The Gilmer Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 153, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 25, 1922 Page: 1 of 6
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WILDCAT CHASEDOG THIEVES
IIRIMnMMIIHIUHWH
AT THE CHURCHES BY ENFORCEMENT
PROSEOUTED
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CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
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A MIGHTY
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SHOE
SALE
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25
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Thankful—Grace Glezen.
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friends ofered us a mt and we the Cradle Roll Department
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3008*,
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The Interests of
This Community
Saturday,
November
Elwin Quinn in charge.
Song No. 217.
Song No. 218. —
. Opening prayer.
land than the Federal enforce-
ment officers.
Wouldn’t-be- -surprised if the
activity of the enforcement of-
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Ne-
rowTT
Following is the program for
the Junior Missionary Society
to be held at the Methodist
church Sunday afterncon at 2
o'clock:
Leader—Ethelyn Berry.
Song.
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MISSIONARY SOCIETY
PROGRAM FOR SUNPAY
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EPWORTH LEAGUE
NOVEMBER 26, 1822
THANKSGIVING
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Special lot ladies Pumps,
IT PAYS TO
ADVERTISE
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Betty Com
98c
per pair
J. E. MOUGHON COMPANY
THE BUSY CORNER"
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“wild-cat’’ still. -termined yet what steps
Upshur county is an ideal be taken to punish
hunting ground for thia kind will be a plenty,
of game, and a “stilt” better
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Opening
—Leata Moughon.
Minutes and roll call.
Piano solo—Rosemary Mings.
Reading—John Robertson.
Bible Stcries—Ruth Hogg.
Piano Solo—Marie Childress.
Bible Story—John A. Mathis,
Jr.
Song—Crystal Oliver. ,L.
Closing song.
Closing ode.
SATURDAY
LESTER CUNEO
IN
“Silver Spurs’*
are our interests, and all
that a thoroughly modern,
well organized hank can-do
to serve or assist its custom-
ers is the constant endeave r
of this institution.
/
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.One arrest has alre:dy been will be the next.
chronicled earlier in the.week,, There is a concerted effort
but they made a blind draw being mede to catch the thieves, B
Friday, failing to jump a single and while it has not been de-
Also Hal Roach >
“One Te
11 A. M. TO 11 P. M,
Just for aa greesble ch
thematmamertesuma
"LADIESMUST LIVE
We have just received a car of the
EXTH SUH STAR RED CEDAR SHINGLES
in both the light and heavy grades
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---- The Primary Department of
The Mirror man wanted to go the Baptist church wants to
to Marshall Sunday to attend give a Thanksgiving offering
the annual Methodist Confer- of fifty pairs of stockings, any
ence, and advertised the fact in size, to Buckner’s Orphans
Friday’s paper. It had been Home. We woula be glad if the
out only long enough for the mother of each child in the d-
carriers to get around before partment who has not already
we were extended the much contributed to this of ering
• ..i. would send one pair of etock-
Which fact not only illustr- ings to Sunday School by her
ates the fact that advertising chid tomorrow, or else tele-
pays, but also shows that the phone the superintendent or
milk if human kindness in Gil- one of the teachers in regard
mer has not soured. It is still to the matter. We hope to pack
sweet. the box Tuesday. We would
Several kind and generous be glad to have the mothers of
y.
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GILMER, UPSHUR COUNTY, TEXAS, SATURDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 25, 1922.
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Get ’Em Now
Au
hing from Cellar to roof
find within the reach of a great parcel post,
many of our citizens recently, consider th
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YOU HAVE TO =
— CRATE AND SOLDER g
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se A+ 2
d,
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will]
them, it
n
A colorful melodrama of Calilernisin-ita '
-----thrill dajs.
ART ACORD b the ie Chepte ef
In the “Days fo Buffalo Bill”
ten
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why) 0V
2e, 7 •
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1 tuna war
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Theatm ill
GEORGE T
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By GRO. TUCKER.
Stai
WALTON’S
BIGCLEARANCE
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vers.
Looking Unto Jesus — Elwin
Quinn.
“Thanksgiving," by Edgar
A. Guest and Mary Lomenack.
Violin Solo—Ruth Smith.
League benediction.
There being no preaching ser-
vices the Epworth League will
ful chases, but they are more break it up if they have to rre-=
familiar with the lay of the sort to drastic measures. I #
small sizes, values
to $5.00
SUNDAY SERVICES
ENamn
Women’s Shoes,-worth
to $5.00, small sizes, on
on sale here
$1.95
1.4 per pair ■
FRST NATIONAL BANK
The Oldest and Strengen Bank in Upshur Ceual
Foilowing is the program for
the Junior B. Y. P. U. Society
to be held at the Baptist church
Sunday afternoon at 6 o’clock:
Subject—One of our Great
Heroes—Dr. Tichenor.
Introduction—Francis Buie.
Birth and early years—Mar-
guerite Couch.
His conversion and first ser-
mon—Ruth Connell.
Missionary, preacher and
teacher—Dorathy Shepperd.
Home Mission See—Loraine
Crouch.
Mountain schools and stud-
ent?—Sidney Martin.
Sunday School literature—
Cleves Patterson.
Last Days—Grayson Ray.
*' s
_
n bras
Aauad.
auditorium of the church be-
ginning at 6:45. Everybody in-
vited.
Tars a quart there are ” food cept a shipment. For instance,
let 7f estmore Ist to the the express shipments of syrup
trade, whp had rather do with- from East Texas ought to be a
out than pay more than eight hig source of revenue to the ex-
3-
They will be prosecuted, :
hiding place for the “wild-cats.” thrashed, published and humil-1
its mountains and timber- iated in every possible way. 1
covered ravines, flanked by j A purse is to raised offering '
dense woods, that obscures the a liberal reward for any infor-
smoke, offers many favorable mation that will lead to the con-
lairs for the “wild-cat," and it viction of one of these thieves. =
is pretty hard to chase them w ‘It is getting so that if a man “
MONDAY aHa TUESDAY
--------
S6n-rmhemsmmgeesa
Gilmer
or nine. press companies, and there is
ut looks, like a conspiracy to no better way tohandle it than
break up an oldrestablished cus- in gallon buckets by the ball. |
tom of having an “eggnog" on But they demanded that it be
Christmas coming in here just crated. Now they demand that
at this season of the year, when it be cated and that you getr
the November run was to be tinner to solder the- cans,
used for that purpose. Thousands of people would shlp
It’s going to take a long a few eans to relatives living]
time for Mr. Volstead to ever out of the-syrup making di-
be forgiven for his activity in trictif the express company
! ... didn’t make it so inconvenient.
= And, because the prophesy has
= come to pass, we can facaike fatwa
= with gladness and optimism, and with
# full faith in the resources of our ria tic as
# in the "integrity and stamina of cur
# citizenship, and the ultimate auicessand
prosperily of our uainve lend.
Scripture Reading, Psalm 98 sought after invitation.
amenbfw
Sunday School at 9:45 a. m.
Communion service at 11
• m.
Choir practice every Wednes-
lay night. '
Everybody cordially invited
o attend all the sen ices.
JUNIOR B. Y. P. U.
SOCIETY PROGRAM
FARMERS & MERCHANTS
NATIONAL BANK I
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their lairs. * lets his dog loose for an hour S
Sheriff Bryce and Deputy some one carries him off, and #
Hogg and Constable Davis have the owners have reached a #
had some interesting and fruit- stage where they are going to!®
Better
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For "They have beat their swords in-
to plowshares" and the plowshares
have turned the fertile fields and val-
leys of America into garden spots of a
abundance against a hungy werld'a
needs.
.04
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FIFTY PAIR STOCKINGS
FOR ORPHANS HOME ’
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Crystal
of the population is mentally reciprocate the favor at oto shipments and .there was no
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hold its services in the main
On account of Rev. Allen
Tooke being awaay at Confer-
ence, and the Baptist church
without a pastor, there will be
no preaching in Gilmer tomor-
row. Gasoline is down to 21
cents, however, and most every-
body has a “flivver." so thas
being no services there will be
many trips to adjacent towns.
They Have Beat the
Swords Into Plowshares
of course accepted the very help us in this offering also,
first, but we thank all the oft- Mrs. M. M. Shepperd, Supt.
er?, most heartily, and will bear • - . -
in kind fememberancethe Pheiraihoads and expreas
A syndicate writer says that fers, hoping for an opportunity, compeny were generous with
only a relatively small per cent to show our deep gratitude, and the Buekner. Orphan Home
a hie Rascals i
ly De
MDMISSION If and I
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Male Quartette—Joe Quinn.
Weld on Whee’er, Raymond Mat-
tox and C. H. Hall.
Scripture Lesson, 67th Psalm i preventing people from having - ,,
—Loraine Powers. their mornin’s momin, i By the time you crate a can nd
We Should Prove We Are Wonder what relation “Force” then take it » tinner and
_ I, to the en-"force"ment busi- have 1 soldered, you have had
Thanks-Linjeg-Howard Bea- ness? We see dozens of -dead to go bW. trouble thanhe
Soldiers» of that brand .round syrup is.worth and abandon the
. _ jdea. They want it fixed so
' . that it can be thrown out of the
We were under the impress- .0 +1. IT.n
s .n. an, • • ,, eXpress car gon the pavement,
ion that. "Force" was • medi-i there has been a good job of
eme, but judging from the crati a job of sold-
number of bottle, we see “ .ring, then it will only buret the
must be a beverage, and there crate, which they can use fer
are a lot of people sick around kindling, and they can deliver
I"**** __ \ the battered can to the con-
I__ । signee. any time in a week or
two, if it goes any distance.
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fleers working with the local No wonder that the freight ।
officers didn’t cause an increase businesa is being largely trans-
in the price of white mine ported by trucks and the form-
which has been very plentiful er express business going by
, when yon come to;
consider the arbitrary rulings
When it goes above ten dol- they make before they will ac-
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OFFICERS.
---- Gladewater, and Mt. Pleasant, ~
Federal enforcement officers and the owners of .fine bird ।
have been chasing the “wild- dogs, now that the open season =
cat" in Upshur countyithis for quail is only a few days of,=
week. are in constan. fear tnai theiin=
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Tucker, George. The Gilmer Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 153, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 25, 1922, newspaper, November 25, 1922; Gilmer, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1409138/m1/1/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Upshur County Library.