The Gilmer Daily Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 25, 1933 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Gilmer Mirror and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Upshur County Library.
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THE GILMER DAILY MIRROR, THURSDAY, MAY 26, 1933.
ago.
113
€
A
K
to E. F. Aldredge.
61-d3c.
P
fh
Robertson, Jewell Arnold, Ira
"L
quarter of
proximately
a
a
/
come confused.
—L
HERE’S A POSTTON—
In- 1880, kerosene constitut- against the medium in
it appears. This will put
truthful
I
A.
Ad
0-
Se-
tain business. . . .
West Mt H.D.
Constables,
J
ROSEWOOD
A RIG CHANGE
woman’s . club,
organizing a
. I
az
4c
I
5c
Union Hill W.H.D., Tuesday,
L
1'
•OROTHY JARNii
••i -
A
Q
I
\
k
$
!
0
$
J
r
hil
(
Y
-
OF ALL KIND/
A.
V.
on canning and a trip to
woods. We are sorry not
have been in all along,
10c
71c
$4,00
$2.00
40e
which
the
6c
4c
10c
the
to
and
WHIPPING CREAM
Half Pint __________
SWEET MILK
.. a place calling for some-
one who is capable of writing
shorthand, keeping books, do-
ing secretarial work and, most
of all, absorbing and mastering
the general principles of a cer-
One year, in advhnce -
Six monthe .
One month —----
BUTTER MILK
Quart__
Two Deliveries Daily
5 a. m. and 5 p. m.
FOOD AND DRUGS
LAW PROPOSALS AN-
to now
guid and .
List of Petit-
Jurors For The
Special Term
A--
Fire, Auto, Tornado and Other
INSURANCE-
L.
A.
Congressman of 3rd District:
Morgan G. Sanders.
District Judge, 7th District:
Walter G. Russell.
District Attorney:
G. L. Florence.
District Clerk:
Floyd Bailey.
Game Warden:
J. W. Bryce.
County Judge:
J. R. Hinson.
County Attorney:
Curtis E. Hill.
County Clerk:
W. M. Smith.
Sheriff:
J. M. Seago.
Tax Collector:
Nat. J. Harrison.
Co. Supt. Education: .
.. O. J. Beckworth. »
Tax Assessor:
Precinct No. 1:
J. T. Darden.
Precinct No. 2:
F. O. Brezeall.
Precinct No. 3:
D. F. Floyd.
Precinct 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.
Charlie Owen.
County Treasurer; ,
W. A. Lunsford.
Publie Weigher:
R. H. Ray.
Commissioner, Preet. No. 1:
E. A. Cobb.
Commissioner, Peet. No. 2:
Frank Robinson.
Commissioner, Preet. No. 3:
J, (Press) Davis.
Commissioner, Preet. No. 4:
Marshall Holmes.
Precinct Officers.
Justice of the Peace.
Mrs. Lillie Dee Smith, teach-
er of the Bible class entertain-
ed the young folks last Thurs-
day night withea big chicken
Itinerary Of
Home Agent
tary Milk House
T. B, Tested Cons.
Sweet Milk, quart.------
Butter Milk, qL-......
$
rt at sud-
orry over
the noise
ike, feel
—
District and County
Directory <
$qE
petroleum monoply is proposed
by the’ Japanese government.
-------
B ............ f .....
Texas’ Young Farmers and Home Makers
TH Er EFFECT ON EAST
TEXAS OF MILLION-
- ' BARREL PRODUCTION
I
J. s. warns dairy
Gilmer’s Most Sanitary Dairy.
PHONE 1M
—.....uitiiMtMMHiii
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rT"
we 0
/%
Miss L. M. Dilworth our Co.
H. D. Agent and Mr. Ander- ,
son, of the State Department
See
N. J. HARRISON
for
;•.......
WALNUT CREEK
L_____
CoPm)
-4. ««S
Dr. Miles’ Nervine
wada in two formaI
Efervescent Tablet.
Both an the same
thereineHwthn
I quid er Mum
eent Tablets at an
drag stores. >
a Price $100
M l
B Charles McM enus
J C MSLLO--SAYAL- CIRY
I TuNG !$ OFF TONNT-
1 | CNT POSSIBIY <,|T To
5--:-- 4KWuTwe •RTT
organizing a woman’s . club, Durine Johnson who spent
the number to' show an interest last week with homefolks.
For excelling in practical demomsrations of better farming ' and
home making these four farm boys and girl» will represent Texas
4-H clubs at the; National 4-H Club Camp in Washington, D. C. lune
15 to 21. Extension Service officiate at Texas A. and M. College have
announced. The boys will be sent to Washington by the Texas Bank- .
ers‘ Association, the girls by funds earned by the 4-H Club Refresh-
ment Stand at the A. aixl M. Short Course. They are, from left to
right, Laura Barton, Lubbock; Mamie Fisher, Sinton; Morris Wil-
liamson, Bryan; Herbert Rittiman, Converse.
PAGEMo
Ba
know the real facts, ha* be-
ed 75 per cent of the products
refined from crude oil. Today responsibility for.
has alwaysi ben insufficient
hence we are a few who still
hope to get together and get
in for the June demonstration
Quart ________
SWEE MILK ,
Pint____________ --
Home Churned or Bulgarian
Mrs. C. C. Helms is still con-
fined to her bed, very ill. Sweet Cream, 4-2 pint
Mrs. G. B Stanley and nori ___________
advertising squarely upon the
manufacturer, distributor, or
dealer.
The truth or falsity of adver-
rising will be measured essen-
tially by the same standards as
those employed to determine
the truth or falsity of label
statements.
f WOW l 0 HOKk CU f
4 owE EVERbor- S
l on wtiL -Im COINC To,
* 1 Tug PnaTF To Koest
akL AND «nMoY.E2eF
(679 r
--——o ........
Airplanes in’ 1931 flew more
than 94.300,000 miles in the
United States, consumed nearly
12,000,000 gallons of gasoline,
carried 1,900,000 passengers.
of Health were in our com-
munity Monday, May 22.
While Miss Dilworth has met
several times for the purpose of
Gillin, Loyd Brown, G.
Biggs, Claud Bowden, J.
more than five pounds a day.
This means the-early coming
of the pumping period for East
Texas when it could possibly,
, under curtailment, have been
staved off for two or three
■ n .years. It will cost producers
$6,000 each to put their wells
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
SWEET POTATO Plants 50c
per 1,000. Fresh cows in ex-
change for dry cows. Nicely
furnished five-room house, all
conveniences, cow to milk, for
rent, cheap. J. R. Penn.
61-d3c.
......
It seems a minority of oil
men want unbridled production
there, while the majority have
sought curtailment so that each
barrel of oil lifted above the
ground each day may be con-
sumed immediately. This ap-
pears reasonable; and it should
in addition, make prosperity
for this state which is so de-
pendent upon oil. We are all in-
terested in preserving the oil
we have underground; we want
it as long as we can possibly
have it; and we want to share
in the prosperity it brings just
as long as we possibly can. We
want no waste of it whatever.
Waste certainly is now oc-
curring in East Texas, and ac-
cording to the majority of oil
men whose opinions we hear
from time to time, that field is
being depleted with unneces-
sary rapidity, the. present rate
of prodnction of 1,000,000 bar-
rels a day resulting in alarm-
ing losses of the reservior pres-
sure which causes the oil to
come to the surface. Under
strict curtailment, we find this
pressure declined at the rate
of six tenths of one pound a
day: under the present volume
of production it is declining
Today busjness conditiNs
look much (righter than at
any time for a year or more.
’ Congress seems to have laid
' aside all personal and partizan
fceling and is cooperating with
1 the president in his efforts to
stew given in honor of Miss
are spending this week with
her parents Mr. and Mrs. Will
Spencer at Pritchett.
Mrs. Mary Dillard returned
to her home at Indian Rock
Saturday after spending a
month with her daughter Mrs.
Hugh Oliver.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Garrett of
Dallas are here on a visit to
her parents Mr. and Mrs. Wal-
ter Aaron.
Mr.* Frank Beene and family
and Mrs. Mollie Green of Sand
Hill visited at the homes of
Jesse Jones and Edd Green last
Sunday.
Mr. George Thornton and
family spent Sunday at Stamps.
Mr. Ben Oliver and" sisters
from Graceton spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Jones.
----- —o--‘
Among other. by-products,
the, oil industry annually pro-
duces about a half billion
pounds of wax.
-----o ...........—
--------
Dairyland
Phone 72 .
Gilmer’s Most Mod-
ern Dairy /
With New Equipment.
New Milking Bam and Sani-
billion dollars in freight .reve-
nue from oil products.
---o---—-- • X
Approximately 20 gallons of
gasoline are extracted from
every barrel of crude oil re-
fined.
—---o--
Of 1,698 oil tankers on the
seas at this time, 522 are
American owned, 544 British
owned.
Of the more than 150,000
railroad tank cars in service
today, the large majority are
privately owned by oil com-
panies. "
+ Railronds drmually receive ap
the ptiblic, which would like to
EV Bl
A proposed draft . revising
the present Food and Drugs
Act was completed today and
submitted tolthe Department
of Justice for review, it was an
nounced by Assistant Secretary
of Agriculture, R. G. Tugwell.
The most important provi-
sion in the proposed draft is
the expansion of the Act to in-
clude cosmetics and to regu-
late advertising, of foods,
drugs, and cosmetics.
The new draft does not pro-
pose censorship of advertising
in advance of its use. How-
ever, under its provisions false
advertising may be penalized
by prosecution in the Federal
courts. Prosecution for false
advertising will be directed
against the source rather than
■
LOST—Pair horn rimmed
glasses. Finder please return
-AN 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
the Tyler Commercial College,
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.
' ~-----
R. H. Muerther, of St. Louis '
received $5 sent back by a
customer who stole it 20 years
the major companies will . be
able, with their huge cash re-
serves. to buy in a lot of
“broke” independents at sac-
rifice prices.
The Railroad Commission
and the Attorney General
should do something to prevent
this from taking place.
I
. I
e
lead the country out of the de-
pression. Business leaders have
promised prompt aid in plac-
ing the unemployed to work,
and the public, tong stricken,
is becoming convinced that the
“economic millennium” is at
last at hand. The last few
weeks have made a marvelous
change in the attitude of the
people in all parts of the
country.
Burnett, N. F. Williams,
• NOUNCED BY TUGWELL Arthur L. Moore, B. F. Camp.
SAY i i,
Yov w at (omiN
AROUnD To PA
for vF Suit?
,y
•I
‘7
it constitutes only five per
cent.
"L . ......—
Glenwood ,4-H. Friday, May
26. 9:30 a.m.
Union Ridge 4-H. Tuesday,
May 80, 8:30 a.m.
Union Hill 4-H. Tuesday,
May 30, 10:00 a.m..
A
P.
— —h
Many and divergent are the
claims heard as to what is
likely to happen in the East
Texas oil field if the present
rate of production—roundly
one million barrels daily—con-
tinues. So heated has become
the controversy over East Tex-
as and so far apart in their
Miss Louisa Stephenson is
I on the ick list.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Barton
i spent Sunday with. Mr. and
i Mrs. Loyd Knight.
। Mr. Wilson Johnson, _ Pete
Johnson and Wife of Rhones-
boro spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Rainey Johnson.
Rev. Kermit Pritchett was
a pleasant caller in our com-
. munity Monday. ■" '
Rev. W. R. Arrington, who
has been sick for the past two
weeks, is very much improved.
Mr. J. R. Johnson, Jr., had
the misfortune of losing a
horse last week.
Remember our singing dates
every' first and third Sunday
nights. We invite all singers to
be with us. ,
Mirror Job Prmting is better
and it costs less. Phone 179.
Precinct No. 1:
B. F. Bledsoe.
Precinct No. 2:
* C. C. Coppage.
Precinct No. 3:
S. Truman.
Precinct No. 4:
J. W. Gaston.
Precinct No. 5:
M. C. Bell.
Precinct Np. 6: •
W. E. Williams.
Precinct No. 7:
J. E. Wood.
Precinct No. 8:
J. W. Willeford.
The oil industry, in 1932 pro-
duted 2,409,(MW) tons of asphalt.
4' ------o----—
The creation of a national
Pmi
( I mo$V HeRRY AND
J CET ou C tot TAE p
\ HOUSE I
-—Somt Bill I
.CoLLECTOR (
MCRABS PE \
71
District Court of Upshur
County, Judge Brooks
*• Presiding.
Second Week.
J. W. Futrell, Charlie Blun-
dell, F. S. Green, Chff John-
son. Author Vessels; A. F.
Burnett, H. B. Lester, Buddie
Fink, John Stracener, Lon
Caffey, E. L. Barnett, Jim
Marsh, John McDonald, H. E.
t
LOWEST HATES
W. E. HUINN 1H 1
WAKE UP YOUR
•LIVER BILE-
WITHOUT-CALOMEL
And You’D Jump Out of Bed in
the Morning Rarin’ to Go y
U yom M wour ana gunk and U“ wora
loke punk, don"wullow a, lot al nalta,
mimer water, oil, hakdive eundy or chewin
cum and expeet them to make you ruddenly
weet and buoyant and full at sunahtne
or they can’t do it. They only non the
bowels and a mon movement doesn’t Eet at
the enuse. The raaan® ior your down-and-out
teeline to your Iiver. I should pour out two
porinds al liqula bilZln to your bowels daily.
Inthis bUa to nes flowing tredly, your food
flaaan’t digest. ItJust decaye in the bowela
Oaa bloats up your stomseh. You have a
thdek, bad taste aad your breath to foul,
ein otten breaks out la blemishes. Yeur head
aches and you feel down and out. You.- whole
"gt"eapotanod good, old cRrEwa
UTTLB LIVER PILLS to get thrme twe
pounds ot be flowing freely and made you
kee “up and ap." They contain wonderful,
geotie vogetble extraets, amazing
wben It eommes to making the bile flow freely. .
Bat domn’t oak (or ll w pill- Aak tar Carter’s
utue User Pilla Look for the name Carter-.
16. Liver Piie oo the red Iabel. Rement e
ebmtitutezcatalletose 019316M..e
-------------- ----------
veeecceevennceecceeeeeeeee
These New Prices
Effective Jan. 15.
• 2 . ■ ; Vs c i . ’. J
• 02tmwwg0es -
DR. T. S. RAGLAND
and
DR. MADISON S. RAGLAND
Offices Over First Nat. Bank
Phones No. 6, 171 and 103
0AK~TaWN SANiT A RI UM
X-Ray and Other Electrical
Equipment. Emergency,
Surgical and Medical ;
Cases Received
DR. H. J. CHILDRESS
elmwootTsanitarium
New Modern, Equipment
Electric Modelities for 1#
ment, as well as X-Ray Aha
Fluoroscope ’ *
J.C.WINN,M.D. ,
' gilmeFrotary
® ^5.
Meeting Every Friday Noon
At The Hays Hotel
_______ ____________________________• / I,
r. c-
•___
WHnNyous
trifles, can’t ba
that children
g,,
■
. ..
on the pump; and since there
are 10,000 wells and more the
total added investment will be
above $60,000,000. We wonder,
with- cheap oil and badly de-
pleted or non-existent reserves
and credit, where the small
operators will get this money.
It looks like ruin for many of
them.
We may be wrong, but it
looks like the State authorities
have played right into the
hands of the major companies
hi their professed course of
protection for the independ-
ents. The major companies are
getting cheap oil to fill their
depleted storage; and we shall
see that, if something is not
done, the time will come when
eiwiiwi'......"i
E ' "1
hope to be a busy class with
Miss Dilworth to lead us an-
other year.
Miss Dilworth’s splendid talk
should have been heard by
many more. We meet agait
June 5. , ,,
Mr. Anderson is doing'a
wonderful work. His purpose
and ability in delivering is not
being given the attention it
should get, we fear. His talk
on malaria, typhoid and sani-
tation, followed by the dreadful
yet preventable disease, pella-
gra, was good and should not
be neglected.
Winifred Jones, W. W. Grider,
W. T. Spencer, Frank Weath-
ers, J. E. Denson, A. L. Waller,
A. H. Lange.
Third Week. v
R. C. Vivian, Sam Dacus, C.
A. Shirley, Leon Fountain, J..
L. Murrell, J. L. Logan, Wesley
Barber, F. B. Dow, Leroy Land
era, Raymond Mattox, B. M.
Alford, D. A. Fleet, T. J.
Adkinson, R. G. Sparks, R. W.
Spencer, C. E. Dixon, Howard
Steelman, E. M. Branch. Dan
Spencer, Howard Douphrate,
Sam Green, J. M. Hough, J. W.
Trice, IL M. Lester, W. L. Car-
penter, W. B. Hollinshead, W.
L, Andrews, F. M. Hill, Ivan
Arrington, C. F. Fink.
Fourth Week.
Walter Stewart, Will Chand-
ler, C. L. Hurt, Lee Mings,
Carson Vick, Lonnie Williams.
P. J. Richardson, C. B. Buie,
H. S. Higgenbotham, D. A.
Richardson, J. D. Loyd, Ray-
mond Smrt, Henry Marsh,
Claude Nelson, Orville Rut-
ledge, Alvin Spencer, J. C. Hil-
burn, N. A. Pilcher, G. P.
Powell, Clyde Baugh, Arch
Armstrong, John McKnight, C.
N. Taylor. T J. Craton, Pasch-
THE
Gilmer Daily Mirror
Founded Mar. 14, 1916, by Geo. Tucker
Tucker a Laschinger Publisher
Ge®. Tucker -........T Editor
R. H Lanchinzer Busines» Mzr
Entered at the Pont office nt Gilmer,
Texas, hr Second Class Mail Mutter.
Subscription Kates
May 30, 2 p.m.
Latch 4-H., Wednesday, May,
31, 9:30 a.m
Latch W.H.D. Wednesday,
May 81, 2 pm.
al Morris, Reese Covin, C.
Witcher, H. R. Cole, P.
Wade, H. L. Helms.
Irritable and blue-—ten to
one if• your nerves. e
Dem’ wait until i you over-
wrought nerves Hf kept you
swake half the night and paved
tt® way for another miserable
dny. Take two thspoonsuls of
DeMiles’ Nervine and enjoy the
rabrf that followa. Take two
mor before you go to’ bed.
Sleep—and wake up ready for
the day’s duties or pleasures.
-4 "TT .
----------
ldd। a —
■r"
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Tucker, George. The Gilmer Daily Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 25, 1933, newspaper, May 25, 1933; Gilmer, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1442700/m1/2/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Upshur County Library.