The Gilmer Daily Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 112, Ed. 1 Friday, July 21, 1933 Page: 2 of 4
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J
PAGE TWO
THE GILMER DAILY MIRROR, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1983.
f
HERE’S A POSITION---
District
County
-
...
«'
23
Sheriff:
tiki
NEW BETHLEHEM
Trade in Gilmer.
\
%
thing tangibk may be reay toof beer has reduced the con-
.A
by promoted the cause of real
eh
Tornado
little baseball story
A
that
■
mnrgame at Elmira, N:
protested loudly,
serting that his absence
in
BUTTER MILK
5c
—
Quart
But more than that: Advertisements take the
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2%......
1 H
tives here last week.
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Don’t Miss The Advertisements
, eoncecvemreppeeevecccneevecnccmeoseccckecccccconcce
____ ____________________ ■ . *_ .... _________ ________ ______
11 r. ■,
By Charles McManus
!
TMY-WANT
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N8ge‘
WVN
Taking the Chase
Out of Purchase
the
since
TTn
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People are busy replanting
their gardens since the show*
er, making an effort to raise
Tyler, Texas,
accredited. It
i’ll
TELL PAPA
I ABOUT >T
" L
Boxwood where she will visit
for several weeks.
\ Fro. Jesse Davis and family
Watts.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Woods of
■i"
again do a necessary x work in
the world.
oet
as-
was
-) '
qn"-
.T
2/0
Mee
Precinct Nd. 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 No. $: -
W. E. Williams.
Precinct No. 7:
11
and natural gas service.
-MARKING TIME
----
A $100 SHUT-OUT
1
id "
This last statement is one particularly to be re-
membered when common-sense economy is not
only a national duty, but an individual neces-
sity.
Dairyland
Phone 72
Harry Helms.
County Ghairman:
A. L. Bradrie
Do not fail to
J. M. Seago.
Tax Collector:
Nat, J. Harrison.
Co. Supt. Education:
O. J. Beckworth.
I A5«£b
FOR A JOB AND He
Electric Fans, Motors and Elec-
tric Irons repaired.
R. R. LEE
Shop in back of
COVINGTON'S STORE
>id. "
WHY SILVER .
STABILIZATION?
g,u n 21,
(Three Murdered Men in Hog Wire Coffin
Mt' .
S
DR. H. J. CHILDRESS
FUMIGATION *
Roaches, Moths, Bed Bugs.
Government Formula Used.
- MARSH & JONES
Leave .orders at Mirror Office.
Lawn Mowers Sharpened 50.
Typewriters, Adding Machines
CDI
30B? 1
Iqald «r W
MU Tablets dt
drug stores.
e Price $1
®
- - -
-
9~b
this year as compared with
272 in April, 1932, while in
May “of this year there were
only 208, as against 296 for
May 1932.
This reduction in the num-
ber of accidental deaths and
injuries, as well as deaths from
alcoholism, Dr. Wynne declares
in his report, is largely due to
the fact that the -legalization
County Treasurer:
W. A. Lunsford.
Public Weigher:
R.,H. Ray. .
Commissioner, Preet. No. 1:
E. A. Cobb. -
Commissioner, Peet. No. 2:
; Frank Robinson.
Commissioner, Preet. No. 3:
J. (Prem) Davis.
Commissioner, Preet. No. 4:
Fire Theft
7 W. E. Quinn
INSURANCE
For Ehna can dosThexzonlvamege he
Ute ehuan Tbs poroom for your doumacut
feeling is gour lira. It ateniM poor put two
pounda ofH«mM MU into your bowes daSy.
chase out of purchase and make every penny do
its full duty.
Two Deliveries Dlly
5 a. m. and 5 p. m.
cecceepea-ckcceccecccta
Highest Quality
DAIRY PRODUCTS
WHIPPING CREAM A
Half Pint_____
SWEET MILK 71,
Quart________ 6 2•
SWEE MILK A
Pint _________ 4C
Home Churned or Bulgarian
.1‘
"I saw it in The Mirror.”
izenmvzA_____ 1*0 i ' J »
DR. T. s. RAGLAND
and
DR. MADISON S. RAGLAND
Offieen Oves 14at Nat. Bank
Phones No. f, 171 and 103
ia
bM/ ' .1
f
► '
—
r • ■
KA •
OAK LAWN SANITARIUM
, X-Ray and Other Electrical
ooY-
WKIHEN yon ‘start at sud-
,, den noises, worry over
trifles, can’t hear the noise
that children make, feel
irritable and blue-ten to
one it’s your nerves. «
P-Vwit sum your over.
1 tmaaa2.5a,uze
, y another minerable
, Tube two tenspoonduls of
DnH"e2Nerximeandenjoythe
Mu that fongwa. Take two
. ST" •* to b*».
■ rendy fot
• aD Kkt gaa hna
Tablet m
e"m"*E
thlek, bad tst and your breuth is fout,
akin often breaks out in blratehte Your hend
nehe and you fem down and out. Yourwhote ■
nystem la polsoned. •
Mada at bits flowinE freely and make yea
M "up and up:" They eontain wondetua,
hermiet, (snUs veegtahle eatneta. amgazin
when it eomes to making the MU Maw fmiy.
But don't mak for liver pilla AskforCartu?s
UtUe Hver Piila. Look forthe mameCarter
ittie Ura Fifemi the Md tabet. Rentemb-
atitute. Ma at drag atone. • 1M1 C. M.Ca.
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 substntialdis-
count. Only ambitious young
ADVERTISING benefits the man who buys as
well as the man who sells. It is part of the
Golden Rule of Business and it works both ways.
Don’t miss the advertisements in this newspaper.
Many of them are interesting just because of
- their news and educational value alone.
Marshall Holmes.
Precinct Officena.
Justice of the Peace.
PRITCHETT
- —
I
We are all enjoying
cloudy, cooler weather i
the shower last Saturday,
There is some sickness
The lower photograph shows the bodies of the three men brutally
murdered in Fort' Worth last week, shortly after they were found in
the Trinity river near the First Street bridge. The upper photo-
graph shows a crowd on the bridge, just before" he horribly mutilia-
ted Corpses were hoisted 75 feet from the river to the bridte Police
say the bodies'were cut and battered in an effort to prevent identifi-
.cation. The men killed were Jack Sturdivant, 24, of Hala: Harry
Rutherford,28, of Dallas, and hisbrother, J. 1J. Rutherford, 30, of
Dallas......r . —-
-----------------------------
-ehetes---faree -.21 -------------------
. . . 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-
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
ar y young person is a thorough
training, such as offered by
the Tyler Commercial Colege.
, peeeeeeeeeveeeeeeteeeeeeeeeeereeeetmeteeeeveveee00* i
h " " ' .. ■ 2
0
. 1 ■
toll which long has shown us,, _ _______
to be th. mot eiflens people 288298 Vitr Tri’* opii
in the world.
exhibitipl
Y., and
IGAMEMEL"AFKEND
4 ' "
is both good anti true concerns
Jerome "Dizzy" Dean, the able
but, somewhat erratic pitcher
of the St. Louis Cardinals. »
Dizzy had been fined $100
for failing to show up for an
Directory
Congressman of 3rd District:
Morgan G. Sanders.
District Judge, 7th District:
Walter G. Russell. ;
District Attorney:
G. L. Florence.
District Clerk: ’
Floyd Bailey.
Game Wahlen;
J. W. Bryce.
County Judge:
J. R. Hinson.
County Attorney: \
Curtis E. Hill.' .. 1
County Clerk:
W. M. Smith. ;
J.S.WHITISDAIRY
< Gilmer’s Most Sanitary Dairy.
PHONE 153
< owssssoooso saMseMsw
4
W i
/
tokaypungpizos,nduun*cgd."qqmms
miner water, oil, lauttva candy or cbvwtag
See
N. J. HARRISON
... for
Fire, Auto, Tornado and Other
11,1 4
in taste and purity.
Large, sanitary, concrete
swimming. posi with modern
bath house.
Most modern, commodious
auditorium in East Texas.
Excellent 9-hole golf course.
Publie Schools with highly. _
efficientstaffs.
Superior athletic—field with -
Farmer of Sulphur Springs,
visited relatives here Saturday
.., .. land Sunday. _ .
sumption of whisky and there, Mrs: EadJonesof-Mt.-Pleas-
employs the
Dallas News:
The London conference is
practically over, since it is
obvious that little of impor-
tance-wili be reported at the
plenary session of July 27, the
date of adjournment. The sil-
verites are hopeful that some-
r '
There seems to be a good
deal of misunderstanding of
silver stabilization. It is fear-
ed that it simply means that
silver will be given an artifi-
cial standard value, at the ex-
pense of gold.
It doesn’t mean thin at all.
As a matter of fact, silver has
an artificial standrd of value—
it is far below any reasonable
level. And silver should have as
definite a value as gold—to
half the world’s people it is
gold, and the only gold they
kow. It has been their medi-
um of exchange for centuries,
precisely as gold has to some
of the western nations. It’s
collapse has affected them
drastically asthe yd lapse of
gold values would . affect the
people of other nations.
Silver rehabilitation is simp-
- ly an effort to permit a time-
tested medium of exchange to
WAKE UP YOUR
LIVER BILE—
WITHOUT CALOMEL
And You’u Jump Out of Bed in
theMomingRarin’toGo
Gilmer spent Monday night
, with Mr. and Mrs. Bert Cain.
Everybody is invited to at-
( tend the revival meeting which
, is now inprogress.
MSENSE To -
ComE IN OuT I
HOF THZ f1
m. hemererm,’
k “e J
people needjapply. See The Gil-
mer Mirror. . and Cash Registers repaired.
____ t ' —
. '■t
Mrs. John Rash who has
been in a serious condition for
quite awhile is reported to be
no better.
Miss Lola Caini who is at-
tending school at Commerce
with Ml and Mrs. Edd W.
Equipment. Emergency,
3 Surgical and Medical
This school is Cases Received
temperance. He says: 4
"May 1933, showed fewest
deaths from accidents on our
recent records. The conclusion
is that the people of New
York have been drinking less
of strong liquors and that the
legalization of beer has saved
approximately a life a day
since April 7.”
Anyway, it is encouraging to
observe a reduction of the
frightful death and accident
report at that time, nd so do
the advocates of the regula-
tion of wheat exports. Most
committees are merely mark-
ing time, realizing that it is
useless to make reports under
thes circumstances. Many of
the delegates are absent from
London, others have returned
home. The experts are "hold-
ing the fort,” hoping that
something may “turn up.”
Whether the conference will
ever meet again afteradjourn-
~ ment is , a question. The high
hopes that centered about this
gathering are ded, and stark
pessimism rules instead.
ft psa
FOR KUFS 5 1
Hail
ant visited her sister, Mrs.
Willie Bums, Sunday and she
was accompanied home by her
nephew, Mr. William Wynn.
Mr. Doyal Sorrels of Patton-
field visited Mr. anti Mrs.
Junious Rash one night last
week.
Mrs. Tullous Scarborough ac-
companied her brother, Travis
Neal Smith to his home at
Tax Anessor:
. Charle Owen.
: I'
■ 11
/ V
, !
see Bob
or HISTF
DOROTHY DARNIT a, ,
-
our community. The eighteen
months old .baby of Mr. and
Mrs. J. B. Roberts is quite ill,
also our postmaster, Mr. P, J.
Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Snow are
visiting their son Farnum, in
Abilene this week.
R. F. Holloway, superintend-
ent -of schools at Ranger, visit-
ed his sister Mrs. J. H., Mings
and family here last week. He
was enroute to Colorado where
he will attend school at Bould-
er the next six weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar New-
some have just returned from
a trip to Denver.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Berry
spent last week in • Alabama
with his mother.
Misses Ida and Emma Snow
T« $EE MQR
Ji FATWER’IME
—fcr
Steele in “The Fighting
Champ” at the Strand tonight.
Its a treat to those who like
action western pictures and it
has a smashing good boxing
bout by real fighters.
spent last week with their
brother, William, at Shady
Grove.
Dr. and Mrs. Will Hale of
Dallas visited friends and rela-
*
“Resumption and completion of
the work of the. conference
will undoubtedly depend on the
development of the economic
and monetary situation in
America,” says a Rumanian
delegate, and that- is the com-
mon opinion.
It will, be a long time, how-
ever,-'before the United States
- will be ready to resume dis-
cussions, and consequently the
chances- ’for reassembling are
slim- "Requiescat in pace.” .
AN ENCOURAGING SIGN
Most encouraging is a report
just issued by Dr. Shirley W.
Wynne, health commissioner
of New York City, concernmg
the decrease of automobile and
industrial accidents in that
city in recent months.
Automobile deaths numbered
100 in January, but only 70 in
May, despite the fact that
more cars were on the road
and more children playing in
the streets. Industrial and oth-
er accidents dropped even
.more sharply although more
persons were employed in in-
dustry than in former months.
The records shows 209 in-
dustrial accidents in April of
Patricia Downs’of Evanston,
III., was crowned "Miss En-
chanted Island" in the unique
baby bathing beauty contest
held recently at-the Chicago
1983 World’s Faf.
unintentional and the result
of his mistake in boarding the
wrong din which took him to
Pittsburg instead of Ehmira.
A few days later Dizzy was
scheduled to pitch against the
Brooklyn ' Dodgers, , when
manager Gabby Street told him
that if he would shut out
Brooklyn the fine would.be re-
mitted. He was further told
that merely winning his game
would do him no ood; it had
to be a coat of whitewash.
And if you don’t - believe
that Dizzy did his stuff, look
up the record of the game,
(Hayed in St. Louis on July 8.
The score was St. Louis 1;
Brooklyn, 0. -
MirstJob Printing is better
and it costs less. Phone 179.
A.
wjqenamnsseae
0 SAD,TDINTHAET—
—-mNDUCH I
Gilmer’s Most Mod-
ern Dairy
With New Equipment.
New Milking Barn and Sani-
lacy Milk House .
T. R, Tented Cows.
Sweet Milk, quart.------- Be
Butter Milk, qt.______:_____ 4c
Sweet Cream, 1-2 pint ----10c
INSURANCE
----------—
ELMWOOD SANITARIUM
New Modern Equipment
Electric Modelities for Treat-
ment, as well as X-Ray and
Fluoroscope
J. C. WINN. M. D.
adpg,, GILMER ROTARY
•
Meeting Every Friday Noon
At The Hays Hotel
0- ——-newly built stadium.
Unfaimgr24-hour electric
late vegetables. S-
THE
Gilmer Daily Mirror:
Founded Mar. H, ISIS, by Gao. Tueker
Tadter a Lanchinger Publishers
Goa. Tucker —- - Editor
R. H Lanchinger — Buniness Mzn
Eutered at the Peat orfice dt Glmer,
Texaa, as Second Clam Mail Matter.
Subseription Rates
One year, in advanee ,, $4.00
Sir months —.------■ .. „ $2.00
Ona month—------ ------- 40e
GILMER OFFERS:
Inexhaustible supply of
deep-well water, unsurpassed
J. E. Wopd,
Precinct No. 8:
j. W. Willeford.
. Constables.
Precinct No. 1:
J. T. Darden.
Precinct No. 2:
F. Q, Brezeall.
Precinct No. 3:
D. F. Floyd. _
Precinct No. 4:
W. F. Steelman.
Precinct No. 5: i
Hugh Smith.
Precinct No. G;
J. M. Duke.
Precinct No. 7:
‘ E. T. Honeycutt.
Precinct No. 8:
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Tucker, George. The Gilmer Daily Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 112, Ed. 1 Friday, July 21, 1933, newspaper, July 21, 1933; Gilmer, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1448134/m1/2/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Upshur County Library.