The Gilmer Daily Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 190, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1933 Page: 3 of 4
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4
LAFAYETTE
District and County Directory
g, M
died Sunday, October 15 and
*
t
i
I
Douglas, S. Mullins, Cecil Land-
G. Douglass, J. H. Johson, E. Mrs. Tucker was in the kitchen
and
e-r-
. AND PARDON BUYING
Wood County Echo:
E. L.
I
I
called to the pastorate of the
R.
W. Baptist church at ‘Clover Hill
C.
»
1
of
*
WHAT are the
she
merely smg and
'‘Everybody Reads The Mirror"
. ner1
ca.
i...
i
22
a •»
gun.
#
puekagos. AU dealers.
(Adv.)
1
..
000 Ameri
8
MI per cent
g-
I
"The fight against poverty
and unemployment has just be-
manent recovery and the build-
ing of a sanev; happien Amevi-
Davis, Jack Dungan, I
Duke, J. W. Beavers, B.
Johnson, J. G. Anderson,
Winnsboro News:
Mrs. Odie D. Darby, age 23,
■ z
Pittsburg Gazette:
Glenn Covington and Miss
Doris Culver were married at
the home of Rev. R. H. Simms
Saturday night, October 14th.
was buried Monday, the 16th,
at Hopewell
H.
mar-
the
con-
the
was a storm and she got her
two children and took to the
storm house for safety.
Precinct Officer.
Justice of the Peace.
- -
It is dangerous. It is one of ,
the greatest7 Obstacles to per- «
Reporting to the police that
her husband had deserted her,
Mrs. Agnes Bryen of Chicago
said he had left her “nothing
to eat except the beddothes.1’
attention/
MM. HOMEMAKE
e, OMuin, Guaivnaa.
pendents’
persons--to live in. destitution
£
THE C
"g g ’ •, •
The advertisements in this newspaper bring you news of many splendid bargains of everx de-
scriptfoti.' Study them carefully ... then stock up wherever you can!
“Pig iron has advanced 13 per cent,”
the purchasing agent of a $20,000,000
couporation recently said. “Brass is up
42% „er cent: 1 am paying 41 per cent
. Store for lumber than I did in March,
and fiber packing esses have doubled
in price. In fact, everything we use
in this business is costing us more to-
day, and will in my opinion cost us
still more tomorrow. I believe . •. that ,
many commodities will be back to or
near 1929 levels by spring."
accaavenlime
Preinct Na, 1:
B V. Bledsoe.
Precinct No. 2:
C. C. Coppage.
Peecinet No. 3;
8- Trmn,
Precinct No. 4:
J. W. Gaston.
Precinst No. 5:
, M. & Mail.
Precinct No. 8:
DOING?
scheme of things which, even
at its best, , permitted 3,000,-
ricans—with their de-
mome than 10,000,000
they are buying because they know
that prices are going up. - •
■ • ;
1 ... 5s
BiggeEof Nation-
al Problems h
Unemployment
PAGE THE
and son of Holly Springs spent
the week-end with Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Pankhurst.
Mr. Foster Coppedge of
Hallsville visited Mr. and Mrs.
John Douglass on Thursday of
last week.
Miss Maureen Tillery of
Leesburg spent the week-end
with her parents.
School began here last Mon-
■day with the following teach-
ers: Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Buie
and Miss Annie Doglass.--1
yalues . . . living values ... can bo
reached, prices will have to go higher
than they are now.
Before they do, take a leaf from the
purchasing agent’s book, and lay in a
supply of th things you need. There
are mqy good bargains slilltohe had.
enceayowloiqanige.
i.Maetkeacai
thipapwvaoyow•
ahoppinq au^a^
6 "dt’zdn
>
•mm
last Friday
lightning.
' I 1
H. Pool, J'. D. DeLoach, L. G. and was knocked down
Beard, W. J. Warrick, F. M. slightly shocked.
Walker, L. L. Patterson, K. C. ......
V.. k
. biggest and most dangerous
of the nation's problems, ac-
cording to U S. Senator Rob-
The Gilmer Mirror |
" T * "1 . "r f
"Unemployment hasn’t been
Our Neighbors *Athat Mra. Proctor thought it
2 y
M‛ io
Writing today in the American
Magazine," Senator
says: ” "0 '
The grand jury did not find
a bill of indictment against Ed
Kennedy, who was —arrested
last--for -cutting his son-
in-law, Colen Bell. _
ofbuyingfo)
Aammiky Co 4
anabmod ce-
UPTURN ITEM
Pig-iron production, belween August
1832 and August 1933, increased
PURCHASING AGENTS
sunk so low in value that he couldn’t
even gat a decent living.
That couldn’t go on. So the Govern-
ment aet up the machinery of the
NBA eodes in order to make every-
thing worth something again.
This process in now under way.
Wages are being raised. Commoditiese
are bringing better pricea every day.' '
But it is not yet ever. Before fair
- Mrs. Woody Spencer at Pitts-
burg last week. .
” £ 1 5
p- ’
- Miss Mary Willis Warrick
was married Saturday afternoon
Ribbons tor an makee
typewriters at the Mirron
i ■ a. - _ i ~ .____
EVERY big company has one or more
men whose entire tiine is devoted to
buying the things which that company
needa.
These men are specialists. It is their
business to know prices . . . materials
. .. sources of supply . . present and
future trendy They are the shrewd-
est. canniest buyers in the world.
But all of.us, in a small way, are
purchasing agents. We have to buy a
certain number of things, If only to
keep alive. And most of us aren’t very
skillful at it. We waste a lot of money.
, We miss the good bargains. In fact,
we could learn a great deal by watch-
ing a professional buyer at his work. .
At this time, especially, it may be
Renew Your Health
By Purification
Any physician will tell you that
•'Perfect Purification of the System
h Nature ‛s Foundation of Perfect
Health.’*, Why not rid yourself of
chronic ailment! .that are under*
mining your vitalityf Purify your
entire system by taking a thorough
course of Calotabs,—once or twice
a week for several weeks—and see
how Nature rewards you with
health.
Calotabs purify the blood by acti-
vating the liver, kidneya, atomach
and hovels. In 10 eta. and M eta.
■ 0. s o 1 n foe
The pretty new home of ‘ J.
W. Tucker, at Quitman was
R. Mathis, C. C. Miller, J.
Tucker, A. J. Moss, H.
W. E. Williams.
Precinct Na. It
A I. Wood.
Ppecinet No. 8:
J. W. Willeford.
Von nigh km
Precinct No. 11
J. T. Harden.
Pseeinct No. 2:
F. O. Brezeall.
Precinct No. 3 :
. D. F. Floyd.
Precinet No. 4:
W. F. Steelman.
Precinct No. 5: ’ ■
Hugh Smith,
Precinct Na. 8:
J. M. Duke. “
Pvecinet No. 7:
E. T. Honeycutt.
Precinct No. 2:
Harry Helms.
County Chairman:-
A. L. Bradfield.
tive for $300, and that
superficial. didn’t have but $200.
There were 10,796 bales of
cotton, counting round as half
bales, ginned in Wood Coun-
ty, from the crop of 1938,
prior to. October 1, 1933, as
compared with 10,186 bales
to Lester Taylor; Rev. S.
Maples officiating. The
riage was performed at
minister’s home. The'
trading couple live in
Brumley community.
Frederick Putnam of Phila-
delphia got a divorce because
his wife fell in love with the
man who taught her to play
tennis.
problem of unemployment.
“Such an 1 attitude is not
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Young Sun-
Wagner day afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Smith
badly damaged
ers, R. O- Ellett, S. R, Cox, B, when struck by
Mrs. Sam Gibson of Texar-
kana and Miss Georgia Mae
Henson of Dallas, wen* mar-
ried Sunday in 'Texarkana. Mr:
and Mrs. Gibson are fine-young
people and the-News—joins
their many-friends in wishing
them much happiness and_sc-
cess. , .
That’s the way the professional Pur-
chasing agents feel about it. And they
know. They have special sources of in-
formation. They are closely in touch
• with Industry. They have studied the
workings of the NBA codes. t
Prices are going up. And it's a good .
thing for everyone. For things had
come to the point where nothing had
any true value. A man’s time ...
product .. . his property ... all had
Unemployment is still the
and he will fill the pulpit at it
o’clock the second Sunday in
November.
Following is the list of Poti
Jurors for the 2nd, 3rd anc
4th weeks of the November
term of the Special District
Court, Judge Nt Rrooks pre-
siding:
Second Week. November
A.'w, Williams, W. G. Leard,
Lantrip, J. A. Ferguson, W. T. ; Rev. Clyde Smith was in
town Saturday, and informed
Mrs. Nellie Webster of Chi-
cago raised such a distruhance
over the treatment of her
child at school that all classes
had to be dismissed.
R. A. MeGrue, O. H. Duncan, ginned to October !, 1932.
without work.
-h.........7’ “This means, that—there will _
-be, including -dependents, 25 ARRIS GRAND JURORS
million people, or a fifth of our
believe that the philosophy
and intent of the New Deal go
farther than this, and I should
not consider that we are mak-
ing the most of our chances
unless we do more than restore
the uneven and delusive pros-
perity of the 1920‛s, with its
millions of unemployed and its
poverty even among those who
worked.'*. ’ ,
consider the patient’s ultimate
health.
“For the negt few evitical
years, it will be enough if we
get men back to work. But I
. X . TITMT" -*1 , , u /
“When, it may be asked,
shall we return to the ‘nor-
malcy of 1929T
“Never, T hope. The pros-
perity of the later ’20s was a
sham prosperity. The chatter
of stock drowned-out the cries
of those who were victims of
an unstable industrial system.
Do you realize that there were
more than 3 million unemploy-
ed at the height of the boom?
Do we want to go back to a
.. Some very large bass have
been caught in Ferndale lake,
some weighing more than ten
pounds. These have been rare,
but Clyde Smith reports this
week the catch of a bas
weighing eight pounds and six
ounces, which also is “some
fish."
eut F. Wagner of New York,
who is ferful tht all the
available reljef funds will be
. insufficient to meet the needs
of the approaching winter.
While flying to its destina-
tion, the large airship known
as the Macon, flew over Quit-
man soon after dark Friday
night of last week, and it made
some noise. It had been ruin-
ing during the day with a
heavy cloud, and it is . esated
ER DAILY MIRROR, FRIDAY, (KT. 20, 1933. * "
—1
J. L. Ellison, J. C. Easterly, •
Bill Huffman, A. E. Flowers,
J. C. Wade, H. M. Dowd, H. J.
Silencer, C. A. Garner, Howard
Dunagan, C. D. Harrison, A. C.
Elwell, J. B. Roberts, T. J.
Plummer, A. J. Tucker, A. J.
Hackler, S. H. Carroll, G. H.
Moody, W. A. Jones.
Houston, Texas, Oct. 19.—
The Harris County grand jury
Thursday was instructed by
Judge Whit Boyd to investi-
gate whether there was any
selling of public school jobs
or buying of pardons going on
in the county.
“I don’t know definitely of
any thing, but there is evi-
dence of jobs being sold else-
where in Texas,” Judge Boyd
said. “I want you gentlemen
to look into it and see if the
same thing is being done here.
“There is so much talk go-
ing around that it ought to be
investigated. There are people
who come in here from other
sections of the State and
charge for pardons, but they
haven’t any more authority to
get pardons than any one else.”
Judge Boyd later told re-
porters a woman visited him a
few days ago and told him she
could get a pardon for a rela-
Bro. Albert Spence of Pitts-
burg preached here Sunday.
He has been called as our pas-
tor for another year.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Welch of
Longview and "Mr. Richard
Young of Pittsburg visited
Inford, H. G. Weldon, J. H.
Howard, M.C. Langford, H. C.
Canter, M. S. Parrish, Pau
Ferguson, W. H. Mathews, J.
' T. Davis.
Third Week of November..__
" S. L. Bailey, W. D. Burnett,'
W. D. Green, G. L. Vaughn. W.
R. Snow, Sam Tune, F. O.
Roberts, J. W. Gaston, D. M:
Dacus, H. M. Couch, J, B.
Plummer, H. L. McWhorter,
Dolan Vaughns, M. €. Wil-
liams, P. H. Aaron. - J. T.
Carrington, C. M. Moore, E. E.
Perdue.
Fourth Week of November
Cliff Langford, W. M.
Corley, G. S. Williams, Leo
Presnell, O. L. Hickey, S. R.
East, Odis Wilson, H. F. Coyl,
J. O. Harrison, R. N. Brawley,
J. C. Langford, C. A. Williams,
TO PROBE JOB SALES "
The Fort Worth Star-Telet
gram of Tuesday carried the
news item in their paper that
MeElreay and Suggert had as-
sumed the leases which totaled
5,800 acres, in the Cartwright
and Pleasant Grove section in
Wood County, but no well was
indicated' in the news item.
This is one of the large com-
panies we stated in our last
'issue as being in the County
and- we hope they will soon Io-
cate their well.
But these stocks are strictly limited.
Now is the time to buy.
Congressman of 3rd District:
Morgan d Sanders.
District Judge, Tth Distmict:
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 Clock:
W. M. Smith.
Sheriff:
J. M. Seago.
Tax Collecton:
Nat. J. Harrison,
Co. Supt. Education:
O. J. Beck worth;
Tax Assessor:
Charlie Owen.
County Treasurer:
and despair
“No. We must not return to
that, a
“Our hation has been like a
man, already ill and feverish,
who is rn over by an automo-
bile. The ambulance surgeon
gives emergency treatment.
When the man reaches the
hospital, howeuer, his entire
condition M carefully studied.
He is given treatment looking
toward his permanent recov-
ery; not only from the injuries
in the akbident, but from the
fever as' well.
“The nation has already
been givn courageously and
effectively, its emergency
' treatment. Many of the mea-
. sures are of permanent bene-
fit. The time has come to
licked yet. Six months ago
there were 13 million unei-
ployed. Today there are still
10 million. And even if this
vast number should be reduc-
ed another 3 million by mid-
winter, which is as much as
can reasonably be expected,
---there wih still be 7 million-
Little Skeezix Young, who
has been very ill with diph-
thoria is much better. Little
Laverne Williams also has diph
theria. - —
Mrs. G. .MeCaslin visited
■ ‘ T<.
’ ■
-—i,9, •i i it r
Petit Jurors
For November
Term ef Court
population,in desperate need
of assistance.
“We shall need this winter
all of the millions appropriated
hy the Federal government'for
direct relieftrand perhaps a
further appropriation. We shall
< need at least an equivalent sum
from the states, as well as
splendid work of local com-
munities. We shall need, too,
continued sacrifice of those
who, under pressure them-
selves, have somehow managed
to take care of unemployed
relatives. We shall still need
the voluntary contributions of
everyone who-is able to make
them.
“It is true that industry and
agriculture are reviving. Men
are going back to work. De-
spair has been replaced by
energy and hope. And this new
cheerfulness is splendid. Short
sighted citizens are beginning
to say thatqsoon we’ll be
through with the bothersome
e .
helpful to know what the big pur-
chasina agents are doing. Are they
cutting down? Are they opening un?
Do they think this is a good time to
buy or n bad time? What do they
think about the future?
Well, therunswer in that they are all
buying as fast an they can buy* And ’
C. this editor* that- he had been
J. W. Cross, D. Vaughn, C. E.
Kay, W. B. Mitchell, J. L.
a A *
$ ”, V l ■
V
-
—" W. A* Lunsferd. - “T
Publie Weigher :=——- / '
— R. H. Ray.
Commissioner, Preet. No. 1:-
E. A. Cobb.
Commissioner, Poet. No. 2:
• Frank Robinson.
Commissioner, Preet, No. 3:
.J. (Press) Davis,
Commissioner, Preet. No. 4:
Marshall Holmes.
..........- • 1 ■ ............
Mrs, Edith Sherwin of San
Francisco takes her pet cat
twice a year to u dentist and
on the last visit one of - its
teeth was filled.
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Tucker, George. The Gilmer Daily Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 190, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1933, newspaper, October 20, 1933; Gilmer, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1448223/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Upshur County Library.