The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, June 10, 1921 Page: 3 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.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:
I
ed the millenium.—Beaumont Enter- 1 that it was not written in the twen-
prise.
(
198285
m
39
*3-
R9
if
SURE TO BE LIGHT
hhhyy
0
S
Rub-My-Tism kis infection.
6
$
‘•]
F. W. Creager
A. Y. Creager
0
A. Y. CREAGER & Co., Sherman, Texas
VA
9
9
a
&
D
D
eie
£
SOUTH TRAVIS ST.
SHERMAN, TEXAS
DR^Y LIME
A Few of the Values That
ODE CROWELL
•0-
-04
In Sherman
Nunn’s Shoes
In Small Checks, Nice Stripes and
19c the Yard.
Plaids
Are Good Shoes
TISSUES
NEW WAR WEAPONS
Quality Meats
\
LADIES’ GOWNS
T
J. F. LILLEY
The House of Quality
/
QUALITY MEATS
HONEST WEIGHT
\
I
1
J
oz. NETWE IGHT.
give it the proper aquiline contour.
“One can imagine that the ladies
B
D
We handle Fisk, Mason Cord and
, General tires, three of the best on the
Good Quality; Regular $1.75 and $2
Value; Now, $1.25.
Full 32 Inches Wide, the Kind You Pay
75c for at Other Stores; Our Price
45c the Yard.
i Grove’s Tasteless chill Tonic restores
; Energy and Vitality by Purifying and
j Enriching the Blood. When you feel its
strengthening, invigorating effect, see how
it brings color to the cheeks and how
it improves the appetite, you will then
appreciate its true tonic value.
Grove’s Tasteless chill Tonic is simply
Iron and Quinine suspended in syrup. So
pleasant even children like it. The blood
needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to
Enrich it. * Destroys Malarial germs and
Grip germs by its Strengthening, Invigor-
ating Effect. 60c.
VOILES
“I think you need more footlights
on the stage,” said the the theatrical
manager who had hired the hall for
a performance.
“Oh, you’ll find the house light
enough when you come to give your
show, I reckon,” replied the man who
owned the hall and knew the town.
----------------- ! but is quoted from an article by the
THE CAUSE OF THE TROUBLE ! elder Disraeli, published in 1820.
209A
2
CITY MEAT MARKET
Garland & Hileman, Proprietors
I
4
4 "iV
• X 2 o 2.
• mo=o=o
DPPRIGB3
Phosphate
Baking
Powder
WHERE IS THAT
HARNESS STRAP?
WE HAVE ADOPTED
BARBARIC CUSTOMS
scribed will shortly be in good usage? |
Can we expect that the debutante of
1930 will daub her pretty face with
blue and yellow paint, and .that nose I
breaking will be advertised by our ,
best beauty-parlors? Let us hope i
=•
The Sun does good printing. You
can get the other kind out of town.
(
\
\
No matter what your wants in the meat
line may be we can meet them, and we
meet them with first quality meats—the
only kind you would knowingly serve on
your table. We carry not only the staples
but also the delicacies that go to make a
complete market stock.
I tieth century, as one might suppose,
‘e2
-Ibecllrigh
in fhemorning"
that will render the gas innocuous.
And so around the whole of the vici-
ous circle. Yet it has been so since
the earliest times. The old sling and
battering ram gave way to new wea-
pons, and not even the discovery of
gun powder stopped the quest for
better means of taking human life.
gibberish that little boy is yelling at
those other children! I never saw a
lad make such remarkable faces and
amazing gestures. And, as I live, he
has his trousers on hind part before!
They fix me up in short order.
Why don’t YOU try these
little wonder workers? You’ll
find them easy to take and
mild but effective in opera-
tion.
Your Druggist sells Dr. Miles'
Preparations.
“The girls are continually plucking
their eyebrows, that they may be thin
and long.”
human beings realize the futility of. Citing this quotation, the Atlanta
war. And then we shall have achiev-' Journal calls attention to the fact
A TONIC
540
Habitual Constipation Cured
in 14 to 21 Days
"LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a specially-
prepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual
Constipation. It relieves promptly but
should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days
to induce regular action. It Stimulates and
Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take. 60c
oer bottle.
VESTAL
MUSIC AND MACHINE CO.
Pianos, Player Pianos and Talking Machines of
Quality and Merit.
ALL LATEST SHEET MUSIC, Q. R. S. PLAYER ROLLS
AND PHONOGRAPH RECORDS.
Keep this Store The
Trading Center
ing, as practiced in India, would be-
come a recognized part of almost ev-
ery woman’s toilette? market. They are all priced at ex-
if this much of Disraeli’s essay tra low prices and guaranteed to give
has come to pass, may it not be that the best of service. R. S. Morehead,
other heathen rites of fashion he de-!
Our delivery servcie is efficient, and we
are always glad to fill your telephone or-
ders. We deliver every week day, and
accept orders for delviery on Sunday until
9 o’clock a. m. We want to serve you.
.nA-, 4. I AAR - an Can Pay Part Each Year. Notes and
UncY 10 Ladl OU Lnu Annual Interest Payable at Sherman.
------- j The Journal says:
“Well! Well!” surprisedly ejacu-! “The particular girl he had in mind
lated a motorist who had halted his were the women of China, and the
essay was a treatise on the peculiar
and barbaric fashions prevailing in
heathen lands.
“In the same breath with eyebrow
plucking in China, he described how
the women of Greenland colored their
faces blue and yellow; how the grand
dames of India applied red paint to
“It hain’t youmer presizely that’s i the cheeks and how the Persian de-
the matter with the little cuss,” re- j butante broke- her nose in order to
car in the big road. “What queer
Mayor J. M. Williamson has called
a meeting of the fathers tomorrow
evening at the city hall for the pur-
pose of presenting information that
has come to him in his official capac-
ity of mayor and presiding officer of
corporation court regarding the mor-
als of the young people of Cisco.
This meeting will be limited, as it
is not possible to. present this situa-
tion to a mixed audience. The mayor
wants every man in Cisco who has a
boy or girl more than 12 years old
to be at this meeting and he also de-
sires the presence of any other men
of the city who have the city’s wel-
fare at heart. The meeting will be-
gin at 8 o’clock.
“I am convinced that we have a
very serious situation here to deal ;
with,” said Mayor Williamson, “and
to meet it as it must be met we must
have the co-operation of the parents
of the city. I have some facts that I
want to lay before every father in
Cisco who has children more than
twelve years of age. Some of them
are startling.”—Cisco Daily Times.
Much is written and spoken about
the high moral standard of the good
old days when our parents were
young. And there is something in the'
belief that in those earlier days the
young people had purer morals and
were better disciplined. They had
and were. • ,
Most of the troubles which concern
the parents and the children of today
so easily and naturally come from too
much liberty, which easily becomes
license. Pleasures, which, in the
writer’s younger days were few and a
year or so between now are so com-
mon that parental permission is not
even sought.
The picnic, country trips, theatre,
visits down town are so entirely a
matter of routine that permission is
seldom asked or required for their
becoming a part of the day’s pro-
gram.
Less supervision is kept over the
children of today than is good for our
citizens of tomorrow. And in most
instances that supervision is not of
firm nature. There is too much
scolding and too little use of good old
fashioned harness.
Our father wore his whipping arm
completely out in attempting to main-
tain discipline and it was all to no
particular advantage. This was true
for two reasons, the first being that
he whipped only when he was angry
and gave the distinct impression that
he was venting his own spleen and
not meting out necessary justice in
the shape of punishment and other
reason was that he had hopeless ma-
terial to work upon. Either cause
would have made the test a failure.
But when our mother whipped, oh
boy, that was different, again and
still. She seldom did it, but she did
get results, material considered.
Fourteen-year-old girls who run at
large with painted cheeks, scant
clothes and stridently attracting
voices grow naturally into the unmor-
al and even immoral class.
Boys of the same ages whose free-
dom is complete develop into the
same kind of animals. No sensible
person should expect any other re-
sult.
The old harness strap should be
brought out first to be used on par-
ents who permit this sort of thing,
and after they have been properly -
tanned ths young people could be
called for their first woodshed inter-
view.
The Cisco mayor is on the right
track. More power to the strong
arms of his fellow citizens.—Wichita
Daily Times.
War is to be made still more horri-
ble, if such a thing be possible. Only
a short time ago we read of a new
and extremely deadly liquid gas, a
few drops of which would suffice to
wipe out a regiment of soldiers. Now
the United States army experts-have
come forward with.a new and more
powerful machine gun than any here-
tofore known, which will fire bullets
capable of piercing one-inch armor
plate, such as is used on tanks in field
warfare.
An army equipped with these new
weapons would, it must seem, be al-
most invincible. It could stop any
sort of onslaught that an enemy
might make, unless the enemy should
be possessed of like or better equip-
ment. This is exactly what will hap-
pen, if we should in the future have
occasion to use these new machine
guns in actual battle. They will no
sooner be put into use than other na-
tions will seek to improve upon them
and to discover means of neutralizing
their effectiveness through more ade-
quate defensive measures.
So it goes. As quickly as we build
an unsinkable battleship, somebody
invents a gun or a shell that will sink
any ship afloat. When we have
found a new and deadly gas some
scientific expert devises a new mask
----—
White’s Cream Vermifuge is cer-
tain destruction to intestinal worms.
It is harmless to children or adults.
Price, 35c. Sold by Dyer & Jones,
druggists.
plied Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge,
Arkansas. “It’s more like insanity.
That’s Gabe Giggery’s boy. He was'
born under a—p’tu—crazy quilt.” |
“When I feel like this—
dizzy, black spots before
my eyes, bad taste in
my mouth, stupid and
lazy—I know what’s
the matter. I’m bilious,
I just take a couple of
DR. MILES’ LIVER PILLS
/
He certainly has a well developed
sense of humor.”
L
L__________________ 1_____________________________
■ 43
Probably it will always be so until
—,g/A
A3
’ “5P-=~
All Hauling Entrusted to Me Will be Handled
Carefully and Promptly. Your Patronage
Will Be Appreciated. Phone No. 8.
8fei,pef
Po170
€19x0
e6e
of Disraeli’s days smiled in shocked not. Yet the very thought, knowing}
amusement at the customs of their what we do of bobbed hair, rouge and
savage sisters, thankig their lucky eyebrows, is grewsomely pathetic.”
stars that fashion did not condemn We can appreciate the force of
them to such atrocities. what the Journal says, but is it not
“Who among them would have be- more likely that the reaction already
lieved that one hundred years later, is setting in? There are signs that
their descendants would have follow- ‘ this is the case, and yhat in itself is
ed in the footsteps of the Chinese and an indication of the drift.—Ft. Worth
taken to eyebrow plucking practically Star-Telegram.
unanimously? Also, that face-paint- ----------------
Reni
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.
Waggoner, J. H. The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, June 10, 1921, newspaper, June 10, 1921; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1424421/m1/3/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.