The Gilmer Daily Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 181, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 11, 1928 Page: 3 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 20 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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-
—
Tire GHMER DXHY MIRROR, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11. 1928.
ed
—mbe
PERTiHtlfHY PUT, HilandDale
CO-OPERATION OFFERS MORE _
—4
R. 2. Gihher, Oct. 11.—A de-
A wit
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big
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now
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week-
INIIEil
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ion
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MSte-au
Mrs. John A. Bonn of Hot
s
mzh-,
L.
K
of buying
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179 4td 1W
ANDMIGUMP
“‘We got him in'the cellar, mamma,’
ING
High School
SEE THE
Auditorium
WEDDING
.....M -
< •
’1
4 »
the worthless. -
—AT THE—
1
in the dark.
THIS ADVERTISEMENT CONTRBUTED BY
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Delusion mn trlumph, but till, tri-
umphs of deluston are but for * day.
Macaulay.
High School
Auditorium
k that
shu}d
wol
be
—
• I
An old-age pent ion would lsseh
the misery in this world one-half.
There never tan be found a way to
make dressing in the morning less of
a bore.
This Advertisement Contribut-
ed by
3
J
Advertising willhelp you in radio fn it helps you In seleet ing
intrinsic value In everything else.. You can rest asnured
that anything which is continugusly advert wed. whether it
be a radio set or a can of asparage has stood the test.
Radio works better in the dark-but there’s no need to buy .
USED IN PRINTING OF
— NEWS FAIR EDITION
inet
$m i
AN WATCH
©IE SNADP-$HOQrBQ
NEW FALL HATS
In pretty styles, special -prices
at Bettye St evens Flowers.
180 3tdlwe. -i
Andy Gump and Min will be
in town Friday night see them
at the High School uditorium.
Admission 15c and 35c.
(4
22."...
Hoslery makers should encourage
"" kne breeches. You can't wear stock-
logs visibly darned.
* ‛t --
Deep Soy Is a setene and Sober emo-
tlon, rarely evinced in open merri-
, ment—Madame Holand,
lowing officers have been seleet-
ed: President, L. F. Boyle; Vice
Pres., Wm. Mathews; Secretary
Saturday! {
Prof. Noodle I,
Lt
Springs, Ark., expeeted to ar-
rive in-Gilmer Friday for a visit
with her sister, Mrs. C. T. Cros-
by——
| E. R. KNOWLES
GROCERY and MARKET |
•e+**eereeees
"•4 •m kmha«
I
wi
LET THE LIGHT OF ADVERTISING SHOW YOU THE
HIGHT ROAD TO KAIHO SATISFACTION.
READ ADVERTISING REGULARLY
wage
each
-
would fill nine freight cars?The
paper was manufactured from
approximately 209 cords of wood
cut in. a large part frem Cana-
dian forests. The average yield
of pulp wood per acre is three
cords.
- One hundred and ten thous-
and copies oFthe edition were
printed.
0. L NATIONS
CASH GROCERY
WHERE PRICES ARE
\ LOWEST
vmo7A
6
ges
lik mer!
Boosters Chib
Is-Organized
A detetive.19 Ajcombinattoh Of
shadow and substance. .
Fire Prevention .Week, and it
must be fund inning. Another
day of it has passed and there
$,9 *4
r
was no fire alarm. If We could
beas careful all the time mayhe
Mirror Want Ads Pay.
—-------—r-n- -
esmemcet
i . t
OH Bo¥‛ WHAT a
HUMDINGEQ OF A
CATCH * THAT OAE
HAD A HOME- QVN
IT
( GAMES OvE,
STUCK EM All. OUT.
Sunday, which has brought to
the publishers favorable com-«
the James Baptist churehISatur-
dy night Oct, 18, for the ben-
elit of the church. We cordially
invite everyone to come and he .
with us. - - w
JUST US.
MM 1
.,1
gN
"g
( ahoicutMuqishV]
I IF VDU THINK MORE
I OF A LOTTA OLE
KA9BA4.es THAN WiAJAJIA
AE WORLD SERlES
LOvLDNT STAY (N
KEovc OtE GARDE NJ,
• (,
od
d"
# isn’t
w
WuAku
could be avoided.
. -- ,.1-,.—1.1 ... .......— • ' •
Mirror Want Ads Pay.
eeeeeoveveveveeeve0e*000e4
asv.
i-
ANDY GUMP
RE *' »
Llns
" h "
■ * 7
, /#maa
dlilltuulidilLamlLLT
Theres a peculiar bug sweeping over the world today that
baa already sunk its teeth Into millions. • giatmemm
—m-- . 'K-TOir I • ,
Ha name is Radio. f
vth."fukxtme"mwe.) .
f/D4 61 7 IEK FEASr
All Eo aLp /
wAfw ret . P
THM X
Takes the “static” out
FRIDAY NIGHT
. l .o•
liEEHE ; , -
• FRIDAY NIGHT
f HENRY P! L-
AR: mu 6
> AGAI I
(Tuge‛ I f KJ STS —7-
sssm"Fga
The- average yield of paper
pulp timber from seventy acres
of land was required to print the
annual State Fair edition of The
Dallas Morning News, issued
. —ATrTHE
tors from other communities
were present. ni
There will he a box supperat
ment from many parts of the
State..
This editoin of The News was
one of the largest ever printed
in Dallas, consisting of 204
pages in nineteen sections, each
copy weighing nearly three
pounds. It was produced in the
News plant without interrup-
tion, of the daily publication of
the several editions of The
News, The Dallas Journal and
the Semi-Weekly Farm News.:
Paper used amounted to 240
rolls weighing in the aggregate
•
• . ■ 0 u, ' 8
■4 4
ANPg2
.r^arr*'1" -
Ne man l« quite s goo at he
thinks hit son-inHaw should be.
BA%TEQ MW'IM J
DOWN! _
gfa
^3^
s-o-nusa
the little fellew piped. ‘Don’t be
frald. Hle's dead all right. W
lamthed him and beat him and jumped
.on hilm till- - .
"Here the boy noticed th# mihistef
for the first time—'until,' he wound up
j a low, plous voice, ‘God called him
home.’ "—Los Angeles Times.
Vacation Echo —
315,055 pounds, or approximate some of the great loss by Hre '
ly 157 1-2 tons, and the printing
III/III i1' tIL
iaytil itilUE
2"
Mrs. Hugh Quim and tle
daughter Bettye Ann of Tyler
arerexpected to arrive in Gilmer
Friday for a visit with Mrs.
Quin’s parents Mr. and Mrs, C.
C. Crosby.
Seldom cun you make an intimate
hriend of a populhr man. Too many
clal him. - , ..
The world will spank you harder — .-15;.-----"
than your paEentsaever did. -h Pale BoostehpMkb and the fol-
TUBBY ;
(cone 0,, -tot our
VooQ HEAVY HITTERS,
1 ’ I’ll STAND ‛EM*oN
PAGETHREM
weg-Fi -
required the use of 6,207 pounds
of ink. This paper and ink
chatter B enverbiostbett " a bi has 2PF2g among quite
of Gilmer forAObetter rural life.
To that endey representativ
group has organized the Hi+and
umf every wife
. ard maid
Li a full-fledged
— eWizen?
•i- nAttle Office Sunshane
=e--M=eMMMN
JAMES NEws
Our school opred Mohdy,
ret.«L with good attendenee.
The teachers for the following
year are Misses Ou id a Ferguson
and Annie Foster. With the co-
operation of both teachers, par-
ents nad pupils we are expeet-
ing to make the ensuing termia
Mr. J imT(< Reynolds of Lhg
View was a pleasaht cllef in br
community Wedstla ight.r
Miss Myrtis Grow spent Sal- ,
urday night with Miss Mildred
Hall. I .
Mr. C. H. Martin visited' in
Wills Point Sunday,,. . . ..
Mr. and Mrs. J. y. Greet tit
‘Graceton were the guests of Mr.
and Mrs. J. D. Beaty Sunday. •'
Miss Lois Lester visited Miss
Myrnese Gran Saturday night, •
Mr. and Mrs. John Williams
were visitors in the home of Mr
and Mrs. MePeek Sunday. 1"
Miss Mildred Hall of Long-
view spent the week end with
home folks here. .
K. Y. P. U. was well attended
Sunday night and several visi-
Moroni Hamberlin, Vice .Sec.,
Mrs. Ethel Bradshaw. These of
ficers, with the following direc-
tors eonstitute the governing
board: J. Lindsey. T. L. McGin-
ty, Ernest Jones, Mrs. Ida Fin
trel, and Mrs. Reva Dalton.
A call has been made for these
officers and directors to meet in
executive session at the Kelsey
church Monday, October 15th at
7:00 p. m. to Formulate phans
for the season. From rumors
heard it is very probable that
ihis club will develop, into a very
interesting organization and will
y,
Q / ‘
"pne
u"T2
Age maks som people had
others stusborm.
ha-mu
in a little town vn yr enetts
come to yot tunetaf.
( OICHTOVERTHPAN,
STRIKE THREE
KEQ OUT !’
ETICK AQKHet RAITEO
UDTAEQ “
mean much to the people .of that
region • LoUIsFBOyLR 4158 OF PAPER
M/"
I .
z,9
TSShsmnahi"
' Po"
-
ot
Some Heroes Are Not Appreciated.
evess I'M )
not STOF# J
f
1
*
grandfather.
"I am trying to recite che Greek
alpha Mt." answered the sehoofboy.
" am glad to hear It I thought
were practicing the choruw of •
new popular song."
, ~
Prnicious Effect
Rate Pfeut—My bey. I hest yot
hhye been most tecalcitrabt
Boy—Pall yorbelf togethen fled,
fbu’te been at those cromword
again — Stray Storles.
Hot ar’a Bob?
titMar (npenking of little boy)-
. H« hns Ma mother’ eyes.
W>(her-A art hit tather’s month.
hna—And Me brother’s trousets.
—jit-Bits. ’ ’ ■
Met rut rw .....
jet Greece on the radlo
ell, no wiH h «■ *
E
"trinometet ip 4npls a irirmhzle tlint
masuresifselt.. ll i on 11|<> prineiule
nt all surrerinn :ti4 rimg i i!nz ee.
vices. whieh iim* trierhemetis fhe
slence of ths imetirrmnhts ot tri
angles.
• ---------------—- ---------
immente Monolith
The largest’ marhle monolith tn the
world, standing sixty:fve net high
measuring eighteen feet aeross and
weighing forty tons, lias heen extractd
ftom the famous niarile qunrrles at
qararra. and will be presented to Mus-
sori for the new Fascist sthdium to
be erected at the Fariesina outside of
Rome. , » »
slight Miumndratondine ........................
«What‛s: the chhttrt" inquired e-efe--==
I
4
Barney Google," Walt and
Phyllis, J iggs and Maggie and
all the rest of the funnypaper
folks will l>c her Friday enight
for the Widow Zaner’s-wedding.--
Nee them at the High School
Auditorium. Admission 15 and
25 cents. ' 179 4td lw
ALL RIGH T ,•*«« SE‛ 2
LISGEN TO 4 uv’AAK
E" cweeg!gat45)
w2gj,«
PAGE FOUR
LU.—
t TREY DIDNT GET A
I AiT oQ RUN OFFA
! ME-THAT’s Aow
k I Do IT ! .
9 r
No one to immuhe. If it hasn’t bitten you yet, your time .
wil eome. For somhe month# you will lie absolutely helpless
In it# power. You may later recover from its effects uffi---
cientlyto go about your daily wiks and attend to your
social duties, but you will never fyly recover.
The experience is indescribably delightful and the pleasure —=
never-ending—if— TherA aumce-Gu “IF* in radio.
We repeaf, the pleasure is never-ending, if you get a good
radio receiyer.and good accensorler,
And you overcome the ir",hy carefureading of radio ad-
vertising. Like everything else. Eod radio sets and acces-
sories lire (he advertised ones? tuddekh'c. pay to advertise
fBMtSSOR NOODLE
r* _L DerProfessof:
I th
Biddy hnd listened with interest to
the vacation story of the family next
door,' coasisting of the mother, fath •
and four- rathet small children, who
enjoyed an excursion trip to Ohio,
lenving Indinmpolts nt midnight and
arriving n their destmaiton early the
foliawing merning. -
"Where did iltef sleep? curiously
- asked Buddy, Mother carfully ex-
pintned Hint on that parifeilat kind of
excursion there wP ns shcper.
"Oh." ixelafiue ihe aistonislied
Roddy. * they «i u) nit dult togn
go beur inetmjeaa News,
. Distance FtMer Swift
With Ilie am of a new cafeintina
mnchtne mrenie by In J. K. Iowe
of the college et wiilap mid Mary
mi nirman ean '<-lt iruniustanr how
fr he is tow) his e«»WI i a nvnner nun
use Ilie detier t"it run: e finder. Tin
„HEIR HEADS - OLE
i VMOKE-BAl I BAKTEQ
IK)THE BOX,
Rb.i 4
oyvah
ee
t 7 ' ' ’ - 1
/ i/A 5j‛
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ,
' Ju
13 - Fb
I ee fid (
need to
start a row
about th*,
poor men’s pay
Most wive9 .2
collect men’s S
What if the world isn't reformed
While you live? The human race haa
a million years ahead of it yet.
• Ka ' —
A great man, reading his biography
x knows there are large sections that
the biographer: missed entirely.
f \ —
To hurry too much shows that you
are not the. ’captain of your time,
though you may bo of your soul.
TALE’S SOFT ENDING
I DIDN’T ALTER FACTS
' Representative Homer Lyon of North
Carolina’ waS talking tn Whiteville
about an Old World complication.
“When-America stepped in," he said,
"a very plausfble yarn, was told us,
but this plausible yarn didn't altet a
pretty horrid state of affair*. . ■ .
. "A minister was calling on a lady
when her youug son galloped into ths
room. High over his head he held a
rat by the tail.
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Tucker, George. The Gilmer Daily Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 181, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 11, 1928, newspaper, October 11, 1928; Gilmer, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1442294/m1/3/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Upshur County Library.