The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 183, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 17, 1926 Page: 4 of 4
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THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM
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THE DANCER OF PARIS
AGAIN TODAY
DAN MOODY CLUB
■TO BE ORGANIZED |
■ ON WEDNESDAY
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WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY
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:
Meet
Lady
Way
—play a
her, and
flfl Reckless
who bet* her
on card* or love
hand with
win or lose,
-
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fh . ..
ivtfa
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know ■ that you’ve
sounded the depth* of
drama and 1 hit the
height* of love.
With Belie Bennett, Ben Lyon, Lois Moran, James Kirk-
wood, Lowell Sherman. Charlie Murray—the most
talented east of the year—and the year’s most
,, ? touching heartplay.
AND A BOBBY VERNON COMEDY—
"TILL WE EAT AGAIN"
R
’las Elna Anderson at the Organ
10c and 25c
-i
Dallas, Texas, August 117.—A
Dan Moody meeting in every court-
I house in Texas Wednesday, August
118th.
This is the slogan and the purpose
Of a movement started at the Dan
Moody rally held in Dallas Saturday.
The plan was introduced during the
morning at an informal meeting of
several hundred Moody leaders in
Baker Hotel. Attending the meeting
were representatives of 17Q counties
in the atate. The call for these
meetings throughout the state was
unanimously adopted by thoaa as-
sembled.
Delegates from the various sec*
tiong of the state pledged themselves
become active in arranging for
Wednesday’s meetings and word has
been sent to those counties not rep-
resented at the meeting to fail in
iinej. The principal object of such
gatherings is to organize, the Moody
forces to the end that an intensive
campaign may be waged in every
section of each county in the state.
Lenders of the Moody forces be
lteve that simultaneous meetings
throughout the state will give an im
■petus to the campaign that could be
gained in no other way. Telegrams
read at Saturday’s rally in such.vol-
ume and so enthusiastically worded
that there can be *Ao doubt of the
interest In the run-off campaign
were cited as evidence that the sup-
porters of Dan Moody are in earnest
about rolling up an overwhelming
majority for him.
Dan Moody left Dallas at 11 p. m.
Saturday night for Austin, where he
will spend Sunday, He went from
there to Greenville where he spoke
Monday night. Hi* Austin head-
quarter* is arranging a speaking
itinerary which will reach practical-
ly every section of Texas.
CEMETERY SOCIETY
IS COLLECTING
Annual dues
The Cemetery Society will have
fqur committees out this week col-
lecting this year’s dues, also some
delinquent dues. We Will appre-
eltg it if you will be prepared to
pay up when called on. it is quite
true that our cemetery has not look-
ed as well this summer a* usual.
There are more reasons than one for
thi» aituation. Unusual weather con?
ditions prevailed earlier In the sea-
son, the work go so far behind in
consequence that we have never been
able to catch up with the help avail-
able, in funds in the treasury, to
hire extra help. We ask the public
tg be as lament as possible.
We are doing the very best we can <115-4
under existing circumstances.
CEMETERY SOCIETY.
HOME GIRL
WRITES STORY
ON ROSES
NOTICE
those holding claims against
To
or indebted to the Ketate of Mrs.
M, W. Brudberry, deceased:
The undersigned having been ap
pointed Administratrix of the es
tate or Mra. M. W. Bradberry, dr
cessed, at a regulur term of said
Court in July, 1926, hereby notifies
all persons indebted to said estate
to come forward and make settle-
ment, and those holding claims
against said estate to present them
to her within the time prescribed
hy law at the office of Ramey &
Davidson, Sulphur Springs, Texas,
where she receives her mail for such
purposes.
This lfth day of'August, 1926.
MINNIE PERKINS,
Administratrix of the Estate of Mrs.
M. W. Bradherrry, Deceased.
PLAN TO BAR
MOODY’S NAME
Mr. L. Lt Hale, instructor in the
Agricultural Department of the East
Texas State Teachers College, Com-
merce, Texas, has as his avocation
the cultivation of roses. He recently
made a very interesting talk about
the care if rosea. I thought it would
be interesting to you to note some of
the things he told us concerning this
subject. „ ^
Mr. Hale now has five acres plant-
ed in roses. He said that he select-
ed his cuttings in November. In
making his selections, he examines
the wood to see that it is sound, and
he does not get an extra large limb
nor a very small one but one of a
medium size. The limbs are cut in
piece* about six inches long. He
buries, them with the bud down and
lets them’ remain several days, then
he takes them up and sets them out
about three inches apart in'rows two
feet apart-. - • - ...........
The cuttings are covered *o as to
leuve about two buds out. He said
ft was better to leave at least this
many uncovered, us the wind might
dry the top part of the cutting, and
there would not be enough moisture
to cause the tpp bud to grow, but
the next one would grow.
Hale said he cultivated his
rosea in somewhat the same way that
cotton is cultivated, However, the
cuttings were too close in the row to
he hoed with a common field hoe.
He often uses a little fork to rake
between them.
These cuttings may he re-set any-
time from November until the 15th
of March. To get the best results,
a fertile sandy loam soil is preferable.
In conclusion Mr. Hale said he
suspected that he' would get a
thousand dollars an acre for his
roses; thereby making a total sum of
five‘thousand dollars from the five
acres of roses.
BY FRANKIE BRADFORD,
Commerce, Tex.
PLANES JOIN
IN BANDIT HUNT
ON THE DESERT
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—<—
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ify
V
Tailored-Made
SUITS
Serges
Dark patterns are popular
for Fall. There will be more
Serge worn than the last two
seasons. I have an extra
l*rge assortment of Serge pat-
terns.
Worsteds
rstedk are very
»pplev Stripe,
ola, Weaves
Dark colors. Worsted
popular in Pineapp
Check,» Diagnols, ' Weaves
—Urge range of patterns in
these novelty styles.
Priced
The price ia lower than last
Fall. My line starts $25.00
and up—a iarge selection in
ail the prices.
WILL APPRECIATE SHOEING YOU
THE LINE.
J",.:.1' • H . *
(From Times-Herald.)
That quo warranto proceeding*
to bar Dan Moody’s name from the
general election ballot, should he be
chosen the Democratic nominee for
governor of Texas, would be filed
ufter the state executive committee
has declared the primary results on
Sept, fl, was rumored here Monday.
No attempt will be made, accord-
in gto the reports, to keep Moody's
name off the second primary bal-
lots.
Joe K. Morris, North Texas cam-
paign manager for Governor SJ. .A.
Ferguson, could not be located and
no statement regarding the report*,
could be obtained from Ferguson
campaign leader*.
Is Parallel Cate.
If such a proceeding i* under-
taken, it will be similar to those in-
stituted four years ago in the con-
troversy between Earle B. Mayfield
and George E. B. Peddy, in the con-
test for United States senator.
The contention as reported is,
that if Moody is declared to have
^disqualified himself, then the name
W the candidate receiving the next
greatest number of votes for party
nomination shall be certified to the
general election ballot*.
This contention, however, is chal-
lenged by some attorneys, who claim
that in such an event it would be up
to the state Democratic executive
committee to name the nominee.
To Moot Sept. 7.
The chairman of the state com-
mittee, as well is all committeemen,
are to be chosen at the convention
called to meet in San Antonio on
Sept. 7, and since the quo warranto
proceedings may not be filed until
after that time, it is likely that the
committee to be .named will be call-
ed upon to fill any vacancies which
might come about. ^
Moody force* will undoubtedly
control thia convention, and Moody’s
friends and supporters will undoubt-
edly be named to the committee.
Whether, despite any court pro-
ceedings, the committee could name
Moody as the nominee, * is not
known.
OFF TICKET HOPKINS COUNTY
YOUNG LADY WRITES
ON HORTICULTURE
Chapman
* “The Reckless Lady,” a story of
mother* and daughter*—and family
secrete. For every woman who had
a daughter—for every daughter,
too. At the Miaeion Wednesday and
Thursday.
She gambled at cards and lost
like a man—but when love was at
stake she fought as only a woman
can. See Belle Bennett in “The
Reckless Lady,” at the Mission Wed-
nesday and Thursday.
. %
Ambrose McCauley has returned
to his horn* in Wichita Falls, after
a visit to his mother. Mrs. Bettie
McCauley.
On Wednesday, August 4, Mr. L.
L. Hale, directing the department of
Agriculture In East Texas State
Teachers College for the summer,
was interviewed by an English class
of the same institution.
Mr. Hale said that the purpose of
horticulture as a A avocation was for
the pleasure derived from it and be-
cause it bring* closer to nature.
Mr. Hale said that he had a major
und a bjinor in his avocation, the
major being roses, the minor poultry.
Mr. Hale discussed roses first.
He said that he had ‘about 3 1-2
acres in rose*. He put two thousand
rose plants to an acre, making a
total of seven thousand roses. He
gave from two and one-half dollars
to four dollars a thousand for cut-
tings. Mr. Hale said that in the fall
he will sell these cuttings for plants
from ten cents to twelve cent* per
plant, and stated he expected about
one thousand dollars profit per acre.
Mr. Hale said another year he would
get his roses plants from bud*. He
will take this fall, branches six inches
long of firm wood from the rose
plants and bury with the bud end
down, letting the bud* stay in the
ground for fifteen days, then take
them up and bury the other end of
the branches, let these ends stay
until the branches have taken root*.
This process is not as expensive as
buying the cuttings. ■ He said there
were few diseases or injurious in-j
sects among rose plants, and that !
the cultivation was about the same I
as that of cotton.
Mr. Hale said that poultry requires |
very close attention, and that he
would not advise anyone' who has
very little time for, the avocation to
try it. He said that it took eight
hundred chickens to, produce one
hundred hens. Then there are so
many diseases and insect* among
poultry.
The class enjoyed Mr. Hale's inter-
view for we gained very much bene
ficial information from it.
BY SELENA McCLURE,
Commerce, Tex.
.Wamsutter, Wyo., Aug. 14.—The
waterless sand dunes of the desert
in Southwestern Wyoming Saturday
night were being searched by West-
ern sheriffs and cowboys for two
bhndits who Saturday robbed a
Union Pacific train of 23 pouches
of registered mail, while the train
was speeding through Wyoming.
A modern invention—the-airplane
—was called upon in the search by
postal officials, when the air mail
pilots flying between Qgteyenne end
Salt Lake City, were asked to scan
the desert for the-fugitives.
The robbers, instead of using the
bronco of the frontier stage and
train bandit, took to the modern au-
tomobile, the posses’ leaders here
'believed. With apparently weli-U'd
plans for the robbery, two men
boarded the mail car at Rawlins, 41
miles east of here, and at the point
of revolver*,., bound and gagged the
two postal clerks.
Waiting at Wamsutter. a confed-
erate of the robbers changed a rail-
road signal so that the train was
slowed down. The clerks remained
bound until the train reached Reck
Springs, when the robbery was dis-
covered, because of their failure to
deliver the mail.
A. J. Miller, who was one of the
two mail clerks on the train, arriv-
ed at Ogden, Utah, Saturday after-
noon and told the story of the rob-
bery.
He turned over to postal authori-
ties the mail left in *' e car. Out of
the 28 pouches of mail r.fied by the
bandits, mail enough to fill only
three normal size mail bags remain-
ed.
Government officials ure of the
opinion that the bags were
heavily laden with currency. This
particular train does not carry gold,
it was announced.
Miller explained that tbs train
left Rawling at 1.08 a. m. and that
the bandits entered the car at ap-
proximately 1:14, six minutes after
the train had departed from the di-
vision point,
Miller said that the bandit* un-
doubtedly entered the train before
it departed from Rawling.
“Gentlemen burglars,” was the
first comment made by Miller. "The
two men evidently are highly edu-
cated and did not make any effort
to harm us.
“They covered ,u* with four re-
volvers, two in each hand, and re-
lieved us of our guns. One of the
men covered us with the revolvers
while the other proceeded to tie u*
with thick cord. The bandit per-
forming this duty certainly knew his
business. He was an artist.”
"The two bandits,” said Miller,
“carried us to the storage car; piec-
ed u* face downward, and left u*
unmolested. We couldn’t have been
treated finer in high society."
BUFORD THEf
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"THE DEMON RIDER"
AGAIN TODAY
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Where but in Monte Carlo cquld
such a tale he set—who but the
screen's greatest stay* could por-
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Reckless Lady.” At the Mission on
Wednesday and Thursday.
666
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It kill* the gevass.
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The extraordinary Borosone treatment
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A bottle of Hcrbine on the shelf at
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......iURftM h»
ASKEW A BUF'ORD,
SULPHUR SPRINGS, TEXAS.
j nURRY MOTHKR|
! constipated, ftverith
I pleasant <».«• .,f "California Fi|
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V teaapeoafel tuq«_v hiav peeve
j -hilq tomorrow.
! -'"••t yonr druggist for gemti
j ,"rni" Fig Syrup" whirl) ha.
I f : I'uhie. ehildren ,,f
j printed on Iwttle Mother ’ y
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I imitation fig ttrup.
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Neuralgia
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How to gain real eeono-
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I IfjkJ 5 grant the fact that food
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refrigerators, yet they fail
» keep their food proper-
ly by taking less ice than
they need. They let the
ice chamber become so Tow it is frequently
j*98 half full. It is economy to keep the
ice chamber well filled at aH times.
Texas Public Utilities Company
“Ua* Ice For Protection’’ ‘
A., .
-<■.....
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Bagwell, J. S. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 183, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 17, 1926, newspaper, August 17, 1926; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth825854/m1/4/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.