The Tyler Journal (Tyler, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, December 7, 1928 Page: 2 of 8
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P^P
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THE TYLER JOURNAL
PACE TWO
■
for anything else.—The Huntsville
Item. :
ISSUES BEFORE CONGRESS of the House, also expressed the opin- j States" involved in the proposal, that
-- ion that it will be/ possible to enact i it would in a sense give the Federal
Important questions that should re- farm relief legislation during this ses-' Government control of the water with-
cerr* immediate action face the short son. j in the boundries of the States. The
miisB of the Seventieth Congress, President Coolidge in expressing hi*; Senator said further that he did not
beginning December 3rd and ending views regarding the disposition of the , believe there would be any disposition
March 4tb. Discussions of farm relief. Muscle Shoals question was quoted a* in Congress to filibuster against Boul-
Moade Shoals, Boulder Canyon Dam, nvt approving the Norris bill. The < der Canyon Dam legislation, although
the tariff, and the Merchant Marine delegation calling upon him in this < he will have a number of amendments
will probably occupy the spotlight regard stated, "President Coolidge j to offer when the legislation comes ud
during the session. It is generally be- told us that he did not wish to put for consideration in the Senate.
Ueved that the Senate will ratify tin? the Government into the retail power
Kellogg Peace Treaty to which sixty and fertilizer business. He also ex-1
nation* have announced their willing-, plained that he was not in' favor of
ne-M to adhere, as well as take some building another dam at Muscle
action on the cruiser bill, which is^ on Shoals. He also informed us that cer- j
the calendar and was debated at ‘ tain persons still desire the passage,
length during the last-session. Public of the Madden bill, which would be
opinion is thought to favor strong de- fairly satisfactory to him (the Presi--a town to back it.
fense forces as a means to preserve dent) provided it did not require the Have many advantage*
peace. The cruisers provided for in construction of another dam." j ities, but bow is the wi
this bill will be a much needed addition Senator King of Utah, in a recent them if there is no n«
to our naval forces. discussion with President Coolidge on the telling? Every g
In respect to farm relief. Senator Boulder Dam legislation, stated that! aids its town whether <
MeXary announced recently that he he was “opposed to the whole Boulder : any special effort to ik
has prepared a bill, similar to the I>am scheme.” He predicted, how. fact that it is a good
M» Nary-Haugen bill except for the ever, that legislation in some form vertises the town as a
exclusion of the equalization fee, relative to the project would be pass- newspaper can thrive a
winch be expect* to introduce a* ed at the coming session of Congress, ly a place where othei
quickly a* possible after the assem- He based his opposition on the ground ness will succeed. 11
bhng of Congress. Representative that in his opinion the pending bill offers p^or support t
Nicholas Longworth of Ohio. Speaker is unwise and unjust to the “upper does not offer much of
The Tyler Journal
Is—ad Weekly By
HENRY EJDWARDjS St CO.
Publishers
more than any other hossaa. skill be
ought to be able to realize that he is
no such great shake* as the woman
—■ who is angling for him makes him oat
to be. *■
>G. A certain amount of flattery is «*-
i sential to all love-making. But at
1781 least every girl has sense ensmgh to
— know that when her beao tells her
let she is the most beautiful and wonder.
** ful woman in the world he is spread-
rC* mg it on a little thick, if not actually
exageratmg. Will the men ever get
<lgr that much sense in their head*? God
_ alone knows.
But. at least, it's no wc*der so
.00 many of them are duapp.tAted and
■KO disillusioned after the hoeeymos*. If
- it takes ail that deceit to land them.
they are doe far a comedown and de-
ll** *epr* 1t~
Mamage bulk spur such a shaky
foundation can not be expected to
J? stand. Maybe if the men ever learn
m,’ u> endure the shock of honesty daring
rag courtship they will find matrimony a
1 » more pleasant and sensible thing.—
Mr*. Walter Ferguson, m Houston
- Pres*.
A milk plant in Tyler, such as is
proposed by the Chamber of Commer-
ce, will mean semi-monthly pey days
for the farmer—24 pay days per year.
It will mean better milk cows, better
barns, better business methods on the
farm. It will mean more rich fertil-
izer for the farm crops. It will mean
farmers will have more cash to spend
—and that that cash will come to
them all thru the year and be spent
by them the same way. It will mean
that every other legitimate business
will feel the impulse of cash turn into
its channels all thru the year. It will
mean that Smith county in time will
be prosperous and even more progres-
sive. Just as are the states of Wis-
consin, Iowa, Minnesota, Oregon and
other sections where the dairy busi-
ness has become well established. :
WILL NOT PROGRESS
A professed witch doctor, charged
with the murder of u farmer at York,
Pa., is held in jail there.
The coast line of Texas has a tidal
shore of 624 miles and a straightway
milage of 370 miles.
changed from me sfliwi to u
bo sura tp give the poatoAm a
to which your paper is NOW
mm well as that to which you *
changed.
Go up to the post office even to-
day. 18 day* before Christasas, ard
you will find Tyler poet office em-
ploys exceedingly busy and w.xfc all
their available * torage and working
space. But what will it be if the uxuai
“Holiday Ruih" is a* b.g tin* year
as it was last year ? It meats* border**
for the postal employee that but very
few of os tnvierxratu! Pre««m*bly
this tame condition prevail* at every
post office a* the hob/lay season ap-
proaches.
But there is another eoe**krat*on
even bigger than that which con-
cerns the overworking, of pvtral »w»-
ployeet. It i* this: If you do not
make your purchase* eariy and mas!
them days awl days in advance, there
is a very great prohab;!‘ty that the
person whom you mean to “rensember
with a Christina* gift" .-nay i/e dis-
appointed by not receivi-ig the “re-
mem berance” when its rtcepkion would
mean the most and attach t// the
gift the largest significance of . 'rili-
ment and appreciation. Shop early;
Happiness is reflective iike; the
light of heaven; and every counte-
nance, bright with smiles and blowing
with innocent enjoyment, is a mirror
traamitting to others the ways of a
supreme and ever shining benevolence.
—Washington Irving.
We have heard it a thousand times,
and seen it editorialized upon a score
or more times, that East Texans are
not sold in East Texas. Are fast
Texans different from the people of
other sections in this respect ? It
is said that a mule may be turned
loose to graze in the richest pasture
on the plantation but that he will
jump a ten-rail fence into a less verd-
ant field “just for a change.” But
East Texans are not mules, even if
they did follow off after the Elephant
this last past gone election. :
A Gift selection from our exceptional display of furniture is always
a successful gift idea, since the practical and the beautiful are com-
bined at a price that represents true gift economy.
Some communities are. like */ me
families, not very well ordered. Some
families live a kind of •‘harem-scar.
em” life. The home is never quiet and
orderly; everything is in a hurly-burly
state of confusion and disorder. There
i. is no system for doing that which
would ordinarily be routine work,
yf' There is no surer index to the lack of ed large state-
system and order in a community than road* at the la
the manner in which that community'* a^^maOrtaimng of highways Is t£
school furniture and equipment is tak function of the state aied not the roar.
en care of. Many of the schools in the ty. The next legislature will be a«ked
™,nty rank high in this respect- ^
but if the sum total of damage (over proposed provide* that such bund*
and above ordinary wear and deprecia- shall not be a tax on real estate but
tion occuring to school property in the their payment is to be met w;th a tax
county y„, thru .hi, comity -
disorder and individual vandalism ramAm .hall nav for them.
LJVINGROOM SUITES
THESE LIVING ROOM SUITES ARE
REAL BEAUTIES AND WILL ADD
COMFORT TO YOUR HOME.
NOTHING WOULD MAKE A MORE
SUITABLE GIFT FOR THE WHOLE
FAMILY, AND THEY ARE MOD-
ERATELY PRICED.
Kama* and Missouri voter* appruv.
bond issue* f'T good
te election. It is no*
mzed that the building
BEDROOM SUITE
THESE BEDROOM SUITES ARE OF
THE BEST CONSTRUCTION, BEING
DUST PROOF THROUGHOUT.
COME IN AND SEE THEM.
DININGROOM SUITES
ANY WOMAN WOULD BE PLEAS-
ED TO HAVE THIS DINING ROOM
SUITE IN HER DINING ROOM ON
CHRISTMAS MORNING. WHY NOT
GIVE IT TO HER?
HONESTY NEEDED IN
COURTSHIP
RUGS
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A BIG
SHIPMENT OF RUGS—FROM THE
CHEAPEST—
AXMINSTER
to the
BEST WILTONS
Give a Rug for Christmas
In other word*, hide your real *e!f. j lar ? Almost every railway m Teia*
Pose a* something you are not. Pile i it paralleled tknwot mmt of ft*
on the soft soap. Lie as much a* po* length by an improved highway. These
sible and maybe after you have hu- railway* hare been taxed to bu i t
miliated yourself and shamed your these highways—and then the high
natural honesty and become a deceit- way* have been made an instrumental
ful sycophant you will succeed ia get- Ry (thru motor bo* and motor track
ting married. Iran* porta firm? to cut the Uu^al* m |
It looks like the time ought to be the railways. A state-wide bond mane
here very soon when the men could backed a* proposed would he assuredly
«r«t alone without all this senseless more just to all interest*.
TELL US WHEN TO DELIVER—WE WILL HOLD YOUR PURCHASE
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Edwards, Henry. The Tyler Journal (Tyler, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, December 7, 1928, newspaper, December 7, 1928; Tyler, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth637991/m1/2/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Smith County Historical Society.