Wise County Messenger (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 25, 1929 Page: 3 of 8
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1929
Thursday, July 25, 1929
WISF (‘OUNTY MESSENGER
—Page Thre
P
N
RESOLUTIONS
Old Settlers9 and
©
Ex-Confederates9
G
they need to develop their egg-prodnc-
daughter. Miss Fstelle and Alvin Al-
body
REUNION
vital organs.
See that they are
here this week
k
Decatur9 Aug. 20-21-22
Fortieth annual gathering of the early day settlers and
r
visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Mitchell.
§)
©
Park. Three big days of fun and frolic will be enjoyed
by thousands of visitors, and hundreds of these will be
camped under the spreading trees.
ed Columbus' voyage cost $7,000.
COME AND ENJOY
J
the entertainments that have been provided by the
1
committee. Remember the dates of Wise county’s big
I.
reunion.
ADVS. ©
JOE WHEELER PARK
Who said that Mistress Smith
O. F. F. CLUB
' And let us know how much it takes
The O. F. F- Club was entertained
To entertain a nigger.
last Friday evening at the home of ,
I Phone 452.
(30)
A
DECATUR
©@@©@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@©@@@@@@©@@@©@@@
(30)
Ill.
4
1/
<
1
With the Chicago coon?
PRODUCE EGGS
SALE—Fordson tractor, first-
1
condition.—ROY
E
Decatur.
23
A
K
when they came in to lay?
need
We had carried them thru
V
T
I
TEXAS POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
YOUR PUBLIC SERVANT
Safety first ---
Name.
ruts.
. S*
9 :
1
7
old soldiers of Wise county promises to eclipse any cele-
bration that has ever been held at beautiful Joe Wheeler
@
9
©
©
©
Your tongue
tells when you
January
months
months!
commend them to the care of all true
Masons.
Whereas: That in memory of our
— Service always
FOR LEASE or Rent—Farm of 192 X
acres; 100 acres in cultivation, balance @
in pasture; running water; fine for @
dairy.—DAVE HOYLE. Decatur, Tex.
FOR
class
zS
©
Who saved it for the nigger;
Who boosted Hoover up until
He reached the highest limb.
Til the darkest of all colors
Was lily white to him.
The Red Cross emblem was founded
thru a diplomatic convention held in
Geneva, Switzerland, in 1864.
and Annette MeMordie ami Mmes. R.
G Nobles and J. I McDaniel.
I
I
dren of Sunset, spent Sunday with
relatives in Decatur.
Had not the courtly elegance
To grace the White House with?
Take out your pencil now please do,
And figure, closely figure,
O. B. FACTORY
. . . $1125.00
1500.00
1975.00
. . . 2475.00
... 4100.00
land were in Fort Worth one day this
week ■ muscles, feathers, am)
-__o_ ‘ i watch them closely.
©
©
Whose job gets big and bigger; ------
’ Who saved the country from the Pope, Leto’s is always guaranteed.
Renfro's Drug Store
Frank P. Timberlake was herefrom
Wichita Falls Wednesday.
Ro R« George Machinery Co., Dallas, Texas
Trabue Carswell will leave Sunday
to return to his law duties in Brook-
lyn, N. Y., after two weeks' visit with
his mother.
STATE FAIR TO HAVE THREE
LARGER BUILDINGS
"CATERPILLAR” PRICES—F.
Ten Horsepower Drawbar - .
Fifreen Horsepower Drawbar
Twenty Horsepower Drawbar
Thirty Horsepower Drawbar
Sixty Horsepower Drawbar - -
Robert Carswell of Wichita Falls,
was in town Wednesday.
-------o--
And. oh. you saintly pious fraud.
Who said that Goose Neck Bill
Had saved the nigger from his sins.
And took him from his swill;
How much of all you said was true.
Upon the stump that night?
And is your hide elephant
A real lily white?
—JOE WOoLAVER.
Magazine
You'll ««y iesshemostinterest-
2ta land you ett mw.
rosi mJ
•rglemd,e
deceased brother the members of the
Bs, A.
07
• Magerise ifMn! Pirmru and Fnr Wordr
From every state in the Union and from 36 for-
eiga countries,''Caterpillar" dealers and owners
send action photographs of "Caterpillar"
Tractors for publication in "Caterpillar”
------o------
Mrs. Dick Collins visited relatives
in Dallas first of th week.
------o------
Mrs. Grover Ratliff of Fort Worth,
was here Tuesday.
A 14 h.p. engine—delivering 10 h.p.
at the drawbar—pulling with ease
a 3-disc plow, or 6 (one way) discs—
two-row lister-planter, an 3 ft. double
disc harrow, 4-section (20 ft.) spike
tooth harrow, 12-14 ft. grain drill,
10-12 ft. combine harvester.
Broad tracks grip the ground—no
slippage or wasted energy, delivers max-
imum power from fuel, loses no time on
account of the weather, wet or dry, hot
or cold—"Caterpillar” is always ready
to go.
Get a "Caterpillar” — plow, plant,
harvest your crops, pull stumps, build
levees, terrace your land, work out the
low, wet places, cross ditches, climb hills
—own a tractor with which you are not
afraid to tackle the toughest jobs?
Mr. and Mrs. Hunn, of Lehena, are kept free from contaninated or uu-
alotabs
TRADE MARK REG.
©
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@
2
o)
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________I
Mrs. C. L Maidens and son. Chas.,
R. B. George
Machinery Co.,
Dallas, Tens.
GemtlemEtL
Without cost or obligs-
-
ah a
8
PREVENTS
RICKETS
Scott’s Emulsion
* ,;
J
Australia, New Zealand, and Argen- ,
tina are the greatest wool-producing |
centers.
tion, place my name on your
list to euceive "Caterpiller"
Magali ne.
If it were
were eight
it — eight
Magazine Free
a*‘+, A NEWSY • INTERESTING • EDUCATIONAL
©
P*29TT0“W2M2E8688888gk,
^Caterpillar” Ten
The Little "Caterpillar’’ for Farmers
frames, tissues.
Miss Rena Counts.
In a diversion, which followed the
business meeting the prize went t •
Miss Mildred Dillehay.
I tecth. It’s simple. Just get a bottle
of Leto's Pyorrhea Rvedy and follow
directions: Dont delay: do it now
And. oh. you dainty southern belle.
With the alabaster skin,
' Let down your exclusive social bars
WANTED—Reliable man to run Me-
Ness Business. $8 to $12 daily profits.
Wonderful opportunity. Write teday. 1
— MeNESS CO.. Dept. C., Freeport. ’
Clyde Thompson was
Wednesday.
@@©@©@@@@@@@@@@@©@@@@@@@@@@©@@
ing systems
\
Coated tongue, dry mouth,
bad breath, muddy skin,
groggy nerves and sour
stomach suggest its use.
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. N. - —
Cox Sunday. Mrs. Fouche is an aunt A TOAST
of Mr. Cox. Mrs. Maxwell is an in- | Respectfully dedicated to a little
structor in the public schools of Ard- boy who had been keeping bad com- :
more. ' pany. and our little girl led astray by
chicks. Make sure that their houses
in Rhome are well-aired at nights and that they
Mr. and Mrs. W- H. Fouche and .
daughters. Miss Irene of Fort Worth, ' hatched chicks instead of being profit
and Mrs. Maxwell of Ardmore. Okla., takers will be profit makers.”
TO TRADE—My home in Perrin. .
Where is that highly cultured dame. > Texas, for a small place of equal )
..... ------- value near Decatur.—W. T. PENICK. (
Box 97. Perrin, Texas- (33) (
SORE GUMS— Pyorrhea
Heal your gums and save your
Whereas: Through the will of the
Supreme Architect of the Universe,
our worthy brother. G. B. Kelley, was
on the Gth day of July 1929, removed
from among us by the ruthless halal
of death at his home in Springtown,
Texas. His remains were interred with
Masonic honors in the Paradise ceme-
tery. at Paradise, Texas, on July 7th.
1929.
Whereas: He has always been a
consistent man ami Mason. ever sus-
taining the true principles of Freema-
sonry. Therefore lie it resolved: that
we are deepy sensible of the great
loss we have sustained as individuals
and as a fraternity in the death of
our brother; that we tender out warm
est sympathy and feelings of condol-
ence to the family and relatives and
Commitee on Resolutions:
J. D. MORTON
C. J. YOUNG
W. A- GREEN
FOR SALE—Six hundred ewes, from
12 to years old ; price right; 14 miles
east of Decatur. See ED YOUNG.
Ponder. Texas. (31)
visiting Nr. and Mrs. O. W. Hunn I clean soil. Keep then from running
and mingling with the early hatched
S. STOCKS.
(30)
“Gather eggs from May-June chicks
in November.”
“Impossible!" you say. According
to E. A. Sindecuse in the current issue
of the Purina Poultryman, May-Jnne
chicks may lie made to produce eggs
in November and hit the peak of the
fall egg market
“Remember last winter." the article
says, “we had pullets in our flock that
waited until January to start laying.
Perhaps they were late-May or early-
June hatched. but how old were they
year, our late-May and early-June
hatched chicks will be well-developed,
fully matured and fit for the job of
laying as early as November. We’ll
lie gathering eggs at the time we can
put real money into our pockets. This
"Now what are we going to do
republican propoganda.
Here’s to the Hoover Democrat
or later, they
old. Think of
and daughter, Alice, were in Norman. I sort of let them coast. On the level
Oklahoma, this week. I now, isn’t that true? We put a lot of
________ I faith in pasture, grasshoppers, worms
Misses Jewell and Clara Mae and grain. We leave it up to nature
Reeves returned home Kunday from a to do a lot of feeding,
visit in Ranger.
___o______ ' about it? Let's give them every chance
Mr. and M.S. ' nther Belew and | to go ahead. Let them have the things
have shade on hot days.
| "Think about their feed." the article
Mr. and Mrs. D. Turner and fam- says. "A lot depends on how we feel,
ily, of Oklahoma City, have been vis- Still mgre on what we feed. By all
iting Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Davis. means full feed. Nothing delays late- Paradise Lodge No. 52s, A. F. and I
------0------ I hatched chicks more than stinting on M. Wear the usuai badge of mourn- | ©
Miss Emma Dean Belew spent th- the feed. Good feed and plenty of it thirty That these reso- ©
week end in Fort Worth. hustles them .a long KeeP the mash lutions be spread on the minutes of @
Miss Lonise Clegg, of Houston, is hoppers filled with a growing mash to the Wise K
that promotes a steady, even develop- Messenger for publication. an.l g
meat KeeP plenty of cool, clean water cops be sent to the family of the
Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Finn and chil- | near the feed hoppers. decoea
~ ■ **’ “Follow this system out and late- ,
J tut like the big "Caterpillars” you tee working the highways—only smaller
the time of the year when it costs the
most to house and feed them. Before
they hit their stride in egg production,
egg prices toboganed—and we couldn’t
get out of the way.
"Just why didn’t those pullets start
laying during November instead of
waiting until January? True, they
were late hatched. Allowance has
been made for tat or the question
would lie. 'Why hin’t they start lay-
ing during September or October?
' Plenty of pullets reach production in
five montils time—but these took eight
months. Why? Well, checking back
into the past, one wouldn’t need many
guesses to hit upon the things he fail-
CLASSIFIED
Duluth. Minn., is home port for 40 K
lake vessels with a tonnage of 720,041. 9
-----— ©
A Chicage antiquary has ascertain- i ©)
FOR SALE—Elberta peaches, fresh
off the trees, $1.00 per bushel: drying
peaches, 50 cents per bushel, at my
place seven miles northeast of Deca-
tur.—JAS. W. SMITH, or W. T.
GOTCHER. (30)
I A P AI NFWe
LUU L IVL n V Continuing the article says, "Instead
of watching those late hatched chicks
closely thru the growing period, we
—
The almanac is one of the oldest
books known.
Delicious refreshments wereseryed xArgot sust ’what jam voted for:
and Emma Dean Belew. I lora Reeves, Ah dont kick at the smell.
Alma Wilkerson, Margaret Bojd.
Frances Jeanne Lacey, Imogene Moore ■ There is one who was born inside
The southern fold of gray.
Dallas. Texas, July 17.—One new
building and two with larger space i
will be ready in time for the opening I
of the state fair. Oct. 12, it has been
announced by T. E. Jackson, president
of the state exposition. A new live-
stock coliseum with an arena 100 by
Ids feet and a seating capacity cf
6000 is now under construction.
Work has also started on the bal-
cony will add one-third more space to
this building. Greater floor space will
be arranged for the poultry show.
And when he meets them at a ball.
Oh. what will Colquitt say?
MAY-JUNE CHICKSj!—
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Collins, Dick. Wise County Messenger (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 25, 1929, newspaper, July 25, 1929; Decatur, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1611227/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .