The Gilmer Daily Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 43, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 2, 1933 Page: 2 of 4
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. THE GILMER DAILY MIRROR, TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1983.
PAGE TWO
7
Texas Will Get
.1
R. B. Nelson.
42-d3p,
Starting from a waste
oil
■
J. J. Crawford
41-d3p
eqai pment
cities
Offices Over Fi
the Mirror Office.
dwtf.
SILENCE OF THE GRAVE
men.
STRAYED NOTICE
3
a veritable bedlam of apecuia- the.Tyler Commercial College,
42-dwp.
place.
i,
On a wager Jose Galanedrera
Barrameda,
of
glasses
1
Aowing treely and make
Hu,
by
By.Charles McManus
H
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'■ •
NOW
$
ME- ubas
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5ELF:
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wdmacuenrkn
-
—
I
t
Palace Beat
Located in Palace’
John
Rusk
the
will
Longview, Marshall and
gore was summoned.
FOR RENT: House, six rooms
and sleeping porch. New,, all
modern. Near ward school. Call
New financing which
administration's program
HELL0"ALD STOCKaN,
I How$ Yot>R HEART ?
Sunday night the fighters be-
lieved the fire was under con-
trol, but it broke out anew in
the Trinity plant. Three other
refineries were in close proxim-
ity, but were not damaged.
Gladewater, Texas, May 1-
Flaming oil wirtually burned it-
self out late Monday after raz-
ing a small refinery, causing
extensive damage to another
and forcing scores of laborers
from their homes,,.. i
Bur den’task for liver pilla. Ask ter Cartapa
Latue Hvr Pila. Look for the name Cartars
leue Lve Pills on the red label. Reent a
wubeututeQceseletorea QiicM.Ce
MOR
NoW
GLAND
t. Bank
. ■
tity of oil.
Fire-fighting
from the near-by
led "up and up." They
hermlea, caoUa i
wheniteomesto
P
.b
— Completely Equipped — Ex-
pert Work. Phone 200.
JUtS, G. T. ANDERSON
of Sanlucar De
Spain, drank 40
wine.
I
IJLr
•I that geatest r of
Congressman of 3rd District:
Morgan G. Sanders.
Distriet Judge, 7th District:
GET OUT OF THE WASTER
CLASS
FOR SALE: 50-acre farm, one
mile of Court House best loca-
tion in the county, priced to
sell for quick sale. Address P.
0. Box 218, Gilmer, Texas.
41-d3.
------
Two Refineries
Badly Damaged in
Gladewater Fire
■
-CASTL0O‘S
BARBER SHOP AND NEWS
STAND
District and County
Directory
e Cof"EE AND RoLL
IN TH—•—
SAVE JOHN PUSKIN
C GAR BANDS/
K’ ■
E
Stephens,
Walter G. Russell.
District Attorney:
G. L. Florence,
District Clerk;
Floyd Bailey.
County Judge:
J. R. Hinson.
County Attorney:
Curtis E. Hill.
County Clerk;
W. M. Smith.
Sheriff:
J. M. Seago.
Tax Collector;
Nat. J. Harrison.
Tag! Assessor:
Charlie Owen.
County Treasurer;
W. A. Lunsford.
Public Weigher:
R. H. Ray.
Commissioner, Preet. No. 1:
E. A. Cobb.
Commissioner, Pact. No. 2:
Frank Robinson.
Commissioner, Preet. No. 3:
J. (Press) Davis.
Commissioner, Preet, No. 4:
Marshall Holmes.
Precinct Officers.
Justice of the Peace.
Precinct No. 1:
B. F. Bledsoe.
Precinc No. 2: *
C. C. Coppage.
Precinct No. 3:
S. Truman.
Precinct No. 4:
J. W. Gaston,.-
Precinct No. 5:
M. C. Bell.
Precinct No. 6:
W. E. Williams.
Precinct No. 7:
J. E. Wood. - ’
Precinct No. 8:
J. W. Willeford.
Constables.
Precinct No. .1:
J. T. Darden.
Precinct No. 2:
F. O. Brezeall.
Precinct No. 3:
D. F. Floyd.
Precinet No. 4 :
W. F. Steelman.
Precinct No. 5:
Hugh Smith.
Precinct No. 6: ,
J. M. Duke.
Precinct No. 7:
E. T. Honeycutt.
Precinct No. 8:
Harry Helms. (
County Chairman:—
A. L. Bradfield.
HEART IS ALL---
RIGHT - but YOUv • Gor
SOMENERVE-iL HAVE
MY HUSAND FRE,
Vou,------—-/
--1 _Z) - /
Permanent Waves, 1.50 & 3.50.
ANNETTE
BKUTY SHOP
Room 106, Hays Hotel.
Telephone 401-402.
—
i of
il-
Early
Three More Threatened Before
Blaze Is Brought Under
Contel. *
xpert Barbers (
, Bullock and Castloo.
A Ask your dealer
for new Fcemiumn
Catalog. More
Havana te-
showing more than a seasonal
upturn and prices of such corn .
• entreete, emanina
the bile Sow (rooty.
71
aamm»n. "*
paaMup
u. KOEN A co. f l
Shreveport, U Distributors
’ - -
i
Business activity had been
FOR RENT: Frnished or um
furnished apartment. Mrs.
Louis Williams at Reall Bros.
42-d3p.
LI.
Herbert Law, an oiler, of Wau-
keagan. Ill., was torn off when
he was caught in machinery,
but he was unhurt.
HERE’S A POSITION-
. . . a place calling for some-
one who is capable of writing
shorthand, keeping books, do-
FOR SALE: White 50-1b. Ice
Box and Steel Day Bed. F. H.
Kiel, 408 W. Tyler, St., Gilmer.
41-d3p.
LOST: Billfold containing two
school vouchers. Name inside.
Reward. R. A. Crawford, care
r Shop
eber Shop
I
"efore Harry Houdini died.
lai 1 magiciays
agreed with his wife that ne
0 s
the general principles of a cer-
tain business. . ..
CAN YOU FILL IT?
No! not unless you are trained.
Boys and girls, will you sit
back and depend on dad for a
living after you graduate from
high school? The finest pre-
paration we can think of for
any young person is a thorough
training, such as offered by
Harriet Woodward, sopho-
more at the University of
Washington, recently won the
intercollegiate women’s rifle-
shooting championship at Se-
attle.
baceo is now
used in JOHN
RUSKIN,making
it the greatest
cigar value at 5c.
Smoke the size
you prefer —-
Perftctg Extra or
Panttala.
AM the clothing worn
. ..
DR. T. 8. RAGHAND
and g
DR. MADISON S. RA
, ing secretarial work and, most
of all, absorbing and mastering
4 t -
5 0-
NOTICE: Mrs. Guy Holbert
will keep my office this week
and "will accept and credit
building and loan and farm loan
payments. A. L. Bradfield.
42-d3.
"n
51e
DOROTHY DABNIT "
%,/ VSTr-yur-FELSEEL
"a *, NM-MSA PA. oF MINE
M-g—LLGET Tou.Mooa Jon !
-THEB6S5L- FAKBAC K g-
would try to communicate with
her from the spirit world, al-
though he had long scoffed at
spiritualism. After his death
in 1926 .his widow watched and
waited for a message.
Finally , Mrs. Houdini confes-
sed that she had abandoned
• hope of ever having a com-
munication from beyond7 the
grave, and said: "The. silence
. is impenetrable; there fa only
a void.”
The Soiety of Physical Re-
search refuses to accept as au-
hentic any of the many re-
ported messages from the "oth-
er world."
After 48 years of painstaking
investigation of thousands of
alleged communications through
mediums and relatives of de-
AllGypsies have been banish
ed from New Zealand because
it is alleged that they have
been hypnotizing and robbing
‘bankets. Most folks would
think themselves lucky if they
could hypnotize a banker long
enough to negotiate a loan.
- —---o-----
Mortgages, deeds, . vendor’s
lien notes, bills of sale, etcw at
---— 0—---
The famous Hope diamond,
named for Loord Hope, a former
owner, and reputed to have
brought ill luck to its various
possessors, is in the news
•gain. Mrs. Evelyn McLean of
Washington, its present owner
wants to borrow some money
on it and other jewels to en-
able her to retain control of the
Washington Post. The Hope
diamond is slightly more than
44 carats in weight and is said
to have cost the Me Lea ns $180,-
000 in 1909.,
i A
A Jersey bull yearling, crop
off right and swallow fork in
the left ear. Taken up six
months ago. Owner can recover
by paying for this notice and
keep of the yearling. Butler
Spratt, R. 6, on the Bradley
—l k ....
Tarns ME »S IM
OFFIE Now- PLL I
Er t* KID ws,
‛ JOO BACK-OR f
Atop
make necessary may send the
national debt back to its peak
of 1919, when it was something
over 26 biHion dollars. This
was decreased to 16 billion by
1930, but def kite since then
have brought it up to more
than 21 billion. “hese are dizzy
figureaienough to sara us
Miff if we could comprehend
them.
Mrs., Rachel Levins of St.
Louis asked a warrant for as-
sault against Mrs? Catherine
O’Brien because the latter cut
down Mrs. Irvine's clothes
line.
Phones No. 6, 171 and 103
gdAg, GILMER ROTARY
® a,
Meeting Every Friday Noon
At The Hays Hotel
See
N. J. HARRISON
— for
Fire, Auto, Tornado and Other
INSURANCE. ......
modities as wheat, cotton, and
sugar had been making rapid
gains when the president's
announcement of- the tempor-
ary ahandonment of the gold
standard by the United States
and his request for authority,
to inflate the currency created
pit Sunday in an unexplained
manner, the fire kipped over
protecting walls, set off ex-
plosions at storage tanks and
swept clean an area of several
acres. Four firemen were over-
come by carbon monoxide gas
and Ware sent to a hospital.
Three of them later were dis-
missed. - . ) ..
The Gregg refinery. in the
southern edge of • Gladewater
and in what was known as Re-
finery Town, was destroyed
with a loss estimated at 97,500.
The Trinity Refinery, less than
100 yards away, suffered a
97,000 loss, but was not destroy
ed. Favorable winds swept the
flames away from a battery f
storage tanks, confining the-
Tririty damage to a pump-
house, throe tanks and a quan-
CIGARS SATISFY
‘ IO SMOKERS-
Ivy Balmain, aged 10, of
Toronto, Ont., was in charge of
her four sisters, aged 8, 7, 6
and 2, on their journey from
England.
Tyler, Texas. This school is
accredited. It employs the
largest faculty of any school.
Business concerns prefer Tyler
trained 'employees. This paper
can arrange for a scholarship
in this school to the right per-
son at a very substantial dis-
count. Only ambitious young
people need apply. See The Gil-
mer Mirror.
ceased person, the nociety has
not found a single one which
has stood the test of ocleatific
examination. -
Yet many sincere persons be-
lieve that they have had such
communications, and no one
could convince them to the con
trary, so strong is the power of
belief and imagination.
SHO ALSPOWEHLIN ES
",m",T a N. PAng;
A heretofere, the present
controversy in Congress over
Muscle Shoals centers largely
around the question of building
government power transmis-
sion lines, as provided in the
Norris bill. Officials of private
power companies declare this
would be a waste of public
money, as existing lines are
adequate to gorge the terri-
tory within transmission dis-
tance.
President Willkie of the Com
monwealth & Southern . Cor-
poration; which owns the prin-
cipal power sysems in Ala.,
and Tenn., testified before the
House military eommittee that
even if the government insisted
on distributing power his cem-
panies would be wiling to
transmit it .under contract-at
less than the building and
operation of government lines
would cost. . .
It is an established principle
that the unnecessary duplica-
tion of utility facilities, wheth-
er power lines, railroads, com-
munication lines or what not,
increases the total burden of
overhead expenses which must
ultimately be paid by the pub-
lic—either in the form of
higher rates or in taxes to sup-
port government projects
which lose money.
Anyway the logical disposi-
tion of Muscle Shoals power
would be to use it for indus-
trial and domestic use as near
the point of generation as pos-
sible. Long distance transmis-
sion is expensive and wasteful,
whether by private companies
or by the government;
——o——-
-------------*
A quick flash of memory
prevented a depression suicide
at Pittsburgh a few days ago.
Mike Kopkotel, penniless and
despondent, jumped from a
bridge into the river, but upon
striking the water he swam
frantically for the shore. Up-
on being fished out he ex-
plained that on the way down
he suddenly remembered that
he had deposited $68 in an up-
town bank five years ago.
--------—
Five women, who got- to
pulling hair after their dogs
fought at Broadway and 72nd
street in New York City, had
to be separated by two police-
mmg
e
••••♦♦••♦♦•♦••••oooooooaoa
These New Prices
Effective Jan. 15.
SWEET MILK 71,
Quart__- 62
SWEET MILK A.
Pint____________ •
WHIPPING CREAM 1A
Half Pint________IvC
Home Churned or Bulgarian
BUTTER MILK F.
Quart —________ eC
Two Deliveries Daily
5 a. m. and 5 p. m.
J.S.WHITIS DAIRY
Gilmer’s Most Sanitary Dairy.
PHONE 153
eeceneeneccnencccceccncaa.
Any Pager or Magazine you
want. Jigsaw Puzzles, RiP
Cover Magazins 6 for 25c.
----mmmerer-wrummemmyerem--
OAK LAWN BANYtARf UM
X-Ray and Other Electrical
Equipment. Emergency, ,
/ Surgical and Medical
Cases Received
DR. H. J. CHILDRESS
ELMWOOD SANVIARIUM
New Modern Equipment
Electric Modelities for Treat-
ment, as well as X-Ray and
Fluoroscope
X C. WINN, M. D.
DRESS-MAKING
Plain and Fancy Sewing. |
Prices Reasonable. Satisfaction
Guaranteed.
MISS YOKKE
309 S. Montgomery. "Phone 51.
58522-dmoc.
the activity. Expectation of
materially higher price levels
for all basic raw materials has
caused not only such commodi-
ties as wheat, cotton, coffee,
rubber, and sugar to register
speetacular gains but it has
also stimulated speculation in
the so-called "inventory stocks”
corresponding to these com-
modities.
2758/j*
W. E. QUINN
Dairyland
Phone 72
Gilmer’s Most Mod-
ern Dairy
With New Equipment.
New Milking Barn and Sani-
tary Milk Hoose
T. B, Tested Cows.
Sweet Milk, quart 6c
Better Milk, _________ 4e
Sweet Cream, 1.2 pint ____10c
' THE
Gilmer Daily Mirror
Founded Mar. 14,1916, Geo. Tucker
Tucker a Publishers
Geo. Tucker ________ Editor
K II. tanchinger . — Mpeinene Mar-
Entered at the Post Office at Gilmer,
Texas, as Second Class Mail Matter.
Suhacriptin Rales
One year, in advance 44-00.
Sig months $2.00
One month ;e------40c
WAKE IIP YOUR
.LIVER BILE—
WITHOUT CALOMEL
And You’ll Jump Out of Bed in
the Morning Rarin* to Go
It you foot wour ana rank ana eKwoa
looks punk, don’t.awallow a lot of Mita,
I water, oll, laxative eandy ar chewing
gum and expoet thus to make you euddemly
aweet and budyant and lull at munehine
Voe they can"t do it. They move Oba
bowels and a mere movement dohen‛ «t M
the mum. The reason tor pour 4a— tot xg|
fading is your Hoar. It sbould pour oat two
- poundaoflquid billnto vourbomeladaly.
Irthis Mia b not fowdng treely. poor foot
donun’t digeat It loot duaw la the bowea
Gm bloata up your’ etomach Yom have a
tasek, bad taste and your breath b toul,
akin often breaks out la blemlshe. Yaw hen
aches and you tool down and eat. You whol
aystem is poinoned. d
edatake u>oM coo, old cAtiry
IFTLE LVER MUS to get ten tog
ii 0
Four Camps Under
Reforestry Plans
Washington, May 1—The
program for reforestation work
in Texas was the subject of a
conference Monday by Senator
Tom Connally with the chief
forester of the United States.
He was advised that it had
tentatively been decided to
etablish four camps in East
Texas, one each in the follow-
ing counties; Angelina, Trinity,
Polk and Newton. The work
would be on private land ex-
cept in Newton County, where
State land is available.
« ---—,,—
Dr. Augustus Trowbridge
dean of Princeton University’s
graduate school, resigned re-
cently at the age of 63 because
of poor health. He has the dis-
tinction of ' being popularly
known as “the most nearly
human member of the Prine-
ton faculty.” -
--O--
It is interesting to note that
Lieutenant Colonel Simon B.
Buckner, Jr., recently assigned
to duty as commandant of ca-
dets of the United States Mili-
tary Academy at West Point
fa the son of the famous Con-
federate general of that name.
—-------o ■
A Maine wet hailed with de-
light a court decision that one
can’t be arrested for buying
bootleg liquor, and suggested
that this confirmed the saying
that "every cloud has a silver
lining.” The Boston Herald
agrees, but adds that "un-
fortunately every" stomach
hasn't."
I
It's easy to hame the pres-
ent high cost of government
on the war. • /
But it isn't eonvineing. With-
in 25 years the National gov-
ernment has increased its
- spending by 730 per cent, and
most of that ccurred in post-
war days. Still more inexcus-
able is the fact that state and
local governments, which
have little todo with warfare,
increased 900 per cent and 645
per cent respeetively.
Discounting all war costs
and all the extraordinary ex-
penses made necessary by pres-
ent conditions, every form of
government has been extrava-
gant. New bureaus ami new
departments, each carrying
overhead, have been created by
the acore. Two employes are
often doing work that could be
more efficiently" accomplished
by one.
Our elected representatives
' introduce and pass bills that'
recklessly create new govern-
ment expenses or increase old
ones.
But—remember this—public
officials feel the weight of
public opinion. Only as we de-
mand less government, more
efficient government, cheaper
government, will we get it. The
ballot box is our only weapon
to fight increasing bureaucraey
and high taxation.
H. L. Hoard, editor, the
Union. Fort Atkinson, Wiscon-
sin, states a plain truth when
he says: “It is next thing to
a crime for a government to
spend more than its income.1
Every government should con-
sider itself just a collection of
families .... and should exer-
cise family common sense—get
out of the waster-class."
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Tucker, George. The Gilmer Daily Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 43, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 2, 1933, newspaper, May 2, 1933; Gilmer, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1442666/m1/2/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Upshur County Library.