Lufkin Daily News (Lufkin, Tex.), Vol. [8], No. 154, Ed. 1 Monday, April 30, 1923 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Before Finished Product It
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Ready for Smoker.
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BULK CO
MOVEMENTS OF STARS
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WHY MEN LEAVE HOME
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OF COURSE
RED TAPE
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HEADING THE LIST
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BROUGHT GOOD PRICES
FROM THE ANTIPODES
HANGER SWITCH
THE CHEAPER WAY
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ELLIS
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ENOUGH
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HI
NNUTS
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If the boon of health is
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yours to-day and your
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financial prospects :
ire bright, now is the time to
U' 1 hina
are the
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prepare for the rainy days that are certain to come.
A savings account alT irds you the proper shelter.
The Postmaster—Get a broom
and clean up this lobby. It looks
Each of
necessary
drbi
thi.
t
Old mattresses made new at
small cost. Why not have the
work done today? Phone 698.
33tf Lufkin Mattress Factory.
Cuntacts.
rivs the
1N
Visitor—Where do you hail from,
mister?
Native—I don't hail from any
place. I reign at home.
Much Space Was I
pularity of Short
r for Men.
a
$
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Phone Your Orders
9
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Good Looking Oxfords
That Wear!
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a patron to whom he had sent a
manuscript of a poem. Three such
pieces—one beginning "O, Lassie,
are ye sleepin’ yet?” brought $570.
— St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
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Ellis original shoe creations are
copied through East Texas. But "
breathes the woman who prefers t
for the imitation instead of buzing
original style while it’s the latest fS
Those cultured women of this co .
ity whose taste demand exclusivenez
originality will be delighted with "7
styles arriving daily.
6**
a > o
g,
rent length of
method of se-
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=THE=
LUFKIN NATIONAL BANK
Lufkin, Texas
I ■
fed
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f I
EM
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self-support-
1 n without im-
58 Per
L MeGowa,
hreveport, wh
been on a short
PS THE SAIL
sometimes Say
seadogs Tenaclou
Father Neptune.
oy thing how we
o the sea, althoug
e it,” said one ol
i on a big liner
cording to the
I’ve noticed in n
when a man is
long service on
in his first 13 mo
7,
I
o 33
MH
me arm in position
h re is no possibil-
arnag or vibrating
Pythian Sisters meet tomor-
row night at 8 o’clock. All
members urged to be present
Lizzie Cavanaugh, M.E.C.
' Mrs. Winnie Bird,, of this
city, returned from Dallas Sun.
day, where she has been vis-
iting Mrs. H. M. Ellis, a daugh-
ter, who is greatly improved
from an attack of the influ-
enza.,
OF THE PA!
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"What changeable weather you
get in Melbourne!”
“Changeable? If it were change-
able we’d have changed it years
ago!”—Bulletin, Sydney.
9—
2
• It takes from three to five years
to make a cigar. That is to say,
every cigar represents an investment
of labor of three, four or five years,
and, in the aggregate, millions of
capital tied up for that time. The
actual making of a cigar in the fac-
tory is really but a minor process
in the long line of operations. What
counts most is the careful, expert
preparation and the skillful blend-
ing of the tobacco. No sooner has
the leaf passed into the hands of
the agents of the manufacturer
than there begins a series of most
important steps, calling for a wide
range of technical skill in the per-
fecting of the raw material, that
treatment of the tobacco in storage
which gives to it the flavor, the mel-
lowness and the sweetness which
comes with age.
“From three to five years’ impris-
onment in the warehouse,” is the
sentence imposed upon each and
every crop of tobacco leaf that goes
into the manufacture of American
cigars or cigarettes. That is to say,
there are from three to five crops
as many years old continuously be-
ing mellowed by age in the ware-
houses.
Kt the sea has tie;
r-hly or that they
I It's just that <
I from their old i
I their old life t
heir foundations 11
ay and that then
living.
L sailor will say
I back on land, i
ettle down as a fai
Ik. Every once it
lem is taken seriou
I land job.
onth later he cor
l and asks for his i
k he is kicking aga
e he has sense enou
enever there is a
one believing him.”
Pythian Sisters
COLLMORGEN
“The Store That Has It.” I
Phones 82 and 83
.1"^
s ^*3
aunt, Mrs. B. w
Long Line of Operation! Necessary long time ago) brought $22.50.
Robert Burns always considered
himself lucky if he received $5 from
The Agent-—Better let me sell
you this portable radiophone equip-
ment. With this outfit you can lis-
ten to your wife talking to you, no
matter where you are.
Mr. Longsufferer—-Nothing do-
ing. Want to spoil my perfectly
good vacations?
E
L
k I B
mms
He had just enlisted in the navy
and, conscious of the fascination of
his nice new uniform, was improv-
ing his last hours ashore by making
frantic love.
“But do you swear that I’m the
only girl you love?” she demurred,
not quite convinced. “You know
they say a sailor has a sweetheart in
every port.”
“Don’t you believe that, kid,” he
replied, earnestly. "Why, I haven’t
’*’-*■*
hs, like a pig sty.
• .The Janitor—The old broom’s all
"wehoutandbidsona new broom
■ /......"opbrrmeuretaoties
7""’ -----------
THAT’S DIFFERENT
E.D.Camho
with B, A. ii
years, assume
the W. M. ci
store on Tuelag
Calhoun woJS
friends at hi
employment, "
Yeu re looking lor an Oxford that is trim and neat—one that will wear long and
still beigood looking. We have them in many new designs and styles and in all
sizes.
We are showing several new styles of white Oxfords and pumps as well as white
sport combinations. Be sure to see them.
more than 10 miles a second, and a
few nights later is hurrying awy
with a similar velocity.— Washitg-
tou Star 1,
it
i f
r
" w rld with a
A N.ELLI S ’
shoe store,
Gosm
i -------- ---means rare. Hie one describing the
FIVE YEARS TO MAKE CIGAR gift of a barrel of ale from New
-- York (written, needless to say a
§ 8§ A‛s
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g $i
3 = Eg
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it £
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41
Esther was much interested in
fashions, and continually pored over
fashion sheets. When she was to
have a new dress she had remark-
ably clear ideas how she wanted it
made.
One day a friend said to her:
“Why, Esther, can you make your
own clothes?”
“No,” she answered thoughtfully,
“I can make up their looks, but I
never do the sew on them.”
3 1i
Jack—What’s the idea of the
alarm clock under the pillow? Are
you hard of hearing?
Harold—No, that’s so I can tuni
the darn thing off in the morniog
without getting out of bed.
goods are up to date and
not shop worn. : : :
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n tried fireman was
ttre and the chief,
m, shouted:
Ft ladder to the
1 along the cornice
indw, drop down
Cateh that wooden
16: then swing
th -cond window,
1" in and see if
Well, what
Husband—Frocks a bit thin for a
night like this—what?
Wife—How do I look in it?
Husband—Oh, pipping!
Wife—Then it’s perfectly com-
fortable, thanks.—London Punch.
I
A copy of the 1751 edition of
“Gray’s Elegy,” the original manu-
acript of which is at Eton college,
brought $3,350 at a sale not long
ago. The other day another was
sold at the enhanced price of $3,500.
The collection of Boswell letters,
addressed to the overseer of his es- '
tate, realized $1,225, and eight let-
ters written by the painter Gains-
borough, $575. One of these letters
mentioned “that painful swelling” j
in the neck which the famous Doc-
tor Hunter diar-ed wrong’y, ami
which caus’d t; instorwugh’s death '
‘Thackerav’s letters are bv 1. ■
The revelations of the spectre--—--
scope which is capable of showing ====-====
the displacement of stars tewardor __
from the earth, make the starry The
heavens, to the astronomer’s eye, a-gI • T
pear almost as full of mazy motions । N A KT AT ■ 1 ft A
as is a cloud of gnats dancing in the I EA U VUE LI U
sunbeams. Even' increase in? the |
power of the observing apparatus j A —4G AlA
brings to notice new 'spectroseupie, EELNGA6
binaries,” which are simply douhle !
stars that cannot be separately son, '. . 1: 1 .L
either because of their extreme close, isione in which the mer-
ness or because only one of them i a chant himself has implicit
shining burly, it is the erratic n- faith — else he will not ad-
tions of tin sr wonderful stare the. vertise it. You are safe in
reveal their true character. One is . • • .1
Eta Orionis, whi> h hangs just belaw patronizing the mer-
the belt of Orion. Sometimes ths chants whose ads appear ’
star is speeding toward the earth in this paper because their;
i f
gle
i
f
2r
J ■ iwl
il e
2ltrN
iff*: .
l3i8
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: ft
■‘i
r 2. and its ac-
1 1 t none of us
f ica of what’s
dil 1,1 a report
2101 coconuts a
r'r the American
[" in our island
[ nuts a year for
nn . .
.. -...... orepnwn . "138
, g 1
bers rrord the even
Bor. is weii indicat
Eription of the pto
erver, which in 191
yers of publicatio
n Daily News.
ch saw the first isst
rat" had adopted
b winch was enthus
Id by many people i
kt hemne interest wa
atrages in Ireland
ghit at Blackheath
b ruled the road tei
Ben—at Hounslow.
Ils devoted to the in
pity of short hail
fashion, and in th
Dios well’s “Life o
red.
lays headlines were
I Wellington’s fa-
Cescribing the final
leon was published
emely businesslike
capitals.
e Indian mutiny
by 10, 1857, it was
that the event was
hrert-line paragraph
spareer.
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Getting More Wear From
Better Shoes
iittle ones that romp and play all day long
Wil! soon wear out the cheaper shoes.' Our
phnes are the highest grade shoes—the result
' i perfect workmanship—proper tanning pro-
es—and lasts that fit—all go to give better
wear.
Hen you will find heavy shoes for rough
Wean, light sandals for warmer weather and
dressy shoes for occasions.
Ellis stands for honesty fair,
Weatherbird shoes, wear and tare.
31
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Wife When I go to Palm Beach,
dear, I shall dream of you every
night.
Huh—If it’s nil the same to you.
I would prefer to have you stay with
me atd dram of Palm Beach.—
Burto Tran- ript.
678
nt wave-changer
ing attachment, de-
Sirain in Popular
Fine, is now avail-
l eterators. The
arrgel that when
9 the face of the
I be lucked in either
WIIEN the storms of life break fearfully
fully upon our horizon. a bank account shines
thru the mist of misery like unto a rainbow of
promise.
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Watford, G. E. & Binion, W. C. Lufkin Daily News (Lufkin, Tex.), Vol. [8], No. 154, Ed. 1 Monday, April 30, 1923, newspaper, April 30, 1923; Lufkin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1415762/m1/2/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .