Lufkin Daily News (Lufkin, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 259, Ed. 1 Friday, September 1, 1922 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Lufkin Daily News and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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A
f
Sheriff* to Al
of Jo
KT
• >’
$
-and a good time.
it
.1
He
'I
I
Wholesale Distributors
made.”
Homer News
It has been four hundred
&
iwceful
Saturday Only
LIVE STEAM NEAR SURFACE
A SAMPLE LOT OF NEW
AUTUMN
DRESSES
Gingha
NNOUI
of
I2|c
TU
$12.48, $14 98 and
Here to give
iv
FWW1
1
4
&
....
8
2
tj
19c
I ___
1—lMl
snrriMt v—rmirn
of New Plaid j
27-lnch :
rhotwea
•y W arren and J
Jr., arrived ho
from San Ange
■
People are all busy now in
the cotton fields.
a
( ■
fU
lh
plat, of course, il
r—• The spelli
aand up’"—Lond
5,000
YARDS
nr
11
SEES ANOTHER GREAT WAR
Engllih Preacher Deduces From the
Scriptures That Armageddon
Is Yet to Be Fought.
Z '
4 -
i
I
Parker E
Just below Se
COR.
KELLOGG'S CRUMBLES
I
I
3f|
J
[II'
was caught whi,
hool to the girl ni
LUFKIN DRY GOODS CO.
—amaini MBMi.j.ai «..ofWrraoMMM— '
Ihiiihv (entering home. sniiTs the
air) — Ah, «1<> I cliu-ll a g.x>se?
Lena (from the kitchen)—Xo;
it’s the missus furling her hair.
FEW STREET-CAR FATALITIES
i-
gggSH
L
■ j'efa
A farmers’ labor union was
at the outbreak of jie organjzed here last'night with
war, which fable, h.-vc .( menl))ersj1jp of fifteen. I did
not leant the names of the or-
ganizers.
Made from Cottonseed Meal
Corn Gluten Feed, Wheat Bran
I, and other high-grade product*.
[ Uneeed OU Meal and Molasse*.
I Protein and Qane Molasses con-
tent exceeds S7%.
Made from Cottonseed Meal.
Corn Gluten Feed. Bran and
other high-grade wheat prod-
ucts, Linseed OH Meal and Mo-
lasses. Protein and Cane Mo-
lessee content exceeds <7%.
Stroud-Leach Grain Co.
America’s Greatest Milk-Making Ration
[were you sayi
aught you whisp
Id the teacher.
Sprit blushed, th
smiling, and saic
pnly telling her h
looked in your n
I
“When they filtnji story it always
gets ft new name and more heart in-
terest.”
“I know. I suppose B» n Hur will
now be featured as Her Ben.’*-
Louisville* (-ourier-JournaL
.48
DRESS GINGHAM
Wonderful aisortment of fine dreti gin
hams in many patterns special at a yard
Borings into Kilauea volcano,]
island of Hawaii. recently started
under the auspices pf tin* Hawaiian]
Volcano Hesoarch assentation, have'
remitted in the finding of live steam
registering a temperature of 110 de- j
green centigrade at depths of only
about ten feet below th^ surface of ,
the lava.
ft is planned to extend the bor-
ing operations to cover th* entire1,
volcanic area in the vicinity of Ki-,
huiea volcano. Those .places show-]
ing the greatest possibilities of.
• power development will be selected
for de?per and more extensive bor-
ings. j
EASY TO PREVENT GOITER
Better grade at
a yard
Coe Agee and family arriv-
ed home last night from Fort
Worth and other points, hav-
ing made the trip in their ear.
They visited Rev. Frank Squir-
es, an Angelina county citizen,
who, with his family, are tem-
porarily living in Fort Worth,
where he is attending a theo-
logical school. He is also the
pastor of one of the Wills
Point churches, in Van Zandt
•ounty, spending Sundays there
in filling his appointments- Mr.
and Mrs. Agee spent one night
in Wills Point, and as he
says, it so happened that their
wil
urishing
»m instea
lene ' School
Dallas, Te7?'3
■Tenfre KnSSl
wyytake charM
Association when they gath- Methodist**{j^,
:• here on September 5, 6 and cording to a J
7 for their forty-fourth annual John H- McG q
____Am nvfananrft vwzx r»F E*—
of entertainment is now Mr. Knickeik Ml
__<i v... w> zj T",.. ».
ber of Commerce and no effort pastor < ‘
will be spared to assure the Church of Wi^'
Anything in5taa.
News office, '
ive just opene
t door to Sam I
Jr*ue, fully prep
)d work, blacks
IfeJwb
I ’'y]
Ginghams!
Ginghams! |
Ginghams!
W’e sincerely advise you to $t|
yourself with ginghams this wea
these worth while savings. ManyJ
ordinary, values are offered. Cg|j
and get them.
Heavy foods in sumi
nder sluggishness and
list Use your good
I serve Kellogg’s regt
the snap that a li|
Icky appetites and fa(
For the evening meal
I be more delightful
Dogg’s Corn Flakes ’
Beans much to the
Uber! Let them eat 1
i youngest to the olde
tellogg’s Corn Flakes
i most delicious of a
wishing—they sustai
Rental worker! The]
for children!
kiiit upon Kellogg’s Cor
pud GREEN package
ktare of W. K. Kellogg
IFUkea None are gent
I think all our people are
jist^well —J. N. T.
I
I
Selling’Saturdar
at a yard
“All devout students of prophecy
agree that there must be another
war,’’ says Rev. E. L. Langston,
English preacher and historian.
“The 1914-’18 war,.’’ he states,
“changed the whole face of Europe
and the Near East and has altered
the politics of the world. That war,
if prophecy is read aright, is only
a preparation for' tremendous devel-
opments.
“The Scriptures state that there
are likely to be two Iieagues of Na-
tions, and the situation is more
thrilling because of the entente
between Russia and Germany at
Genoa.
‘The one certain fact in the fu-
ture is that the Jews are to pi ty a
very great part in the politics of the
world. Throughout the whole of
Christendom we sec Jews coming to
the front as never before—-in law,
politics, arts, science, newspaprs,
banking, diplomacy—wherever in-
tellect is demanded there the Jew'
eatjija,
* “The Jewish question, right to
the second advent of Christ, will be
at the bottom of all world unrest
and will eventually lead to the last
great war—Armageddon!"
MAY BE RIGHT, AT THAT
There’s no 1 ,
hot* .wave embodied in the
weather man’s prognostication
for tonight and tomorrow-
continued high temperature I have
being the offering. This is
September, the first fall month,
but the weather is still that
of the "Good Old Summer
Time.”
' specialty will
shoe your hors
es for $1.50. ’
work yuarAntl
fo,e job isn’t
1S*<1 with it.
£• • j •' ;'r?
Gu<H*ante€d Balanced
r Cow Ration
Feed for Dairy Coira, in addition to caN’oby^“‘e8ml^
ficient to supply energy and fat, should contain
cient protein to make blood, lean flesh and replace iss
and produce milk,
The best feeding authorities have repeatedly proven 15
to 18% protein is all a cow’s ration should contain More
than that not only coats money, but overworks the c
without increasing milk flow and wears out the animal.
Furthermore, her diet should be varied and contain cer-
tain feed elements.
INTERNATIGNAT. SPECIAL DAIRY FEED
The Largest Selling Brand of Dairy Feed In the World
I A COMPLETE BALANCED GRAIN RATION
Contains 15% protein, is a perfectly balanced ration for maxi-
mum milk production and fulfills the need of many feeders who
desire a grain feed, in conjunction with roughage, which con-
stitutes a ready balanced ration without the addition of other
concentrates or grain.
Cows do not tire of this succulent variety diet which contains
all the Cottonseed Mea! a cow can assimilate.
Try a ton or two—money back guarantee of satisfaction.
There’s an International Balanced Ration
For Every Feeding Purpose
Soli Rv [halon Eitervwhore “In Sau) Tooth Borior Baoin
RED SEAL GINGH
_ '..'Sil
Red Seal and Toilerdard’s ginghamt,
best on the market special at a yard ...
B. M. Smith Dry Goods
Actually worth as
high ?.s $35; on sale
with the opening
of the doors Saturday
Morning at—
- . . -------- ....
W > .Mllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllltlllllllllllllllfliiiiiimnt.....iii>bJ|
According to the national safety
council, street railway transporta-
tion in the largest cities of the Unit-
ed States has come to rank with the
safest forms of traffic. The council
finds that street car fatalities are of the dtter what
'• flatly decre^ngwh^ of com. the
bile, truck and bus accidents are on ■ , l j
a serious upgrade. In 1915 the monwealth, the head of the had l
council report states, the number of household regaling Mr. Agee ing,
people who lost their lives by street ’1,‘ “* 1-----J
car accidents in 35 American cities
with a population of 17,500,000, was
559; in 1916. 688’; 1917, 785;’ 1918,
787 ; 1919, 57.G, And 1990. 595. The
sudden drop in the last two- years
'■ —is credited to safety education and
development of traffic control. Auto-
motive fatalities, meanwhile, present
these totals: 1915. I.’.’ll: 1916,
1,565; 1917, 2.O57-. 1918; 2,330;
1919, 2,178; 1920. 2,670.
RW
X'\v
C\‘ \
The visitors obtains-; shines bright and the birds
considerable data in referem? make music all the day.
to the “free state’s” secession
from the whole union and
tjng up an “empire” of th i:
own :
civil war, which fable, like
Banquo’s ghost, seems will
never down. Also, they gained
first hand knowledge of the
great “county seat war,” fa- One jir. Larkin is here this'
mous in story, if not in song. mol-ning prospecting for oil. i
Any county that has never
gone through with one of these
"revolutions" does not know,
and never could know, and
never could understand „iu '
; it has‘missed. Alfrbli
the Angelina county visitors
had a great time on their out- years since the ladies began to
ing, encountered good roads wear silk stockings, but man
little of the folk-lore and some not so good, and I never saw them in use in their
won- were glad to again set foot on | entirety until the past year or
ther native soil, where the sun I two.—Mt. Pleasant Hustler.
with no
of those people who are
derfully and powerfully’
Abilene, Aug- 31.—Abilene
is preparing to-open wide a
hospitable front door to the
members of the Texas Sheriff’s of Journalhm
jer here on September 5, 6 and
convention. Ari extensive pro-'of English
gram <
being arranged by thd Cham- of Dr. Hube^^
ber of Commerce and no effort pastor of the
will be spared to assure the Church of WichH*]
visitors of a hearty welcome Knickerbocker thJ
' —J ' western and Cel 3
-------—. sities and workjl
relief from the’eas*ern neW8papt[j|
Th“3|
(PassionatJjJ
! a secret to wi
your ear-wheJ
Pennsylvania W
“Sim|n»* goiter the easi<-M of fill
<lise»suR Io pu’voii!.” wrote Hooter
Marine, the great specialist 1n this
(liseast*. wme time a::*. Iodine is
known to be nete^'arv Io the normal
function of Hie thyroid gland, (loi-
ter is an expression of deii* i»*n< v of
iodine m the thyroid, and the elatet-
rftte experiments made nten^ly by
Dr O. P. Kimball on the school
children of Akron. O.. furnish con-
clusive evidence that administering
a minute quantity of iodine every
day nets as a preventative in such
regioifs where goiter prewails.
BEN HUR AND HER BEN (
—— . /
■......".Vu.7,.....................WtOwmmimK
........"""j*
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Watford, G. E. & Binion, W. C. Lufkin Daily News (Lufkin, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 259, Ed. 1 Friday, September 1, 1922, newspaper, September 1, 1922; Lufkin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1363590/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .