The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 30, 1923 Page: 4 of 8
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THE PADUCAH POST
Paducah, Texas, August 30, 1923
BOYS and GIRLS
Listen at this, you will be given one 5 cent No. 2 pencil, with every 20c purchase or more of school
supplies bought at
Swint-Burnett’s Drug Store
during the First Week of School.
LAST CHANCE
Your last chance to sign up in the “Victory Week”
campaign will be
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1
Be certain and see a member and get all particulars about
this important movement. The thing to do is to see about
“Getting More Money For Cotton.” The best and most
businesslike way to do this is to become a member of the
Texas Farm Bureau Association, and market your cotton
through them. You are protected from any and all who
might be inclined to take advantage of you when selling
time comes. The Farm Bureau is your Friend.
Cottle County Farm Bureau
J* first. This is not only true, but has never been run on business cession of steady promotions,
we suspect that there have been principles. Think of a railroad! Showed Character in War
enough punctured tubes and cas- hauling a passenger or a piece of strength of character was,
— “■> » »» Miss t
City for the same amount they jtivc part in the battle of the Jap-
would take it from here to Fort an Sea, as chief of staff of the
Worth, or even as short a dis-' Kamimura squadron. That squad-
tanee as Swearingen. A letter;ron fought the battle under the
across said wooden culverts and
bridges to have paid for a set
of concrete crossings several
times. A person can hardly go
across Cottle County without get-
ting a puncture or a casing bad-
ly torn. It would be impossible
to estimate the amount of money
that has been spent from this
cause. •‘Fenny wise and pound
foolish” is an old adage that has
many men,
can be sent fifteen hundred miles
most untoward circumstances.
„ . jWith the consequence that people
lor the same price that it can be accuse(] it 0f utter impoteney, if
sent fifteen miles. In addition not actual treason, and there were
to .this there are thousands of ein-! many rough demonstrations to
ployees in the postal service who sh°w the public anger.
ITS A GOOD,
| THING
j HENS DONTI
KNOWHOW!
' MUCH AIASOHSl
LoET FOR
I LAYING
BRICK5"
V-vT
are holding down “positions” in-
stead of jobs. Yet we boast of
In those days of bitter trial, it
was Baron Kato who kept the
esprit de corps of his officers
Lakes and his meteors that fell
broke many men, and it will our cheap postal rates and econo- and saiors.
break counties and States as well, my in this department. As long Although Baron Kato served as somewhere in Texas had nothing
isz ,;r;; Jhc
s r ' , 1 . , or of the naval plan of the so-, This rooster, seeing that a hen
to put up a piece of road so that best policy to. not change it, for ca]]e^ “8-8 fleet,” it must be re- was sneaking away from her nest
THE
PADUCAH POST
Published Each Thursday
E. A. Carlock
.location of the Tech College.
|it will stand, or to build a bridge after all a satisfied people is the membered that fate had it that
that will give no trouble even if best asset that a country can he himself represented Japan at
only one hundred yards of the have.
road is fixed at a time or only! -:-
!°ne culvert or bridge built a The nations of the Old World jun'etTon with other'Nat ions' His
! the arms conference in Washing-
ton, where he agreed to drastic
'scrapping of the navy, in con-
jyear.
; This is no more than people ex-
: pected. Four weeks ago there gome 0f our
jwere about thirty-five towns note; are given t0 running column and using every power possible
Editor-Owner ,w*th their “hat in the ring” forja£ter coiumn every week, and the to crush Germany and the na-
jare certainly getting in a bad feme suddenly rose in the eyes
- way. Germany is literally broke, of the world as the most up-to-
exchanges, we France is afraid of her shadow,; date statesman of the new age.
LUXURY TO BRITISH PARSON
London, Aug. 26.—The ecelesi-
______ j this college. We suspect today year roun(ii on pioneer days. This tions in sympathy with her. Rus
Entered as second-class mail mat- there are thirty-four of these -s a g0od sentimental idea, and sia is a country of almost'out- astical commissioners, having
towns who would say we do not ()ne tjlat people will enjoy, lawry and no one knows what looked up the archives labeled
ter May 11, 1906, at the Post-
office at Paducah, Texas
need such a college. Such is the
but we note that these papers tomorrow will bring them. Eng-1 Strawberry, Clergy, for-the use
life of towns as well as individu- maj£e aiWays the leading fea- land is the only one that seems elusion?-'6 8 686 3U^US COn
els. We want something so long ture 0£ everv jssue \ve like to to be really thinking and try- 1—That strawberries are a lux-
as we are personally benefited, t),ink 0f dayS passed, but we had ing to pull out of the marrow jury.
but when the pudding is served rather feature “today” than to and make a brighter future. Eng-j 2—That raspberries are not.
on the other fellows plate and feature “yesterday.” We had land can well be termed the I ^ That it is meet for the chas-
we are left to pay the cashier ^
rather “boost” tomorrow than to
can
‘watchdog’
of all
' : ** doea not seJ Wlth. “f'jsit around thinking of what might'tries, for on her rests the bur-
There are always a lot of mer- But the deed is 'did, so let s iJiaye been ju the past Tbe past den of really bringing things out
! ten ing of the flesh that rectors
t ose coun- should not eat strawberries.
ehants who think they can get brace
better printing away from home plum that Lubbock got
than they can get at home. Why are certainly entitled to
upland pa^for the|js only entertainment for our idle °f chaos and getting the Old
j----... a World back on her feet. The
United States must also do her
! moments. Today furnishes us
real work to do, while tomorrow.
holds romance, adventure, for- part and work in harm™y with
tune-making, and eevrything that England.
'. great and good for our imagin-
Let “yesterday”
be a thing of history.
JAPANESE PREMIER DEAD’
Do a noble
work “today.” Expect great!sliya Uchida" minister of Foreign
things of “tomorrow,” and be Affairs, has been appointed pre-|diture.
sure that you do your part to mier ad interim and will serve
make them come to pass.
Tokio, Aug. 24.—Viscount Yah-
I until a new cabinet is formed.
it as |
not get the idea in your head much as any other town and we
that the mail order houses will think that the locating board
sell better merchandise than you could not have made a better
dot There would be just as choice. Other towns might have
much logic in it. We use the been as well situated, but Lub-!a,lvt powers,
same presses that the foreign bock offered every advantage
houses use. unless it be litho- that was necessary for such an
graphing or embossing. We use institution.
the same type, paper and ink.1 ——-
Then why should our printing not J While we have not what is
be as good as the mail order,usually termed a “bumper” cot-
stuff? Why should you say that ton crop, yeit we will gather at
your goods are better than mail least double the amount over the
order goods—or even
- . I . — . mm m • I U t‘ IIH I'M KM V TIIMT WP r 1 U VII U rrnnn ■ —
.. r _ . „ . | Admiral Baron Kato was con-
not be as good in your estima-'always just before day according ear' u * e acul ^ firmed as Premier of Japan, June:
tion? The mail order houses buy! to the old saying, and this has"1’1 U(>t make a &reat sch°o1 this 12, 1922, his cabinet succeeding J
their materials made from the j certainly been true this year.jterm ,f the>’ do not have the c<Hthatu of Visycount Takahashi j
same mills, with the same kind of j This county is going to be in "peratl0n uf the- parents. They J^sl|"e ™e . n a
... can dn thoir ViAst hnt thorn is . statement tollowmg nis appoint-'
machinery as your goods are, good shape—far better than was ’ b t th 4 ® ment to ithe high office, Premier
made from. Our printing is ! expected a few weeks ago. m"ra 0 ’ '"a 1011 on y°ur Part< ^ Kato said:
made from the same type, the; - rvour bo>' and Sirl is to do their “In brief, Japan’s foreign poli-
same presses and the same inks! We suspect that Cottle County ,best’ stand b-v the teachlDg force cy. from which this cabinet will |
that mail order printing houses lias spent enough money in the andhe,p fhemnlo their work. Of «°t '“part’ the^pfrirls well
course you can not do their class Tne P ,ers in :n , spirix as weiij
as the letter of the covenant of
So, forgetting all about Cardin-
al Wolsey, who thoroughly en-
joyed himself with a dish of
strawberries, they communicated
with the Rev. R. A. Waddilove,
rector of Ashtead, Surrey. Mr.
Waddilove was laying out a new
garden. The ecclesiastical com-
missioners 'had given him £80 to
do it with, and as they seemed to j
think he might start a collection
of lawn mowers took good care
to check each item of the expen-
for long periods of time, took up
the job she deserted and spent
three weeks sitting on the eggs.
During this time he strutted and
clucked like a regular hen.
**************************
i INSURANCE
BONDS
HAIL INSURANCE
FIRE, TORNADO and
AUTOMOBILE
PAT N. JONES
Over First State Bank
ROOSTER SETS
Lodi, Call., Aug. 20.-
Tokio, Aug. 24.—Baron Tomos-
I lie school bell will soon ring aburo Kato, Premier of Japan,' land’s sea serpent in the
again for the session of 23-24.!died Friday afternoon, it was al-
■Mulhol-!
Great
Clarendon
Monument Works ;
High Grade Monu- j
mental Work of Ev-;
ery Description. ::
Write us for prices. < |
Clarendon, Texas ::
................HI'
_........equal to'county that was estimated three j'The faculty has ^ "cured, and lowed to become officially known
them—when our printing would!weeks' ago. The darkest hour is "0 dare ^ that we have a «ood ' ' aay‘
use. What’s the difference?
Work has now been passed
down the line that some of the
defeated towns will contest the
past fifteen years building little ,rt, luc iCllcl vuv UUVCUOJJL UA
wooden culverts and bridges and "ork fnr tbe,n’ but You can let the League of Nations and the
keeping them repaired to have;'1<>m ano'v’ they have your,. ipatiess and resolutions signed at
put in real concrete culverts and moral suPP°rt and that you are j Washington, with the view that
bridges had they been placed at
BIFOCAL
SPECTACLES
Announcement
I am now in a position to furnish you with the ground-
in or one-piece Bifocals, for reading and for distance. A
great improvement over the old-time cement Bifocals that
get blobbery spots in them and never look clean and nifty
(and finally come off). Do not bny a cement Bifocal pair
of glasses till you see my new one-piece all made together
glasses that will please and beautify the wearer. Come see;
^then deeide for yourself.
S. F. HUNEYCUTT
JEWELER and OPTOMETRIST
Paducah, Texas
.........■mi i ......
going to do what you can to make | concord and friendship may de-
this a bigger and better school. iveloP amon8 the nafcions and that
______ i reductions of armaments may
T. . steadily progress to relieve the
v all statistics that have ever i diffjcuHies and burden of man-
been given it is most thoroughly kind.”
proven that “public owned” Baron Kato, who was head of
property does not pay During Japanese delegation at the
the war the government had ^ conference in Washington,
, , ,, | had been in ill health for some
c large of the railroads. They tjme due( j£ wag sajd;. to over-
came out away in debt and a work. Nevertheless, Ms death
deficit had to be paid. In sev-
eral of our large cities the street
car lines are owned and operated
by the city. They are not pay- Kato was born to one
. * / . , t . I of* the Stunurat famihes of Hiroe-
mg, and the people of those cities Clan.
Thursday had not been expected
and came a great shock to the
Japanese Capital.
are paying a higher street
fare than where the lines
dividually owned, or
companies. We bejiWe the «*««
street e«r
nes jjtt in-
Qsfned by
thing wouldbg true vritb onr |Kato’s)
'^fepsi
Since the day of his entrance
to the naval academy, Baron Ka-
to was a very particular and in-
dependent hid, having the nick-
name of Kato no Tomo (Tomo of
postoffice, department. While | As. early as those days Baron
I there j|fno likelihood that it will Kato
'be leased or owned by indi-
Tvidnala, yet we believe that it/
'« «.
^ '« a
Was already showing signs
of his characteristic silent atti-
tude.
... _. Baron Kato’s naval earner, er-
eould be run more eoonomocally if er ’.^eCftme a midshipman
' •‘■as been a suc-
it was thus. Our postal system > ?
It Tells Me a Story!
“Plain as if spoken, this engine asks
for new oil in the crank case every time
it passes the 750-mile mark,” said a
careful motorist at our filling station
this week.
We clean the case well before put-.
ting in new oil. These little details in-
sure a longer life to your car.
Texico clear Motor Oil
DRIVE IN
General Auto
Supply Company
L
J
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Carlock, E. A. The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 30, 1923, newspaper, August 30, 1923; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth721302/m1/4/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.