCaHM and ... I
I'-
Nt
fc
r
SR
*
£
11274 against Ml tor the same
period last year. Jt was under
gy’wfi.apr these conditions of demand and
seem* to be some peo- supply that the 1921 tomato I
’h* would question the‘grep has been marketed.
a ef the Texas Tomato I to those familiar with all!
ire* Exchange because the conditions ft appears noth-
1 individuals criticise it 'ing short of marvelous that it I
t doing the impossible. was possible to market any !
whose criticism is sup- considerable portion of the i|
The!
, r mov-
|>f aft the facts that affected at a good price under thejl
position,and those who re-j most adverse conditions; which 11
^criticisms should do so would seem to be of much I
’giving due consideration greater importance and s:gnif-'|
* merits of the criticisms, jeance than whether each !
these reasons it would grower got cash for his toma-J
bly be well to give a tOes or had to wait until col- I
Analysis of the conditions lections could be made. I
<?-fch..the °P'i A careful.study of the daily |
marketing reports, published I
in Jacksonville by the U. S. I
I--
And Everything Else in
for True Summer
‘•n. July 29,
Eat man of <
"as prepared
‘inerting the >-■-
— ■‘a bill at the
it a te’onv t.j
se m Texas.
h„.. „• p ,,m BeaTh’^iu
fv-; Singleton'& Eave'
S“b«^be7^ti1e'^I.
commissioner
commissioner
commissioner
came on to be heard ' PurPos<
•‘"J petition of F N. ‘ *»■<• bonds and
•■ywtm a God-send to
I believe I would
had it not been
WCardui." Cardui has
found beneficial In
ajRt thousands of other
«>t womanly trou-
M r* feel the need
<g good,
strengthen-
y loaic. Why not try <
C**!? ft may be jus,
"■*» you need.
r AH
Druggist,
NOTICE OF road
. MUyTIOM ,ros,dB and” the”fmher'--------
TeSs, to~de-’ ofh‘1,’trict c?pie8 °f thia order
B*>d county shall issue 1 c^nt^ having the same P^ees in the r-----
‘ sf“» r*ten be at the eour.
navment thereof >n obedience to an. of oav^Vn'- ”?litr oP‘‘ons, three weeks prior to
tbe Com.iM1”^ , ---- ' '
>»Tas " m s>
u-ntaiss wc?**.-. -■ - cts-t!
i I
F f
Ki
-h.iaid
profitnaX.e! *rX °f time’ 1
trolling and assuming it” SPeaking’ when
- this connection'shake i " ™10n °f
sa » ; eXManfe'e functioned ‘shall be
admirably this vear ,
June 20th.
rains
had
very ill; toe>
going to tically
so weak 1 make
advised their j
hg .tions, and >ft 'th^
^■Jnere wa- a go<,d
■■ mand for
the (
able to
I 3o per cent in the
' ' cheei< Ij Wa< then f"at th
jcbange said "We will r
I gradhePthOmat0eS' bUt We wiI1
grade them carefully and
| su^ the risk of safe
[ into the markets.” <
will tell whether the
m. a wise °ne, since full
w—Took ™
1- received for tomatoes X
Ped since that time will rep£
"’oney that could not have
-j without assuming the
- establishes for once
- —>nce of Texas to- |
the cash ,
-i accua-
tem of intelligent merchandis-
ing of the whole crop.
W. B. FARRAR, .
Marketing Agent, St. Louis
Southwestern Ry. Lines, ,ocon’
Tyler, Texas. from tftil. United Ste
---!W^Pa>to senfi
New Straw Hats for $2.50. nortkgm division fl
Singleton & Eaves. tional Railways of M
i'e should maKe the same * m*^SSLilBproveMi
of a book that the bee does j ^cording to repe^
! movement UiC 'pieaa oe iul a 1'iower, says C. C. Colton:
flfiagainst 288 for ,ea. “‘raer-' f- b. prices;she steals sweets from it, bafc^M —
week in an0 the Jobbin« P-rices in —3B
tor the week ending fparket?* and it is to the cash
paid,
and pack the prod;:;:-
tidy pe./yle wh-.
’id.- rick t,
tl.ry e ..-:y \\
th<r
tin
Brown Domestic, yard wide
Bleached Domestic, yard wide
Co'jred and Figured Voiles, yard wide
Colored Organdies, yard wide- ~ • Jpjj|r
' ■ <).! Prints
Shir’.ng Prints ................. y ".
t otton Checks
We offer lines of the better grades of goodJ
vi.) ;ind -her bargains as great *« the abov ™
US llOW VOU. ,s,! C-JuSt LA.*':
The -y. Star
Frank’s Old Stand, Lufkin, Ta.^
__
u
F* *
ing.
To those who would c
s»y. let us look ,
lf‘Tn'"u'd «"«bUn„c.
jOnncuk f- ••
change from
r
Represen-
ts County!)
1 a petition re-1
^’veritor to suf,.'
'De<‘a‘ session jl
,nv appear |
. Dn,<p’st’ ±
Baafll
The , ; :-
^e tribution in
wal vari l This is only
"0 per What can be done. With the)
home East Texas crop in the hands)
—_t- of the smallest number of the
------1 men possible, who will
intelligenty control distribution
more and more, there is no le-
gitimate reason why Texas
matoes cannot be sold in 250j
markets in the United States
and Canada just as easily as
---- aaaaj V’CHr
“aS°"’ and :n 103 markets.
The risk or hazard incident!
to the handling of perishable
farm crops trom loading point!
into the primary markets is the ‘
There
mand fm ;omatoes and .
««hange had just been
. > advance the price
preceding
— ,.ie ex-
not cease !]ions
-11 don’t
e delivery Plnhabita^temh? "th j“d 8401 ** th« very^
Only time hills, praying for the m 5°°**I°f * He "*
‘ step was to fall Upon m®on4aj“ >Red in th. very fowl
nil settle- them from the imner”^ 8hi?Itf o£ worit but if folS
made yet, a8tpry n._.. ,rapeDdin« dm- worjg to the best of hi
•nd labors not aloM
SirVfX':s!8’Rev,srt s,at-;
M~admiel No ’• Of bonds’rer.
lyfr^,' It®' eonweutive-' ’
«uai of woo lnclus,ve' for the
■urn of ??/—
Uu district any time after To yea";
S"5 d*'r' £‘h ^ert .t the5”:
Ausri^T.8'’" Of ^l0®° I Yancy
rSk in Ji T as‘ OT Ci‘y of New! No
g.«». 'xfxsiT, i -
R, «nnum. payable r----- '
■••o district Nn 4 ’j
b***" July sth i»i8 r<’*ie. 01
«"“gn>twe>y from t to' ,
rieeVnr the sum of S5OO J-k u'
rating the sum of S75 ono „ '
option of the i Jtr’c- a^' .P’>'able, r‘
s 'iEt'
jemiar.roany ^m." Tox^''
ordered'by '.lj!ere^’r‘’ conridered
T b* Xtv?.! -H
not less than th>rrv . <■.
AU. of this order it wi.., h'T
WJe*1»r on rot
gjrina County. Texas
” tee Comm.«si
of ore million
f-c.
*••) doiisrs, for th!
‘' J- A
Dress to Fit
■ ■ w-
the Hot Weather :
a 2,500 car
■to belt.
1 May 28th, juat on the eve
|be shipping season, the
Mrnment report showed that
w had been 5,475 cars of
Woes on the United States
Itets, against only 3,154 to
?ame date last r-y ::::,
‘ the movement for the one
wwk ending May 28th was
695 cars against 199 r
the corresponding week last
" , ,For next week, end-
- jmb-' ln». J“”e 4th, the
*^£j*«* 6«9 car- ‘
,.Fdr the v
Bagadnst 595 the same
»« year, and for the
idfng June 18th it was
!. Was
I Very
I Weak
I irxfler to*birth °f my
baby I had a back-set,”
writes Mrs. Mattie Cross-
white, of Glade Spring,
Va. “J was
thought I was
die. I was
couldn’t raise my head to
fla drink of water. J
l0°k / . . medicine, yet I
didn’t get »ny better. J
wns constipated and very .
weak, getting worse and ^fl
worse. I sen I for Card..,." B9
TAKE H
CMDUI
"■•h th.
hund-,.,; f,,
hundred if) |3
purpose <-f ;he
eonstreet^ °f this directly
, is
thereof, through voter., desiring to T* al! Pr0Pertj
< urhatko. Citlrxr. * * , support ine pro DO- I
- ---------- or not snion to j.r, f. -l i> V
3SJV3: -KB?" ......- H,.bS;on ihi8
purpose of paying the
,a and to pro-
f-
maturity; and
-io-r, Ji* c”",‘ ’ "‘"l ,a”l ten nr
signed by two hundred and words:
" ■ ' ‘ vot- '
ap- and the .^.r,
amount of bonds ment thereof ”
-- ------- The . -
n_f °,f ^.ejection
i w. ” ‘vjjvws:
Courthouse
presiding
No. L At Homer with
presiding officer.
•*o. 3. At Burke ur’*‘
|r°v’ “J Pte’^'nx officer.’
| No. 4. At Clawson w.f ‘ ‘
“r. as presiding officer. '
No. a. ft ' -
presiding officer.' -----
presiding officer'.
A‘ Piatt v:_. r
presiding officer.
with J. F. Young,
’ auare C happel with
presiding officer.
> with L. S. I of
Young-
with Charley I
“ Presiding officer j
pre.,dmagnXerW',h " °f the
At Ztoxaila with R f
** presiding nff](P1
D Su’ph'n
•• pre,,,|;;
I purchase and cun st ruction of district1 statute, k .
roads and the further construct^?t Nori?. h"e,“bove, referred to. «
^d!xd? -C^oror. $ J
turnpikes, or m a.d thereof throng ’ ti
:JFl,rtlss^dd'for“^reKaring {u2-500 ,k'e °fr‘“rt<XtionWaS? m’Sdition |
1921 m.rrh.il *£ f the PurPnse of the thereto, there shall be nosriJl ’ *
o'de. L.i?“5/.n/ ""’truftion of district copies of this order at thr^ publto
1 county, havmg the same P<«ces in the county, o,“ “ Xh
.f*tes th* courthouse door, for
as theTond-There^orel “The KuntyTudg” iXtT«
now outstanding against a^to cause'sa.d noriees to be
fu rthe'r orter™^
sweets she herself improves and
risk concocts into honey, ■ "■gg||
be rr»h TTl Saturday-.
89c, at Hash & Karry.
.--—----_ f Thei ----
”JIi^ions Xow Laving Will siderabte innage S
----- was the subject dfs- PoHcfc and in tto;
- ...d court house yea- yesterday afternoonv
r; lr "T------- ' eri!y>
,re trer' ...>; . ,‘.'k: “re makin? indelible foot-prints J went to PoBok tliisj
ac-r :e. .rf n. c tr on tne saflds of time, chrono- response to a teleji
",nT8i“Ily w.;o™ — <u th. j:
It wa< in just this corne.-tirn *-^Di get a ',ision of the final tth*t place, asking tha
that the exchange functioned Ish^V” maUer WheH time !snd sabaiit a bid f«
admirably this vear Ahn,it r ki be “° more’ It s true, the repairs to, his sto0
>vhen continued "e St^'3 ^bat n° man knpweth1 which had been du
throughout the territory i h°U/ C°meth when we The high Wind.
,? ^.‘^oryjare supposed to park all our! ----J
earthly belongings, and pre-,
torn f I ’ j"'.'! ■
A good citizen is j
is willing to make sea
fice of hfe time, meato^
I '
li I
^4 11??
If ever a man should dress to fit the weather,
it is on hot days. Common sense tells us
that bodily comfort goes a long way toward
mental comfort.
td this year, and then cite
ir of the accomplishments.
P*S industrial condi- Bureau of Markets during the
^throughout the United shipping season, shows that the |
I? it was considered very number of markets in the;
Jtful, early in the spring, United States and Canada to
P°s- \vhich Texas tomatoes were.I
crop originally billed in 1921 shows I
an increase of 18 per cent over I
.-.j corresponding number in I
1920. Original billings in 1920)1
77 different markets *1
reached, while in 1921 they)|
■ 1 marke’s reached byil
f. o. b. sales. The total num-
ber of markets reachedthrough !
original billing and diversions
in 1920 was 88, while in 1921
This shows an in-j
■ sent i—
■ been had i '
risk; and it cct
fl the independe:
flmato growers from tl.
■ ‘ u-ers who have been
I ing. 1 m'jre Promis-
| To those who would criticise
its t;:' “•
,•*>1.. rathe, xh!u«71 *"thJ'
'ter
i Joi
njay trA'VJV""» vwuvwiW m TVQIIKJHp JSBueu
fhereof in the*courtbS^t1"* of'a^?n’i ""’"tenance and operation I*-0®”- " 'U1
Lufkin. Tex.«, ,u members “f the' “1 P-’ed -th real of T2I«S
„„ «S: K
Z oth„ pu: „ ■“
gWKi 87^,2 S W ISMJTjyH “ ’"T7, 5
terainmg 5hI<’fo)t|owi^r^opOs[tton:!(jeirheth’a“i aler'ion sh®>l be held un.l Dr T- A- Taylor has pur-! B
"aI?rb:otiXbr’tho’ Chance>- h°m^ "owiB
^one minion th* *ite ™ whicljC
W) “" Ae "reo.'*yti’-|^Ure °f the s^ tXLegi, jw.ll be erected Lufkin’s mod-!®
purchase and con.,traction of dhtrkt reteTof"-h ’re ‘e,ra"y [ 6rn h°tei’ and wi|l move -ame'H
— the street foiR
It appearing to the c’niirf -Jv those opposed shaJi have writ of fhp lot i at I
ere .k ' p opert-v ^paving vot- ’Against th. ? .i. ’ ome "111 Occupy the
SpringteUnthk and " fur,her aP' and‘ rte levying <7*^1. °f b<,nds '“le of 'he -ante lot M
to be ' issnwi * amount of bonds ment thereof” X Jn pay" which fronts 7S fo t > '
......B
is!£&BLr“ ”r
Lotton Concentrating Point
Dallas. Te^Tjujy 20.-C.
)O Moser, Clarence Ousley and
enrv representing the
itee'"nf' r"' BU,’eau Com-riit-i
| tee of twenty-one, were ini
iHouston Monday and U
>ly 18 and 19. for th
of IM
Men's ^tlk Pongee Shirta,
Men’s Percale Shirts, coR*r attadbei
Boys’ Percale Shirta, collar attached
Men’s Heavy Work PtoitoJL-............._J|s^ jjjfl
Roys Blue Work flfrta j
Men’s Good Grade Work Shirts
AG:: s Black English Walker Dvawg Shoes 1S
' V
i.
■7 j ,
!
Cl.
‘3 W
d
I b '■ I
I; - .^:u ?
Rr - t
J '
of the’
of tbJ
county judge;
pre- ’
follows:
?“mbered consecutive- |
*•■>00 each,'Aggregating th* OT,,cer-
paJable^eJ. * 6- At A1I*n Gin
Het >110 faVWaa <>.vt,®n Of isette as presiding ef
rate:ken. as ,
I 8. At Pollok
At Wallare Chapi
1 oc Ji__ 1J
>0 At /unrin^n
as presiding officer.
>1 At Ora with Tom
as presiding officer
Moorhead
, No.
annually^ Foster
_2J‘">b<“red Hawlmj „
No. 15. A;
aggre- with Gile*
at 1.... r.
X >'
buB..?,
supposed to park all
made quality of the toma-l
very, questionable. prac-;nar7“7 uc‘°ngln^-
y all buyers refused to'n ^at ’°ng J'',urneyl
» vr . X.‘s 17°“ the c“ld' «•* «m»l
rf ‘.nd’: ’ ?«>ve may
na‘- rest beneath the shade nf th.. I ---------------
territory. I trees, but if the RihU 1 veni«nce to advanc^
-o™t- Oe-U«dtag. e'X Bjb,' ’ “
; Point were we can take the ’ **tehfui-*
,b°“‘“ •«' -re h„d. *1 g’ "£* “ f “
arrange our private affairs ac-’oMo
icordmgly. Granting that mil-j A man m.v l.iu«
I "3 now living will never diejhia c™08en
■you imagine it will be alkm.*,, * .u d
lf~»d ^Ud. ,hM *> “»’"“M
shall be. re-
with D. A.
officer.
B- G. Galdwin 21-3wl
with W. M Bur-j
tfficer.
with Andy Sul-
At Uy’ w'ito'U F. Havard
inr a* m ir __
« Wrih Jim Mod- u 8e;- C
officer. Henry Coit,
with^R. w GiUi. (Texas Farm
jtee of twenty-one,
1,”u<ivSit«n Mrnday and Tuesd«y.|
/uly 18and 19. for the purpose!
i:
the 'SHOUS port cjties of |
(central °re 'Ocat!n^ '*>* con-l
G J3trn P0J,nf the cotton!
t,.n , arm Bureau Cot-H
Mark , ’ttJerS Operative
-,arl‘f‘ting Association. !|
W-nts Bd? ffob^7ed I
CXtoft RzvaU J* °. 4 OllOk to
”nd8 5^id,‘n ,’J>r",din« obiter.
Z^i-lP"1.1.° l 9 At Wall.,
a«
No
No.
-Voj2. At R«k% Hi„
13.
as
.4
Singleton & Eaves.
M e should make the
„.w use c
biggest factor in the spread be-,’of a flower,
tween farmers’ f. o. 1
the jobbing prices in the does not in jure IL and
• A V V ,
who assumes this i
. ’.j mast be’f
The farmers who grow'
are the)
van reduce,
minimum, and Never Die” i
■ tor ugh,cussed at the
v-cariza- terday afternoon.
■ ife . M
I_____________________________
kQ1
of your inc
CITIZB
I
I ’ ,7^^
— ite
lUfK
D
H
I
R«lli
[I ...........
Mrs. M. K
Bias been visi
and friends i,
arrived home
Mr h7b7
tendent of th
his many gdmi
a is ■ ■
16 years’pr
Tal.pHc
DN
EXPEI
■
Office a;
day.Frito
Do notn
. service at.
— ......
~----------H -
When Yoi
Netting 1
Jan
Carry ouh!
money. Ea,
r—_-
Wten You
Mimi Yi
WHt Mm
Th:
^.’Wi
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i
I v JSsfl
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Watford, G. E. & Binion, W. C. The Lufkin News (Lufkin, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, July 22, 1921, newspaper, July 22, 1921; Lufkin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1363323/m1/6/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .