Gilmer Daily Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 23, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 20, 1920 Page: 4 of 4
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Boy Graduates
23 4tde
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12
night.
23 4tde.
9
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I
the Mirror Office.
tf.
NOTICE
J
t and colt both respo
he fees and costs of collection.
Ottis O. Shipp.
I
Subscribe for the Mirror.
10 d w 1m
Phone No. 129
I
this of" +.
•f
r.
W. W. Lomenack, Prop.
21tf.
1
6
C
j
l
• A deputy collector of
ourself
Heat it for
TO MAKE INVESTMENT SAFE
h whici
—the phonog
azed all Gilmer
a:
two years.
ly hands swelled until I could
ax;
as the predon-
ol
y per cent of
EDISON
The NE
-
♦
i
-i- ■
NEEDS
the time I had taken it four
4
or
observant revenue
J. W. CROLEY. HARDWARE CO.
me.
4
Giltner, Texas
1
-
have been able to get around at
and wear my shoes.
Tanlac is sold in Glmer by
|
income.—
ea
-
y
------------
venue* di
n he,
prices down as
s with the price
ho have made
farms show that
that at times I simply should
not keep from screaming. Some-
Now, after taking several
Ies, I can’t praise Tanlac
enough. My nerves are so much
better I sleep like a child an
FOUND—A pair of spectacles
in case. Describe them, pay for
this notce and secure them at
given your
are better
Hr business
de Jack at
Mr. Russell
: Graceton. I
y barn, five
t for $10.00
»Xa disposed
2
L
ae
We are ab.
pared to sei
deserve te
l voice of the living
scovery awaits you—
who attended Betsy
work our special care. Today i
able to take care of your shoe ri
breed
le for
K B
e
Bed and Pillowed Chair until
She started on Tanlac
SCHOLARSHIP—In Tyler Col
lege, the mast popular education-
al institution in Tetas. Apply at
E
Don’t forget it. Fridoy night,
April 23rd. Performance starts
promptly at 8:30 o’clock admis-
sion 35 and 50 cents.) The Dear
. ■
4 a
r
The production of vegetables
it home relieves transportation
difficulties and solves the mar-
keting problem.
k-
—get the
Schrum
Habit
—Call us
every
Monday
— or any
Day
R. R. RATES MUST
BE ADJUSTED
a
2 I
Mh.
Dean of the Wharton School of
Finance on the Need of Good
Railroad Credit.
♦
♦ —Otar car at your bervice
FOR SALE—Auto, Oakland Six,
see C. G. McCollum, at depot.
22 2wk d-w
so helpless that I lived propped
up with pillows in a chair or in
. . X-. ... — ... ■■■ ■ । ।।
Lots of specked peas at Gil-
mer Produce Co. for sale. 15 tf.
National Authority on Railroad Trans-
portation Saya Roads Must Be
Self Supporting or Become
Bankrupt. ,
A
y
also furnish baskets of eream
for home use.
Williams Variety Store.
28 4td Itwa
The banks will be closed to-
morrow on account of San
Jacinto Day, it being a legal
holiday in Texas.
A eg-
WORE NO SHOES
FDR TWO YEARS
582
p15
-
"aq
i
t
than ever before and at prices lower than
many other Texas towns.
WE MAKE A SPECIALITY OFPOLISH
AND LACES
QUALITY SHOE SHOP
J B. ARNSBY, Proprietor
, LADIES SHOE SHINING PARLQR IN •
CONNECTION 10 CENIS
Come ill and hearjthe identical instrument*
which wan used Friday Evening. Make the
great discovery for yourself.
--PARCELS POST--
We assure those living out
of town that we appreciate
their patronage.
If you cannot secure mod-
em cleaning in your homle
town, parcels post your gar-
ments to this big, modern
plant •
HEMSTITCHING—Mrs J. H.
Floyd would be pleased to have
your hemstitching at her home
on South Montgomery Street.
305
a,.
lore than anything
rosperity of the
huthwest Georgia
Get your cotton seed and your
garden seed from Waghalter.
290 tfc.
it was money thrown away and
I got so blue I did not care to
live. Then my husband read in
—everything that science, ex-
perience, the desire to serve
and modern equipment can do, ‘
we promise to deliver.
8yts.
TEETROBLEM
002280
Mt •eze
-Hcce-
' 2g ,
,
g-mes
and $2,000 with no insurance. during thbR
Besides the barn three -of Mr. The duties Nsthis deputy -in-
Williams horses were burned clude not only thi
errJrJrr-rJr-r-r-r-rrrrrg-r-]
1
News we do not have to turn
down any ten pages of ds, and
te are awful glad of it, and
iympathise with the News.
There’s nothing like ordering in
time, and from dififerent sources,
Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Mell
motored over to Marshall Mon-
day.
G., R. & J. SCHRUM
Successors to”ROBINSON & SCHRUM
tThe Minor received another
shipment of paper Monday, and
has notification of two other
ig shipments that are to - be
sent at an early date. This gives
us an adequate supply n sit
for many months to come. Sub-
scribe now. Unlike the Dallas
—we now have a cleaning, dye-
ing and pressing plant large
enough to serve Gilmer and
surrounding towns.
Internal Revenue Department
ammumaan. -
2“"
vply at the Bell Hotel.
2,23
!
I
1,8
T Peanuts for seed. Get ’em
J
now Gilmer Produce Company,
I
I
I have my Bla
ome the one that
stood two seasons d
vill stand him at
niles east of Gilnt
nsured. If the min
efore foaling time.
S
,2
3
the first time in two years 1
th Los Angles Woman Lived in
■} --
Causing a Loss of Between
$1500 and $2,000
Mrs. J. E. Dailey departed and heg4
Monday afternoon for Beckville inating fl
to attend the funeral of her other woi
uncle, Dr. Hornsbury. the farm
- I money on
ye • newpir of shoes cet $9.00
and wear 90 day*. and can be ve
paired for $3 00 »o as to wear 90
days more, how much does the
wearer save by haring the shoes
rephire !
like the thousand •Gilmerit
Lane Shepherd recital.
- ’ ‘ . -J
Thomas A. Edison gave his fa- ;
mous Tone-Test last Friday night
~ in High School Auditorium. He 1
had Mita Shepherd sing in direct f ]
comparison with the RE-CRE- / i
ATION of her voice by the New / i
Edison? Music lovers were com- / <
pletely baffled. Their ears were / i
D8% )ncome
to put him-
ae who are
• The instrument used in Friday’s Tone Test is the regular
model which sells for $285 (in Canada $481.) It is an exact
duplicate of the Laboratory Medel which Mr. Edison perfected
after spending Three Milllon Dollars in experiments.
7 ' T-tf. f .9
The barn of Mr. Wash°wi- who has been at work in thie
liams, near Ewell, about ten part of the state for several
miles north of Gilmer,. was weeks past, is authority for th-
bum d together with its con- statement that peanuis and hoge
tents Tuesday night of last contributed
week, about 8 o’clock. else to the
The loss was between $1,500 farmers of
Thanking you for your past
favors.
im blankBsf
vision and co
ARE you one of thoswhp believe that nopho-
4 nograph can matchh
human? An astonishing d
Ecakesou
akfrmer
beer4uffici
KclsM
if you want to have two hours
of solid enjoyment gee “The
Dear Boy Graduates ” at the
High School Auditorium Friday
A world wide wheat shortage they
is predicted.
tha, are senelhardly, work my fingersand I
- haven t been able to out on a
Jr pair of shoes because my feet
28 1n21 were so swollen. I had sharp
" re hepains through my back so bad
-c ‘j
b —3/0
Mr. J. Lee Tarpley, formerly
Held worker for the W. O. W.,
jut now Field Worker for the
Texas Sunday School Associa-
ion spent Monday and Tues-
lay in the city. Mr. Tarpley
has been a frequent visitor here
and has many friends that arc
always glad to see him.
completely up. and a mule be- of delinquents I
longing to Isaack Fink was very out of their rei
badly burned, and will probably them, but the i
never be worth anything again, rection of retur
In addition to the live stock back by ths
loss of the barn, the seed from for correctN,
three or four bales of cotton, in nine
some hay, cow feed, harness and finds
'a few plow tools were burned, hat
Origin of the fire unknown, in '
__________ liabl
$ltwe * '
ten
jpod
system of diversified farming, all
are the ones that are renily pros- '
“I had to be cared for just like
i baby before I began taking
Tanlac." said Mrs. Alice Murphy
of 1501 Pennsylvania Ave., Los
Angles, Cal.
‘Two years ago I had a very
severe attack of muscular rheu-
iprehensiommatism," she continued, "and
ha fillinc No one knows the pain and
t’orture I have suffered since.
. . “I tried every medicine or
nerpa money treatment we could herr of, but
incomes, and “getting aown t
z-smulmruunmau
abandoned cotton planting fora
times I got so dizzy everything
eanuts seemed o spin around and then
. . T 1 would have sharp pains and a
4ctors. In- chilly feeling afterwards. I was
WOOD! WOOD!—Leave orders
at J. A. Still for sfove wood. 3
loads for $10.—W. T. Foster.
19 6tdp.
KARN AND HORSES WHAT PEANUTS AND
BURN NEAR EWELL HOGS ARE DOINGV /
--- FOR THE FARMERS
Saved per day on rep ire d
Shoes---- - (6§
90 times 06% equala amt.
saved on repaired Shoes $6 00
plus the comfort
TAKE THE 303 OVER NOM!
Peanuts for seed. Get ’em
now Gilmer Produce Company,
W. W. Lomenack, Prop. 21tf.
THE ANSWER
neo : 91) ec a‛s coat of
New Shoe* per day----- 10ct 8
$300-: 90 equals cost of
kepaire 1 Shoes, per day 3e‛s
Cost, per day, New Sboes. 10 z
Cost, per day, r paired
Shoes----— 03
E, -4\,- • ii . — bed all the time and had to be
deit,principally out of helped from ome place to an-
other. ..
or prospective taxpayer in hand. the souf
he is pretty apt to get a straight AlbatG
2 line on his business affairs and
{.238.0
g-e • a8e
5 .*9
WITH THE BESE
OUR STORE I-as
CLOSE TO YOU AS
YOUR TELEPHONE.
A message to us and you
will get SERVICE.
11 times pre-
tyou asyou
eerved—
you ice cream and cold drinks.
Our price on coca cola and other .
bottled drinks will be 6cta. Ice “rh
Cream cones 8 cents . We can
—we want orders, particularly |
of those who have found it ®
hard to secure the right sort of |
modern cleaning and pressing 5
service.
2 ' %,
Mn ’
J. A. STILL
-GROCERIES--- ,
R Phone 143
eegdtt
' poir
The F honodrs ph Wi h a Soul
The materials used in repairing shoes :8
of better quality than that used in new sues.
Perhaps vou were rot awar of this tact.
To prove it, note he. x much longer the sules
on repaired shoes will wear than the soles
on the same shoes when new. Prolonged ,
wear is what you want. ./
Insist on getting the best lath in your
repair job. It wl cost a little/more, but 1
your satisfaction will be greater
We have had twenty-five yars of prack-
cal experience in the shoef repairing busi-
ness, ten years of ii has Peen spent in Gil-
mer, giving the public th beat that could be
had in the shoe repaikiy business.
We have made imp)bvements in our shop
from time to time, ymtil noy our Shoe Re-
pairing Shop is thebbeskequipped in North-
t east Texas. / \
-.1
i a p
.. 3
P anuts and hogs. On the other
hand, those that depended on
cotton as their
crop appear to have ‘come out
behind,” whitethose who plant-
ed more peant.than cotton
"tthe papers about Tanlec and by
The informatioriven Bpthi-4five days I was i, was heping
„iector, wh me. -
has been figuring vith farmersbottl
and other busiess men on theiz
22282.22
We have always held oar
low as possible, in accordant
of raw material and at all ti
I \ x-
unab'e Ne distinguish the RE-
CREATEDyoice frem the living.
You have never heard any pho-
nograph thak approaches the
New Edison, st RE-CREATiS
not only the muial notes,, but
every elusive quality of tone and
color, which identify the original
artist.
In nn address on "The Rallroad Puz
zte." delirered in P'hlladelpisia, Janu-
ary 3, !r. Emory II. Jlinso», dean of
me wuarten Sehbol of Finance, and
one of the ntion's lending authorities
on railroad transportntion, declared
usat "after the first of March the com-
pankes must be self-supporting or be-
come banhrupt." Cuaf'using, he said:
"Can the rnilroads be successfully
finnnred atid operated wtien they"are
returned to their owuerst For two
years the govemnment has drawn upon
the public tresury to sustain the
credit *f carriers.
"If iLc carriers avoid failure thielF
ineeme must cover operafing expenses,
maintenance and capital charges; if
the companies succeed to the extent
that is demanded in publie. interest,
they muat not only be able to meet un-
avoidable expenses, they must have
some surplus revenue.
“If there is no income to be used in
part forebetterments and in part for
building up a surplus or reserve fund,
the punlie will not Invest in the rall-
muds, their credit cannot be re-estab-
listed and maintained and corporate
owuersidp and operation of the rail-
ways will fall.
"The income of the carrlrs is deter
mined by public regulation, and prop-
erly m; but from this it follows that
the country must decide between a
policy of adequate revenues to the
raitrend corporatons of the future and
a pMky of government ownership.
“The government is entitled to credit
for having given greater unity to rall-
road operation, both line and terminat.
It has done much that the carriers
wele prohibited trom doing. The pub-
lic row realize thnt co-operation of
the carrlera in the joint use of equlp-
ment and- terminals should be encour
uged. Instead of prevented.
"Tie railroad legislaiion now pend
mz in Congress must solve many dim-
cult qtesilons, but the most critical one
is that of providing for the future reg
lot'en of railroads in accordance with
a volicy thiat will cause the carrler to
necure raven ne suficient to enable
them to perform their services ado
quutdly and with progresmive emelency
The roliroud business must be made at-
tractive to private investments or the
country will have to adopt goyernment
ownyrehlpi and operation of the ral
roads. There is no other alternative."
g
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Tucker, George. Gilmer Daily Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 23, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 20, 1920, newspaper, April 20, 1920; Gilmer, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1431718/m1/4/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Upshur County Library.