The Jacksboro Gazette (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 27, 1930 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
mm
Thursday, November 27, 1930
Che JaTksfrers <Saxri&
sw,
Par,r. TiiKRJ?
life;
.
■■■< 1 ';
ip
THE NEW CHEVROLET SIX
HAS MANY IMPROVEMENTS
p’
u
1
I
The introduction of
the new Chevrolet
Six marks the most
impressive forward step in Chev-
rolet’s twenty-year record of con-
stant progress and improvement.
For this Bigger and Better Six
offers new beauty, new luxury,
new completeness and new qual-
ity—yet it sells at lower prices!
The improvements in the new
Chevrolet Six begin at the smart
new chrome-plated headlamps
and extend throughout the entire
car. The radiator is deeper ami
unusually efficient. Due to the
increased wheelbase, the lines
are longer and lower, giving an
air of exceptional flectness and
grace. And the new Fisher bodies
combine with this more attrac-
tive exterior appearance, a new
degree of interior luxury.
The chassis of the new Chevrolet
Six has also been refined and
advanced in a number of different
ways. The frame is heavier and
deeper. There is a smoother oper-
ating, long lived clutch; a sturdier
front axle; an entirely new steer-
ing mechanism; au easier shifting
transmission.
And along with these improve-
ments, Chevrolet offers a 50-
horsepower, six-cylinder motor-
four long semi-elliptic springs
—four hydraulic shock absorbers
— a safety gasoline tank —and
an economy of operation not sur-
passfcd bv ant automobile.
AT NEW LOW PREOSSS
The
Phaeton ...........^ 010
*475
195
The
Roadster ......
Sport Roadster f
with rumble 3ea,t
The
Coach ..........*54t)
Standard „
Coupe .................r'l)35
Standard. Five-
Window Coupe ,.t)45
Sport Coupe rr,,
..: ,h rumble seat '5*/^
Standard
*635
Sedan
Special
i
Sedan
oPSCIAL EQUIPMENT EXTRA
Chevrolet Trucks from $355 to 695
All prices f. o. b. Flint, Michigan
mm
*€50
Lj-:
A | m H
X
JK
IT’S WiSli TO iUOUbK A blV
N & J Chevrolet Company
JACKSBORO, TEXAS
Keep Milk Cows and Live at Home.
Paducah.:—Declaring that he
and his family would be off some-
AUllltlillMIMIIf ■1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 HUM
I SPROLES
\ MOTOR FREIGHT LINES
Successors To
GREGG TRUCK LINE
| Overnight Freight Service Daily
| From Dallas and Fort Worth.
J Cargo Insurance $10,000.00
1 Per Truck. Bonded—Insured
S
I B. C. Thompson, Agent
| Phone 59
'inllHIlUMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimillHMIllillltlllllllllluiillMiMiiMIMMr
where picking cotton it it were ! at the office of flic State Highway
not for his dairy cows, J. S. San- j Engineer at Austin, Texas, until
derson, Cottle County farmer, has 10 o’clock A. M., December 1st.
reported to the county agent. II. j 1030, and then publicly opened
M. Cantrell, that six cows bought and read.
three years ago have more than Work consists of constructing,
made the family a living through-j Grading and Drainage Structures
out the drouth. Five of the cows ‘ from the Wise County line to an
are registered Jerseys. | intersection with Highway No. 25
___,____ a distance of 11.304 miles.
; Detailed plans and specifica-
Notice to Contractors foi State j < jous of the work may he seen for
.Road and Bridge Construction, j examination and information may
Sealed proposals addressed to j be obtained at the office of L. <
the State Highway Engineer of | McCanlies, Resident Engineer, at
Texas, for the improvement ol‘j Perrin, Texas, and at the office of
that part of State Highway No. | the State Highway Department,
31. covered by S.X.A.P. Xo. S5f)-H 1 State Office Building. Austin,
in Jack Comity, will be received Texas.
__*_I The usual rigids are reserved
I II
«r 4
CHRISTMAS 4
GREETING f
(bII-28)
&
g
9
CARDS!
We Invite You to Examine Our Great
Selection of
Ihristmas Greeting Cards?
We are showing this year the' greatest
variety of samples We'ever Had
NEEDS FOR RED GROSS
SERVICE ON INCREASE,
SAYS CHAIRMAN PAYNE
DON’T FORGET
wn
Disaster Relief &nd Service to
War Veterans Make Heavy De-
mands—First Aid on Highways
New Plan.
Your Radiator—it may freeze.
Let us explain about its
guarantee.
PATTON’S SHOP
Wiiggi
AfterEalinq
Demands upon the public services
that tbe American Red Cross is or-
ganized to give are increasingly heavy!
and will continue to be so in tbe fu-
ture, John Barton Payne, chairman,
has announced. ■
The two major services of the so-
ciety—service to war veterans and
their dependents, and relief in disas-
ters—show each year a greater num-
ber of persons helped by the Red
Cross.
Pension legislation passed recently
for World War Veterans, and increased
• allotments to all Spanish-Araerican
War Veterans, have given to Chapters
and tile national society many thou-
sands of additional cases to handle,
Judge Payne said.
in the past year help was given in
10S disasters. Ninety of these'were in
the United Statu: , twelve In foreign
possessions and six were in foreign
countries.
Health activities of the Red Cross
also are being extended, especially
in the rural communities where all
health authorities agree the greatest
need exists. Red Cross, with 794
nurses in its employ, is the greatest
employer of pablic health nurses in
rural areas in the United States.
In its campaign against accidental
deaths, begun twenty years ago with
its life saving and first aid programs,
the Red Cross now has adopted an ad-
ditional program—that of combating
the huge toll of life from automobile
accidents on the highways.
Expenditures of the Red Cross in the
past year were $4,204,796.34, of which
$1,208,151.09 was spent in disaster
relief, the chairman pointed out.
“The Red Cross depends upon the
public for its support, through their
memberships enrolled once each year
in the period from Armistice Day to
Thanksgiving Day.” Judge Payne satd,
"We do not receivs any support from
the-Government, or through other tax-
ation, although as the President of the
United States is president of the so-
ciety, and one-third of its governing
members are representatives of U. S.
Departments, it ranks as a semi-gov-
ernmontal agency.
“By joining as a member, in the
local Red Cross Chapter, once each
year, during tire annual Roll Call,
every citizen will have a part in car-
rying on this great humanitarian
task."
Roy Rum age of Oklahoma is
visitin*r his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
VVr. T. Rum age, and other rela-
tives here.*
c
O-
What
that ?
YOU
FORGOT?
Well, there’s still time
to remember that an-
niversary witis aa oat-
of-town telephone
call. It’s the warmest
friendliest, mostappre-
ciated way of saying
“congratulations.”
* Before I started taking Ll-xi-
Draught, three years ago, my
health was very bad,” writes Mrs.
C. C. Carsc.i, 945 Ccncord St.,
Beaumont, Texas. "I suffered
constantly front constipation. I
had headache when I got up in
the morning, ar.d I felt dull and
sluggish. I hardly ate a meal
that my food agreed with me.
Frequently I would have gas on
my stomach, and felt awful.
"I read about Black-Draught,
and I thought it might help me.
After I had taken it a little while,
I felt much better. It relieves
constipation. I keep it on hand
so when I need a laxative I will
have it. In the three years I
have been taking it, I have never
found anything as good for con-
stipation.”
THEBFORD’S i
Draught
^ For CONSTIPATION^--.,
INDIGESTION,^BILlOUSNESSl
ysts.Chly 1 Cent; a Dose
E-UI5
] W O.M ION who are run-down, nervous,
lor suffer e ery month, should take
for over 50 years.
Yhr j'arltsfooro (§:xMcftc
Office Phone 71 and NEWS
J. R. DENNIS, Editor and
Resident»' rhone 4i
Frojirietor
lbliahed every Thuratlay ami eutered at the P
second ehiss rn»il matter, under act of Congress.
ostofiii • at Jacksboro, T- xas, as
Tbe Jacksboro Gazette established in 1S>:!
Tiie Jacksboro News, esial*iisiic<l in 1 SO.i
Consolidated
J 1919
SUBBCRlPTION RAT
me Year____$1.50 Six Months-.7-f -- For.-i-r;
fhreo Months 40C PeV Copy jf In
ti Countries—Per Year.--$1.59
variably (“ash in Advance.)
VDVEBTISINU RATES: M
-‘arties ordering advertising ■
izations of any kind wil'..
payment of ihe hills,
ny error made in advertise’]. ■:
the attention of the publish,
lue ot the amount A the s;
.11
eld pi
spin
es or organ-
ih'o for the
Motor Injuries Treated
By Red Cross First Aid
In line with its work for the preser-
vation of life and prevention of acci-
dental death, the American Red Cross
has adopted a fleiv program of emer-
gency first aid stations on the high-
ways of the nation, where victims of
automobile injuries will be helped.
In the last year 31,000 persons were
killed as the result of automobile acci-
dents and more than 1,000,000 were
Injured. As its contribution to the
nation wide safety campaigns of other
organizations, the Red Cross will aid
through the emergency stations. A
number already are in operation by
Chapters on such Important traffic ar-
teries as the Westchester County,
N. Y„ park system, the Valley Forge
and Gettysburg highways in Pennsyl-
vania and the White Horse Pike in
New Jersey, connecting with Atlantic
City.
O they harass you bj
day and. keep you
awake at night?
. Donlt neglect them. They’ll
ruin your charm and beauty,
alienate- jrour friends, interfere
with your business and soeiat
gueceas. v , ,,
When yonh-e nerve as, take
Dh Mika*’ Ifcwvtee. It’s the
prescription of s aaeeaaaful
Nerve Specialist pat
Saving Mothers and Babies
Is Important Red Cross Task
Saving mothers' lives and better ba-
bies were important features during
the past year of the Public Health
Nursing Service of the American Red
Cross. About four-fifths of the 794
nurses in the Red Cross work made
more than 100,000 prenatal and mater-
nal visits. In addition to assisting
doctors in the examination of 1,309,409
school children.
Statistics reveal that the lives of
two out of three American women who
die In maternity cases could be saved
if they received proper medical and
nursing care. As more than 15,000
women die in the United States each
year from various diseases of the ma-
ternal state, this means that more
than 10.000 ef these deaths are pre-
ventable: #
will bt: gladly corrected upon being brought to
r- and the liability of this paper is limited to the
iai-i- consumed by the error in the advertisement,
ar advertising rates charged for all cards of thanks, obituaries, resolution!
v.. t tributes of respect; also, all lodge or church notices where there iso
admission fee charged, or articles sold.
jy erroneous relief tion upon the i-iiarru-li-r, s'anding or reputation of aav person,
firm or corporation, which may appear in the columns of The Jacksboro Gazette
■V;u t,p gladly o<.m‘c*ed upon its tunas brought to the attention of the publishers,
V ••• ■*»)■• I •••••lllllt IIII. ' •IM.’* Ill III llll IMIMHH *H ••••»••*••*•*••• »«••• M4l»MIIIIIIIIHIIl»IIMIIIIIIIIIlllMIHII»IIMHIItUlllMIMII-iiJ
PROFESSION A L
.....................................................................................................................................
l#IIHIIIIMIM»MMHIMMHMIMimi»IMMIIrt»IIM»»«M»M»IMMIMM«"l MMIIIMIIIMMIIMHIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiailUIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM
She Sarfcsboro ASasctt? j E. N. MILLER CO. [
f | FURNITURE-UNDERTAKING f
Flowers for all occasions. I
J. R. DENNIS. Prop.
i
Quality Job Printing j !
I : :
: r Bay
\ { Phone 146
Night !
Phone 183 §
ROBT.H. AUSTIN
Registered Optometrist
Jacksboro, Texaj
ttlllllllllltlMtlllllllllllllllllltltllHIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMMItlllllllllltll
j Jacksboro Nafl Farm | j
Loan Association { I
! 5% Interest for Jack County i {
Farmers—Long Time l j
I J. W. Gaskin, Sec’y-Treasurer | {
i See me in Jacksboro on Satur- j j
days and First Mondays. f [ I
1 •••■•mm............................................................. ................................................................. ........
(|I, llli;illltflllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUllMHMMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIH
I jP. Simpson Loyd G. Bouldin |
II Simpson & Bouldin f
Attorneys at Law
General Practice
1 I Office: First National Bank |
£ I Building. Phone 267. |
•Mt
i!
ISBELL’S
We Suggest That You MbkeYow # ^
pteiK’XMU’e
■Dh mm
int
Nervine i»
Selection Eartyt
W
Comfort Kit* Sent 40,000
Service Men by Red CroM
Oty patterned cretonne bags, or
ooafort kite; containing articles me
tel and amusing, are eeef by the Red
croses to* 40.000 soldiers, eallore and
mariner, on. foreign service, as 'Christ-
mas remembrance*.
ntTfap: gift bags are donated egfct
packed by women in Red Crta* Chap-
ten ell over the country. They ere
despatched by Army traneport la the
/trier to teach the
poets of the D, 8.
be bug on tee
• •<M«ll«IM<IIMIMIIIIIMIIIIIIMlmMimiU«m«UMIUIMIIIIIIIIIII
JOHN D. McCOMB
ATTORNEY AT LAW
General Practice
Address Jacksboro, Texas,
or, 701 Colcord Building,
Oklahoma.City, Okla.
••MMiiiiiiiiiiiiiieiiiiiiiiitimiMiitHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiieemiiuiiiiM ••••••••HHeMeeieMiiiMieiMeniiiiiiiiieeiiMieeeeiiMiMMeece****
^ •••MIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMtMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMtllltllllliy
i GEORGE SPILLER ?
SURVEYOR, | I
: Notary Public, General Land | | !
ard Collecting Agent. ! I INSURERS, ABSTRACTERS I
I Has Only Abstract of Jack j | :: ENGINEERS :: :: }
< ountr Land n^les f \ Second floor of court house I
! t'olici^s in any of twenty of the § §
Hest Companies
' •eeMMmteteetiiiiiMiiimMimiiiftiiititmtititiiiiMieeaiiifiiiiiMi ft
^•MeneceemuMimiiWHtnimitiiMuteHeeuiMieinHfmmiMMii
I DR.C. E. PUTNAM
DENTIST
Office over Post Office
JACKSBORO, TEXAS
••iiieiiiiituiiiiiitiiiiesiWfiiiiwaiiiiinnMgMiemniiienite
I Office
! Phone 25
Residence
Phone 90
Dr. Jas. A. Stevens
DENTIST
Over Young k Matlock’*
Drug Store
Residence 261
Office 288
Office Phene
242
Res. Phone
189
R. S. Fillmore, M. D.
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
Special attention given te
Asthma, *ay Fever k lesama
Office Jaekebere Natl Bk.BMg.
1 I l '""'H
Ip-pj, o-wvlwn
ft:
vsaKmmd^mmmsmm
Office Phone 128. : , Rot. 208
Dr. C. C. McClure
y.’.ririTf ‘
<A;p5;
fill
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Dennis, J. R. The Jacksboro Gazette (Jacksboro, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 27, 1930, newspaper, November 27, 1930; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth729941/m1/3/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Gladys Johnson Ritchie Library.