The Shamrock Texan (Shamrock, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 18, 1933 Page: 7 of 8
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Say, May 18, 1938
THE SHAMROCK TEXAN, Shamrock, Texas
Page Sevea
doctor, Lawyer, Merchant and Chief
\yiake Up Personnel of School Board
By MRS. JOHN LEWIS
personnel of the Shamrock
of Education Includes doc-
swyer, merchant or chief, and
ite of the fact that they are
(men, they always find time
I attend to the thousand and on*
Itails connected with the success-
operation of our school system,
ey have shown splendid judg-
Et in managing the affairs of
school during the depression;
8 citizens and faculty appreciate
5lr excellent work.
I. B. Clark is president of the
ard of education; he has served
this capacity for twelve yeais.
r. Clark came to Shamrock in
15 and established his law offioe,
d In 1916 he was elected as a
!mber of the board and served
eight years, then in 1928 he
'.re-elected, and has been pres-
the 12 years that he
has
ved.
Mr. Clark Is never too busy with
rsonal affairs to assist in work
the school. His consistent work
b made him an Inspiration and
e faculty and citizens are justly
<ud of him.
'r. J. W. Shaddlx came to
unrock in 1928 and in 1929 he
jt elected a member of the board
education and for the past two
re, he -has been serving as vlce-
y^sWent. Dr. Shaddlx was grad-
j #d from the Memphis Hospital
hool, Memphis, Tenn., in 1911,
id has been practicing for 22
ars; he practiced for 15 years in
iss county, his home county.
Dr. Shaddix was very enthusiastic
his appreciation of the Sham-
ck citizens and faculty and their
lendld cooperation in making
lamrock schools one of the best
Btems In the Panhandle.
tt Lewis, secretary of the
has served as secretary for
years; he came to Shamrock
years ago and engaged in farm-
t fot some time, carried the mail
the Dozier route, later the ln-
ranoe business and now he Is
e reliable grocery man.
IT. Lewis has watched the rapid
th of the Shamrock schools
takes great pride in the high
ndards maintained by the facul-
1 and citizens of Shamrock.
T. C. (Champ) Davis was prac-
tically reared in Wheeler county;
he has lived here 29 years. He
spent his boyhood on his father's
ranch at Texola and came to
8hamrock in 1924 and opened the
D. C. D. Pilling Station. In 1929,
Mr. Davis purchased the Ewton
Chevrolet business and has been
actively engaged in the affairs of
Shamrock; he has served three
years as a member of the board
and is loud in his praise of the
faculty and hearty cooperation of
the citizens.
Lester Parrish and Mr. Davis are
considered old-timers; they have
both been in Wheeler county for
29 years. Mr. Parrish has spent 15
years in the repair business; he
has been in his present business
with Mr. Burkhalter for 10 years.
Mr. Parrish has served three
years as a member of the board
and he is proud of the splendid
cooperation of the teachers and
faculty.
Prank DuBose has lived in Sham-
rock for 10 years; he is connected
with the State Highway Depart-
ment and has served as a member
of the board of education for two
years.
Earl Kromer has been in Sham-
rock for 11 years and has been en-
gaged in the ginning and oil mill
industries; he is serving his third
year as a director.
o
CARD OF THANKS
To the host of loyal friends who
were so devoted and attentive to
us and our baby Paul during his
sickness and death, we want to ex-
press our heartfelt thanks, and
pray God’s richest blessings upon
each of you, that you may live
long and your health be such that
will permit you to minister unto
others as you have unto us.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Melton, Quail,
Mr. and Mrs. W. T, Cherry and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Cook and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Murry and
family.
-o-
Miss Agnes Reynolds and Miss
Jerome Stanley of Wheeler were
visitors here Monday.
KENTUCKY
BURLEY TOBACCO
"Direct From Grower To You"
Old Kentucky Burley Tobacco Is
the cream of the finest crops Ken-
tucky's bountiful soil can produce-
ripe, rich leaves - smooth and mel-
low-with that rare old-fashioned
flavor and fragrance that only
proper ‘‘aging’’ can produce. We
bank on it you have never tasted
or smoked a finer flavored, more
satisfying tobacco in all your life.
Special Offer!
What is a Bladder
Physic?
FIVE POUNDS
SMOKING
TOBACCO
A medicine that works on the
bladder as castor oil on the bowels.
Drives out impurities which results
in getting up nights, frequent de-
sire, burning, leg pains and back-
ache. BU-KETS 5 gr. Tablets) is a
pleasant bladder physic.
Get a 25c test box from your
diuggist. After four days if not re-
lieved go back and get your money.
You will feel good after this cleans-
ing and you get your regular sleep.
Sold by Shamrock Drug Company,
Pendleton Drug Company.—advt,
-o—.—
i
Rich, Ripe, Old Fashioned Leaf
Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Nicholson left
Saturday for Dallas en route to
Mineral Wells where he will attend
the state bankers convention.
jhundfyiaif^y// /£
QaAolinJO-wb/x / /&
/>
i
The recognized truth
of instant starting,
lightning pick-up, im-
proved anti-knock,
greater mileage and
power has been en-
thusiastically estab-
lished by countless
users everywhere.
BK©NZ£
GASOLINE
Our Old Kentucky Burley Is no
more like manufactured tobacco
than day is like night - guaranteed
free from chemicals and all other
adulterations that conceal imper-
fections, delude the sense of taste
and undermine the health.
We use the same method our
granfathers used in preparing to-
bacco for their own use - every
trace of harshness leaves it - noth-
ing to "bite” your tongue or parch
your taste. Thousands of tobacco
lovers the world over swear by its
inimitable smoking and chewing
qualities.
REDUCE YOUR )«/ We sell di-
TOBACCO BILL \ /2 rect from
the grower,
this eliminates the eighteen cents a
pound Revenue Tax - all manufac-
turers' and middlemen’s profits,
thereby effecting a saving to you
of 50 per cent or more. No fancy
packages, no decorations, Just qual-
ity and lots of It.
MONEY SAVING PRICE
SMOKING 5 lbs. Send us One
OR for Dollar Cash
CHEWINO *1.00 P. O. or Ex-
press Money
Order (no personal checks) and we
will promptly ship you a five pound
package of "Burley Tobacco."
Five pounds of Old Kentucky
Burley will make 40 large packages
of smoking or 50 twists of chewing.
Q Send 35 cents in silver
J j/' and we will ship Post-
w ^w Paid - one pound of
Burley Tobacco as a trial offer.
A trial will convince you.
We have thousands of requests
dally for "Samples” - our margin
of profit is so small we cannot
comply with these requests.
We do not ship C. O. D. orders
to do so would require a large
staff of clerks. Orders must be In
English language.
INDEPENDENT TOBACCO
GROWERS ASSOCIATION
McClure Bldg. Frankfort, Ky.
lf==Ir=ii=df=£lr==Jf=Jr^r^n:
EBHaarEHa-goaaggf? ♦
3
;. KIBBON/j
(BLUE p
ATTENTION
FARMERS!
There is no better feed value you can
buy than Cottonseed Hulls. We have a lim-
ited supply we are pricing for quick sale
for the reason we do not have the room to
store them inside a building. Come and get
what you need before they are all gone.
COTTONSEED HULLS
$1.00 fS
AS LONG AS THEY LAST!
Shamrock Cotton Oil Company, i*.
Shamrock, Texas
WHAT WILL I
DO NEXT?
Graduation time is now only a
matter of days. Several thousand
young men and women will grad-
uate from high school. The next
important question arises. What
will I do next?
To stop where you are means, of
course, that you can make no fur-
ther advances until you supplement
your high school training with
something that will give you an
earning capacity. The professions
are overcrowded. To spend from
four to six years’ time and the
necessary expense incident thereto
with no chance to put into profit-
able use the training seems a waste
of time and money.
Teaching offers absolutely no in-
ducement. Law, medicine, and the
arts offer but little, if any, greater
inducement. At this time, with the
upturning of the business trend,
and the determined effort on the
part of our wonderful President to
give us a new deal, argues very
strongly In favor of a business
training.
Such a training may be had in
a few months and at a compara-
tively small expense. It gives one
an immediate earning power, and
the longer the training is used, the
more valuable it becomes. A prom-
inent educator remarked recently,
“Now is the opportune time for
young men and women to train for
business.”
Take the advice of this man and
plan to prepare yourself for a pro-
fession that offers much greater
inducement at this time than any-
thing else.
The Tyler Commercial College
and School of Business Administra-
tion, at Tyler, Texas, offers the
young people of the Southwest the
very best training in business. They
will be glad to send you one of
their large catalogs free. Write
them today, using the coupon be-
low.
Tyler Cotnmreoial College and
School of Business Administration
Tyler, Texas
Name
Address
CONSTIPATION 6 YEARS,
TROUBLE NOW GONE
John J. Davis had chronic con-
stipation for six years. By using
Adlerika he soon got rid of it, and
feels like a new person. Adlerika is
quick acting—safe. Shamrock Drug
Company—advt.
Loyalty and succea* go hand In
hand—buy at home. 36-tf
COLORED SCHOOL
HAS 34 PUPILS
Prospects Are Bright For Bigger
Year in 1933-34, Principal
Booker T. Harris Says
By FRANK WOFFORD
The Shamrock colored school Is
about to finish one of It’s most
successful years, states Booker T.
Harris, school principal. The school
includes grades from the first
through the seventh. The enroll-
ment this year was 34, which Is
two less than last year.
With tile closing of school next
Friday there will be two graduates.
Two boys will receive diplomas.
This school's activities have been
ably carried on under the guidance
of Harris, who holds a Bachelor of
Science degree from Prairie View
State College. Harris has been re-
elected and Is expecting an even
more successful year next fall.
Mr and Mr.s P. T. Boston and
sons made a trip to Hedley Sunday.
-o-
J T. Brown of Canadian was In
town Monday.
He knows bis low-priced gasoline!
She's a sbreuii shopper!
\\Wllpap more and get morel
But all of them buy at Gulf!
X701) can’t suit all oil buyers with
X the same price oil—any more
than you can suit all motorists with
the same size hat!
That’s why Gulf offers you 3 fine
oils at 3 fair prices. That's why Gulf
lets you take your pick of 3 excellent
gasolines—each at a different price.
had—note this well!—every Gulf
product is the best that can
be made at the price. It's an
honest product, honestly
made to meet rigid stand-
ards of quality. Drive into a
Gulf station! Once you start
on Gulf—you’ll stick to Gulf!
★ TUNE IN ★
Gulf Headllnara
Will Rogers and Irvin S. Cobb
Sunday, Wednesday and Friday, 7 P.M.
© till, GULF REFINING CO.. F1TTMUHOM, FA.
3 Great Gasolines
Gulf Traffic—A dependable, white anti-
knock gas......
LOW
PRICE
That Good Gulf—The famous FRESH
gas. No extra cost.....
MEDIUM
PRICE
So-Sox Ethyl—As fine gasoline as money
can buy, plus Ethyl. . .
PREMIUM
PRICE
-B1 i ) »
3 Great Motor Oils
Gulf Traffic.. Safe! A de- ^ g ^ a quart
pendabie low-priced oil
(plua tax)
Supreme . . "The 100- a quart
mite-an-hour oil.'
(plus tax)
Gulfpridt . . No liner O C gf
motor oil in the world
a quart
(plus tax)
jGzrvrif'
Qlca/dortv, lJ&oA/.
May 9, 1933
A great thing has occurred amongst us. We have made a complete
turn-around, and at last America's face is toward the futures
Three years—1929 to 1932—we Americans looked backward. All
our old financial and political machinery was geared to pull us out of
the depression by the same door through which we entered^' We
thought it simply a case of going back the way we came. If failed.
We now realize that the way out is forward—through it. ' i»”
Thanks for that belongs to President Roosevelt. Inauguration
Day he turned the Ship of State around. Having observed the failure
of sincere efforts to haul us back the way we came, he designed a new
method—new political and financial machinery---to pull us out
the way we are going---forward. He is clearing international
obstacles out of the way; he does not stand in awe of tariffs. The
people begin to feel that he does not take advioe from the 'inter-
ests* ; that he has courage and loyalty to work for one supreme
interest only—the welfare of the American people. That is a big
achievement for two months in offioe.
And now we all look to what is ooming; we grow less and less
concerned with what is behind. We are looking for a hand-hold on
the haul rope. Every man wants to do what he can, and all he can.
The best thing I can do for the Country is to create industry
by building good motor cars. If I knew anything better to do. I
would do it. Industry must be my contribution. Motor cars must
faoe ahead to the future, like everything else. They are so”lirueh a
part of the Nation's daily life that if tfiej; lag behind tbeyhold
’ (
the Country back.
hm aolJwi in’, iterl ftofjwwit;
111
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The Shamrock Texan (Shamrock, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 18, 1933, newspaper, May 18, 1933; Shamrock, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth561939/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Shamrock Public Library.