The Ladonia News (Ladonia, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, September 14, 1928 Page: 4 of 8
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Hendler’s BoUgllt LlOW tO Sell LlOW er’s
« SMSST
rSK.i3L ‘..if-
sembled and now invite your inspection. Everything in keeping with fashion requirements for th
coming season and will delight you with their newness and prices to suit the most economica 1 . D
not wait come to see us now and make Fall purchases while the stocks are still intact. Get your
choice of this new array of merchandise. Now is the time to supply every wanted need of the en-
tire family, at prices cheaper than ever before. Make this store your headquarters for rail shop-
ping and save the difference.
Below are only a few of the many items. Space will not permit more.
New Silk Dresses
Decidedly Feminen Fabrics
$4.95, 6.95, 9.95,12.50
New Fall Hosiery For Ladies
To please everyone
48c, 1.00,1.50,1.95, 2.50
Men’s and Young Men’s
Shoes and Oxfords
Every kind to fij anybody
New Fall Shoes for Ladies
All the smartness you may wish
$3.50, 3.95, 4.50, 5.00, 6.00
Work Clothing
Every kind, at every price. Work QCn
pants a pair . vvv
Blue Overalls and Jumpers, each
$2.95, 4.00, 4.50, 5.00,6.00
Floresheim Shoes for the Nan who Cares, $10.00
New Fall Piece Goods of Every Kind
to be used in fashioning up-to-minute frocks
Fast colors, to suit every purse
15c, 20c, 25c, 35c, 75c. 1.00,1.50
Young Men’s Suits
All new Fall patterns in the dark shades
$12.50,15.00,17.50, 20.00, 27.50
Two Pant Suit
New Fall Millinery
Appealingly Feminine and Becoming
$1.95, 2.50, 3.00
Don’t wait, come now! Get your choice of this New Merchandice at saving prices
The Store of
Service
|-IENDLER’S
* * Dry Goods Store
Three Stores:
Ladonia, Rogers
and Lott, Texas
I)a
(it
ru
of
vhi
THE LADONIA NEWS
i
and the iron fist of the autocrat. As day can look down with contempt City, are open for business. As rapid-
we adopt paternalistic measures or upon the Hohenzollerns, the Roman- ly as possible a total of thirty-five
Catered as second class matter it
iadania Postoffice under Act of freedom.
March S, 1879. . I
alloW alien influences to creep in, offs and the
we destroy the foundation of our “whose blood
I. W. GAY...............Publisher
---------------
VACATION
,r
IS OVER
q romp Adv«rtiain| Rr*»Ment«ti»«
I_THF AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION
The glad summer season of play is
Juelphs of Europe, branches will be established. Branch-
has crept through es at New York, Boston, Chicago,
scoundrels since the flood.” But to and Atlanta are organized and will
the Egyptians Moses was a slave’s commence doing business during
son. He was to them as a black baby, September. These will be,, followed
born in a Louisiana slave-hut, would by the opening or regionally located
have been to the Southern aristocra- ; offices in other principal cities from
icy in 1850. (coast to coast,
over for our children, and they are ; Time has a grim humor. The mon- j The Universal
Credit Company
agairrvrreeping, as the Immortal Bard archs of Egypt are today only known plan of time purchase premits the
of Avon phrased it, “unwillingly to as contemporaries of Moses. The owners of Ford cars to buy them
school.” Yet not as “unwillingly” as (,zar ^U8!da will be kn
in the days of the Bard of Avon. ,l-°"‘‘‘mPorary of Tol8toy’
at lowest possible
commensurate with
financing cost
sound business
Moses goes up into smoking Sinai practices.
and has a conversation with the thun-
der and lightning. *What did they say
Taken by and large it seems to us
that school is a. rather pleasant place
DO WE WANT AN AUTOCRACY? these days.
■ ■ | The days of the rule of the rod
Everv American citizen has been are pertty generally over. Teachers . „
J .ft _____.. . . . , graven the Ten Commandments.
"—I with , b,u.f in democracy, of Way are .ymp.th.t.c, mten-.U.d
and a knoa ledye of „h»< i. meant to » «■- problem, of youth They want
In the latter respect the joint in-
terests of the purchaser and of the
to him? He shows Us when he comes ,Ford dealer are protected. The plan
down. There on a stone slab are (includes the purchase by Universal
| Credit Company of sound and ade-
Whether he really spoke with God, 1 quate fire and theft insurance cover-
or whether he had a hypnotic fit ing the purchase^, the dealer and the
up there in the thunderstorm, the company. The purchaser receives
fact remains that in some way he a standard form of policy of insur-
ed maintained it. \ne"nt of the teachers of days gone Kot h°ld of the touf?hest- most ever-. ante providing protection for one
No Jess, every American citizen by. Many of thl.m wen> wonderful lasting and fireproof bundle of truths ;year. These policies are issued by
has Been raised with a very real hor- mon and women who were nn inRpir. W ■«" of man ever found. | the Home Insurance Company of
ror of autocracy and its freedom- ation an(1 a Kuide to all their pupils. The Tl>n Commandments are the New \ ork, one of the largest in the
■tiffing evils. There were a few. however, who re- m08t important words history, world. The policies provide for set-
Bureaucracy gives to a small lied on force and lung-power rather They were *iven by Moae8 to the | tiement based on the actual cash
to instill knowledge, not to inspire
thwr men who founded our govern- ft,ar
raent and those who came after them Thjg ig far from bein({. a belittle.
» lii i .. „_ks 'iimn .. ___i Jews, but they have been generally value of the car at time of loss.
group *f public employes an arbi-.than on patience and tact. Now, _
, , .• _____ i„,.ni„ f accepted throughout Christendom as Enumerated among other advan-
Arary and undemocratic power over luckily, the number of cantankerous . ; , , . , Al ... , _ . ..
I t no f nil in I o r Inn nf nil lam n n>l myiniJu T U (fou nf (no I mitafonl I f1.. m
the Jives of fellow citizens.
Too of- up-in-the-air teachers has dwindled
considerably.
This is because new systems of
training children have been devised
which are based on a true under-
the foundation of all law and morals, j tages of the Universal Credit Com-
They art1 the basis of society in | pany plan of time purchase is the
the civilized world. jfact that the company it not opera-
There is no other instance in his- | tod with the primary and sole pur-
tory where a rule has been recog- |pose of profit, but is credited for
turn a public servant proves himself
to be in reality a petty Alexander,
»ith vague dreams of empire.
U j* ?nid0urncounntrrris^’« public standing of \hV chHd-mind." The'^io- nixed and obeyed by the mass of the |tbc *°und financin* of the Ford dea1'
^mnioye living at Z xpnse o7 t h e , neer work of a number of distinguish- «« three ! ers and purchaser,
employe living ai cue expense oi |_^ L__ Jt> on thousand years. They are not mere-
ly religious teachings inculcated by
the church. They lay their restrain-
WIDE RANGE IN
COTTON GROWING CONTEST
Costs of growing cotton ranging
from 8 cents per pound of lint to 59
cents per pound, during the 1927
season have been reported to the
United States Department of Agricul-
ture by 992 cotton growers. Most of
the growers reporting on their costs
had yields higher than the average
of 154 pounds per acre reported by
the Federal Crop Reporting Board.
The department has tabulated the
costs by yield groups. Forty-five
farmers reported yields of 60 pounds
and under per acre at an average
cost of 59 cents per pound of cot-
ton. On the other hand, twenty-three
farmers reported yields of more than
500 pounds per acre at an average
cost of 8 cents per pound. Seventy-
two farmers who grew from 61 to
100 pounds of lint per acre reported
an average cost of 26 cents per
pound of lint, and ninety farmers
who grew between 101 to 140 pounds
to the acre reported an average cost
of 20 cents per pound of lint.
More than half the group of 992
farmers had yields of 141 to .700
pounds per acre with an average pro-
duction cost of 13 cents per pound
of lint cotton. These farmers were
among the group having the larger
cotton acreages.
AGRICULTURE AND THE TARIFF
oliwr rive. This means we are ap-'«*d educators has had
preaching an extreme of bureaucrat- ‘•Vl‘r>r school the country over. We
portion of th. population,^ hy virtue ||k_* , I n I They function in the home, the
of
(families.
GIRL DIES SUNDAY
Miss Janie Sheffield, age 17 years,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Shef-
heimr descendants of powerful to dofeot its purpose, cruelty. I ,ey Iunct,on ,n the h0™, the .laughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Shef-
or friends of the king, are ,n 'Edition, new and interesting .market’ the at”et.and They field, died at the family home north-
interesting
Selig Hendler and C. H. Moore of
Rogers were here Tuesday night and
Wednesday morning on business.
These men are connected with Hen-
dler Dry Goods Stores in which
they own and operate three, Ladonia
Rogers and Lott.
The recurrent statement that the
farmer suffers from the protective
tariff is disproven by the facts.
It is held by free trade ana low
tariff advocates that farmers must
buy in a protected market and sell
in a ruinous unprotected market. An
examination of the tariff laws shows
the reverse of this to be true.
Practically everything necessary to
agriculture is sold in a free trade
market. The list of articles is illu-
minating. It includes plows, harrows
reapers, threshing machines, cultiva-
tors, cotton gins, wagons and other
machinery. Animals imported for
breeding purposes come under this
duty-free provision as do binding
twine, all material for fertilizer, buil-
ding materials, etc.
The second supposition is equally
unsound. Farm products protected
by customs duties, include almonds,
grapes, apricots, bacon, beef, oranges
onions, tobacco, wool, prunes, ‘lay,
flax, wheat, cattle, butter and a long
list of equally important produce.
It may be that the duties are in
some cases too low and need revision
upward. Certainly, a cure for low
duties that afford inusfficient pro-
tection from foreign low wage scale
countries, is not to drop all duties
and all protection.
The tariff, instead of impoverish-
ing the farmer, has done much to
insure his prosperity, by helping him
get the necessities of his business at
low prices and sell them at good
prices.
If it can he fixed in a garage
Shoup can fix it.
-empowered to control' the lives and 8tudie8 have been added to the cur-!no,u ,n the wild p,aces of the ‘!»rth w«8t of Ladonia a few miles- Suii-
liberty of others. In a bureaucracy, ncuIum> and in most cities and towns
Diner in control live by virtue of tberi* is an,P>“ provision for healthy
having some public job that limits recreation >n the form of athletics,
freedom of action or liberty of oth- whlch ar<? ■»» integral part of the
ers. There is no fundamental dif- M bl‘°' course.
ference. I Educational methods, as well as
4»he« we favor a public ownership Beaton, are progressing so rapidly
(project, for example, we are endors- ^bat m *he near future people read-
me paternalism that revokes liber- in* Shakespeare simply won’t under-
tt»e» of the citizen and prevents him s,‘ln,i how he came to use that word
>aa~uig his own initiative and enter- unwillingly.
<prihr- We thus place private busi- ......
ness in the hunds of a bureau com- DR. FRANK CRANE SAYS
4>oaed of men wjth something of the -
(power of emperors. Mo»e« and Th® Tan Commandment* (
l>o we want an autocracy? The Moses wns a Jew, the great grand- j pany has been created to act us the rendered us during the ill-
mverage citizen would answer an un- »«n of l>evi. the great great grand- specialized financial institution to n,‘M and death of our daughter, and
qualified “No!” But he must do more son of Jacob, who was the first Israe- provide a uniform and authorized nssure y°u 'vas appreciated more
than that he must realize that the Hte, and the great-great-great grand-J time-purchase plan throughout the tbnn worda can tt l1-
Respectfully,
Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Sheffield.
hold in
and in the farthest seas. day after a several days illness. The [
- funeral was held Monday afternoon
FORD ORGANIZES I at the home, conducted by Rev. A.
FINANCE CONCERN J- Ward, pastor of the Gober Mis-
- I siunary Baptist Church. Interment
With the production of the new.was in the ^ad<>n>a cemetery.
. . . ... The many friends extend sympa-
Ford car showing a steady increase1.. . .. * . . . . *
thy to the grief stricken parents in
each week, the most interesting re-^he death of this young lady.
cent development at Detroit was the ; -
announcement of the authorized
Ford finance plans with the estab-
lishment of the principle of time
payments on all Ford products.
The now
CARD OF THANKS
We take this moans through the
Ladonia News of extending our sin-
Universal Credit Com- -rrre thanka for the kindness and as-
•iangor is ever present under an at- *<»n of Abraham, who was the first United State*. The Universal Credit
tractive guise. Hebrew. j company is Ford controlled und fin-
The United States was settled at In China they boast of pedigrees anced. Officers of the company
a nation where free men could lead thirty centuries long; the only people have been established in the new Mr. and Mrs. John Miller, Mrs. S.
free lives, untrammeled by vicious that can show anything equal to this Penobscot Building in Detroit and H, Fulton, Lorenzo Fulton and son
■"Divine Right of Kings” nonsense, are the Jews. The proud Jew of this, two branches, Detroit and Kansas wer* 'n Px^* Wednesday.
Gulf Service Station
Miller-Yates Motor Co. old
stand. That Good Gulf Gas-
oline, Supreme Motor Oil,
No-Nox, Goodyear Tires.
We repair your tires.
Service, Our Motto
Your Businettg Appreciated
Phone 25
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The Ladonia News (Ladonia, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, September 14, 1928, newspaper, September 14, 1928; Ladonia, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth914279/m1/4/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bonham Public Library.