Lufkin Daily News (Lufkin, Tex.), Vol. [8], No. 219, Ed. 1 Monday, July 16, 1923 Page: 3 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
LED WORLD IN IRRIGATION 2
5
HE'S BETTER OFF
’’
9.
dom .
The
, who was soon to take her
Pretty New
Y
to exert
as
any of
laws which
vork covered.
LENGTHY FRENCH PLAY
Laces
2"
ySta
la
animals, dear?”
irregu
See Our Window Display
Perry Bros. Variety Store
1
tet
1′01)
i
6 f-iat
(
!
ad. Shoa
rs is um
, t
r
Clearing the Decks!
st
in our
»
=
M
Furnishing Goods
les.
vtX
H.
E
J
■
. ....
pineav
"7,
1
pecialist 8
study of
n quality. ■
are an ex/28
p after 8
o be mad,
are differ
select shoe
derable eq
। and finisb
July Clearance
Sale
id
‘ - RA
"Are you going to camp out this
summer ?”
“Not unless I can find some ac-
quaintance I haven’t already camped
with.”—Boston Transcript.
ws has
postal
|ty Y.
hhgelina
Eway to
5 attend
Summer
h. Mr.
(so well
5 which
friends,
Sbelow:
to tour-
M., to-
bur fig-
is from
Kin 3%
age of
[a day.
r We
1 today
Moline,
raver-
egallon.
Ads be-
marillo.
Hentire
re this
Raton.”
Oss are
• little
■ expect
A GARDEN ZOO
"Mother," said an imaginative
little fellow, “I’m going to have a
circus in the garden.”
I
Ethel—I don’t see how she man-
aged to live with him so long before
starting divorce proceedings.
Clara—Oh, she was merely wait-
ing until he could afford to pay her
alimony worth while, my dear!—
Judge.
A PRACTICAL PHIEND
tumn.
How this comes about is not
known. The apparently lifeless soil
The
Advertised
Article
#ver are
Hu bene-
Bwhich
college
hundred
Enn be
ipportun-
hrticular
ive stock
business
len and
iare di-
bhe rural
Mtcours-
Nich will
s'
Me Farm-
will be
Bof the
a Asso-
41 Writ-
dirty-sev-
of the
fral so-
of the
Wreeders
Ektension
id
--
Soil is usually considered lifeless,
but Sir John Bussell, English
scientist, has taken a census, and
She—I’d like to give you some
little present as a memento of our
friendship before you go. What
would you like?
He—Er—a couple of dollars
would be appreciated.—Judge.
NEW DEAL NECESSARY
KM NN
•N
'■ 2 199
We beleive that you now can find al-
most any kind of lace you desire in
our extra large assortment from
ties
| of
om-
ain
and
Ums
lent
on-
lon-
ers’
ion
ra-
t is
gri-
we have not yet dis-
> B
I
‘our Ch
r children ge,
ith an eduen
ou adopt soms
ire assured t
11
had a
of S«
las-
he
2
1,-
p°
pts,
report a revolt of pedestrians against
the motor cars and their monopoly
of the highways, and in that country
sandwich men are walking about the
highways exhibiting slogans that de-
clare they are down on the motors
and want some place to walk. The
peculiar part of the revolt is that it
should first appear in a country that
is mountainous, where many roads
cannot be traveled by cars and
where there are numberless byways
and roads where pedestrians might
amble along in perfect security as
they climb the steep hills and wend
their way to their destination.—
Ohio State Journal.________
LABOR SCHOOL IN CASTLE
MILLIONS IN A SPOONFL
• ■ 1 .. , ....
Hard for Imagination to Understand
What Can Ba Contained in Small
Part of Earth.
I
Re
Bruhl Castle, a famous edifice for-
merly the country seat of the arch-
bishop of Cologne, is to be occupied
next August by several score of stu-
dents attending a summer school
arranged by the International
Federatiou of Trade Unions. The
students will come . from all over
Europe and will listen to lectures
in German, French and English by
leading laborites on various phases
of the labor educational movement.
REASON
d
dvmihnmseden
I
tc*‘
is one in which the mer-
chant himself has implicit
faith—else he will not ad-
vertise it. You are safe in
patronizing the mer-
chants whose ads appear
in this paper because their
goods are up to date and
not shop worn. : : :
Herington Drug Store
“Look at that pour motorist being
towed in by a horse.”
"Lucky guy, I calls him. He ain’t
had to buy no gas since he broke
down.”
When you are sick, you want a care-
ful, experienced druggist
----7-, i ;
Ancient Egyptlans, Forced by Necee-
sity. Developed High Skill In the
Production of Their Crops.
The people of Egypt, in the first
place, were farmers from time im-
memorial, and they had not a few of
tlie ideas that farmers often have
today. Perhaps it is hard to think
of the powerful and cultured mon,
archs and nobles of that ancient
land as the leaders of a nation of
patient, plodding agriculturists, but
such is nevertheless the fact.
I heir principal occupation was
the raising of wheat, and this grain,
then as now, was probably the great,
est source of wealth of the region
which produced it. Egypt had but
few mineral resources, and the store
of precious metals which its rulers
possessed, while no doubt obtained
in part by warfare, must largely
have been received in exchange for
agricultural products. To this de-
pendence on their corn, combined
with the fact that rain seldom falls
in the country, is to be attributed
the high degree of skill in irriga-
tion work that the Egyptians early
developed.—New York Tribune.
"My purpose is thrise to blowe
the triumpet in the same mater, if
God sopermitte: twice I intende to
do if without name, but at the last
blast, to take the blame upon my
selfe, that all others may be
purged.”
CHEAPER TRIPS THROUGH AIR
who was
7 good
X
quare.
» each
urday.
id get
e art
ly less,
rinting
nd the
ini The whole soil population is de-
asi pressed in winter and in summer,
and is uplifted in spring and au-
• g*/
I
97
hereditary throne, and to Elizabeth
of England, ... . .
great a power in Scotland as „
its own sovereigns. Knox said in his
preface to “The First Blast”:
endab
A new play put on at the Odeon,
the Paris State theater, has broken
a record for length. It is a new ver-
sion of “The Tragedy of Tristan
and Iseult," by two modern French
playwrights. There are twenty-one
scenes, and the performance lasts
over four and a half hours. After
the first matinee the artists had not
time to dine before starting the eve-
ning performance.
finds that in one single gramme of
soil, about enough to fill a teaspoon,
there are more than forty million or-
ganisms. A method of counting
them was worked out, and the cen-
sus was made every day for 365 con-
secutive days. No fewer than sev-
enteen different organisms were
enumerated. One of the most in-
teresting results was the proof that
the soil population is not steady in
number, as had always bean as-
sumed, but is in a violent state of
flux. Daily variations were shown
independent of external conditions.
em‛,
8.
WfAD OF JUDGMENT
In the business* of life, your best capital is
HEALTH. Be sure you have that capital by
keeping your spine in good condition. If you
are Healthy you will assuredly be Happy, and
will also have a better chance to advance.
ALICE H, BAIER
Chiropractor
We have a registered pharmacist, who has filled many thousands
sknneftort i to buy porhabip'arugs in amall quantitipe and to
keep our stock fresh and potent Your doctor’s prescriptions will
be filled by us exactly as he orders.
the-
ur expert!
go elsewb
us made him obnoxious to
two queens, during whose reigns he
tt play—to Alary, Queen
■ l -
A
e
ive
tinent, he wrote a treatise against
woman’s rights, which he called
“The /irst Blast of the Trum-
pet Again st the MTonstrous Regi-
ment of Women,” in which he
inveighed strongly against the right
of woman to hold the reins of au-
thority.. He gained sufficient wis-
dom .never to give a second blast.
A. & M.
3ek of This
“Why, I’ve got dandelions, tiger
lilies and the big elephant’s ear, and
I’m going to have the trumpet flow-
ers blow in the band.”—Boston
Transcript.
.85*252982
KFe=T Chiropractils
Vsstes.e ” 4sPiAL) •
Wi, Adjustment? T
Aw " Will L
5/Remove the A
99 Cayse o£ c
ay r S
•E
2
P. Jg. l.11-
gv
HEALTH
_ __' ~ .... _
CAPITAL
...0 ---
It is hoped to soon bring the cost
of theParis-to -Iondon air trip down
to two shillings per mile instead of
four arid a half which is the present
rate. Tt is said to be merely a mat-
ter of a dependable volume of traffic.
At the present time the trips are
largely "resorted to by tourists and
few of the passengers are what might
, be termed regular riders. The traf-
“Where are you going to get the fic is therefore rather uncertain and
imais "ea‛ —oilar. The condition in this re-
spect is said to be improving and as
the character of the service improves
I
-
hrong abo
thecolle
A SURE OPEN S582E
“Why did you let that look agent
into my office?"
“Well, sir, as you saw, he had
his stuff in a golf bag.”—Detroit
Free Press.
must be considered as really throb-
earr bing with life, changing daily and
imu- houtly in obedience to some great
the.....
• €9
5c a yard
uom
_
-........m.....
1099
__
tlanta,c2
ufkin and
nue their J
ilesmen b
ase. Lur,
en to the J
Welead
2tf Ham
1M2 ---
ReformedS Act Dictated by Con-
eclonc, but Injudicious, to Say
N the Least of It
5 -
The most important, and the most
injudicious act in the life of John
Knox, Scotland s famous heretic,
was performed at Geneva-—an act
which he undoubtedly felt to be
called for at the time, but which
sadly handicapped him afterward.
Aroused to fierce indignation by
the cruelties of “Bloody Mary,”
who had .exiled him to the con-
Genuine B. V. D. Union Suits, QK/
Good quality Athletic Union Suits, AA
One big lot Men’s Dress Shirts, ollar attached, 70,
One lot Arrow Laundered Collars, 0,
Men’s. All Elastic Supporters, Q,
Clearance Sale .......................................................... •C
•272
-------- --------- ■
....... ————— ...........
Next to a Good Doctor
’ v r '
iex
87 14KWARAGE>
“Nige N 2,6-,,
■ WWPB#NKKg= 11%
WWe42 i L 12
L.,A2JVr-
THE FAIR
DRY GOODS CO.
it is being made more general use of
by those who are traveling on busi-
ness
arm REVOLT AGAINST MOTORS
sion ---
• Switzerland is the first country to
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Watford, G. E. & Binion, W. C. Lufkin Daily News (Lufkin, Tex.), Vol. [8], No. 219, Ed. 1 Monday, July 16, 1923, newspaper, July 16, 1923; Lufkin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1415803/m1/3/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .