The Gilmer Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 126, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 25, 1922 Page: 4 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 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:
20
didn’t ahow.
1 x
n"e
Rex
Ph
Premier
"1.
*,
QUALITY AMP QUI
iiiniiiiininiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiii
I
Tyler
y Co.
dge
r'
9
r
A
I
==
ETC., ETC.
/.
FEVER
t........
•M.I.STEPHENS
K
IHE\TAILQR
W
DE
1
0
W
0
.1
,28
J.A.STILL
2
412
startdighu
Subscribe for the Mirror,
N
fl
4 .
LH
/6
A<en.t
stu2c:
■ 69.3
2
an
A
I . ■ :■
hmem
fer, optometrist of 1
be with us again Oci
digestion. The remedy
Prickly Ash Bitters;
rOcer
CLUSIVE
ion of
you fe
myasmmana '
n
lililillillilil
’ 25
: c*964
1
t
k
sg
: ■
Possibly in part you - worked y
lege. But having graduated fro
you (the average boy) go to
you break even; you do not yet
you owe; you can’t
• Sul
a
I
Ffine. Price $1.25 per
■R. C. Barnwell, Special
Fresh
Groceries
LETUS
us \
SHOA
YOU
SAM-
PLES
AND
GIVE
YOU
PRICES
LITHOGRHPHING
ENGRAVING
EMBOSSING
jritis
e medi-
res the
This Value
Has Never
\
\
C^t^rSb^
sourly—'
thaFord.on
ns /rapidly
doflar means
/your debts,
ry and then
\now piles
-
ajc
hr.
HOLESAE--•
GILMER, TEXAS -X
Phon. 108
Serviee Every Minute
Every Dey
’ ARK YOUR GROCER ABOUT GETTING
VALUABLE PREMIUMS
EVERYTHING
the Market affords.
Clean, Fresh Stock.
Prompt Free Delivery.
L
..
L
- ■
-
me-
-
Then you start in business. Obligh
multiply; you begin to understand what
and especially you learn that you must
Thtn (if you are so fortunate) you n
JUST RECEIVED
NWPATTTV
.ANDSEORTHATB ...
Cau hnd Sen Them
. \
I \
Bad breath is‘a symptom
a disordered stomach, andyr
TYAYS
—o—
the things that w
of them. Phone
you know,
Subecribe for t
mcrX
■ w
98982
70
— _#
1
— That eomething is ownet
confdence built on permanent satisfho-
tion. There are 170,000 Pordeon tractore.
hi yearn—wtumawtr Powwer Parming is being
• uuvw-•V• -vwe=*6 “•*d
doneFordaonis ahowtigdmpedorservicei
Mao
35
Fresh Vegetables
FANC
GROCERIES
ivim that payment may take ask
-JNO A. MATHIS.
VOLUNTEER STATE LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Gilmer, Texas
Save
money
on every acre
— plowed—
with the
Fordson .
AyFFe
four to six
with the
3
5
white against white and it writing a few lines now and
didn’t ahow, daaxa then, as bright thoughts,
it is said to have shown on superingendered by the bright
again, perhaps, children come. Obli
upon obligation. )
No one can properly meet ths
ser0*g
*63
iften (15)
Better
ciarettes
"W
Fordsor
a-e THE; TRACTOR
95078,
- the Fordsea 31
F.
fee
, Druggists.
wlt-d23-4-5
*
Distributors of
Sunset Coffee
The Coffee With the Wonderful flavor
_1,
3,
—UN .
\Hzonongamg,"
i-t
oughon
e 156
lad Dressing
Phone 160
. A ri ■
Barnwell A W
Wv. • /
I X /
In
■ I 1kc
Mrp ■ ‘^1^
■
OTQR.CO:
Au, 2**- 2
dane5sz2a*
1 (
rV -A
aa"um•
CIGARETTE$-$
H —betierTurkiah
Ash Bitten cleanses
strengthens thene organs
hsips the system , to natot
ease farms. It is
ter workisg memiu MK
you. Suppose you die one fine day. Then yur fami-
ly will diiscovtr the due date of your.paper. \ ---
IT WILL ALL MATURE AT THAT MOMENT
Have you made provision for that? Can your' estate
pay up? If not, who will pay? Somebodymust. It’s
the law. If you don’t know who will pay and what
# Remember, the long winter
■ nights are now with us again
and to enjoy readii
rjkgner Virginin " •
- Burley
' " 44 2g0e t3
• . . 6-204*28 G 702d
EDD FENLAW. Manager
. B. A. BROWN, Driver
Get on our Mik Route. We
deliver while you sleep.
Ask your neighbor about our
Service—She gets milk from us.
We want to give Gilmere Mg
Dairy. Your patronage ‘will
help us do that very thing.
We shall soon say something
about our prices.
We are here today to Guarantee
what we did yesterday.
-pSamp325
2",e" jf
2
I
s
I
E
s
We 1
mer to
the trash piles plainly’ and we pengelings against the eastern
could have seen .0 inumerable horizon, sugredted them, and
. . without looking further for
number in the alleys hard by, frost, watched that beautiful
, Frosty mornings and sun- but we were in a hurry to light scene—you ought to see the sun'
.... wav beyond the half way house
‘ and look down the shadowy
dMigittiona but
Cat year 6
farm Y
costs in
half with
7,0 ’ 1
A. J. GILCHRIST, Local Manager
iiiHHiiiiiiiuiiiiimiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiii
. .. ML....... L..«
8 Of ferment-
ities, purifies
the complex-
and makes1.
; i ing one should have
r es accurately fitted.
and sew-
rood glass-
Dr. Shek,
lallas,
i 2ZAn and
• Keep your stomach, liver and
fl bowels in good condition if-you
would bore health . Pricky
1
! 28th. Eyes examine, glasses
; fitted.
P ' / '
)\
SPEED
cine for men. It
stomach and boyd
ed food and ipfpur
the breath, Mears
yodnwuh
" ""
"FHE MIRROR HAS THE
1 A“ENCY FOR THE A
EXLINE & EXLIWECO.
DALLAS, TEXAS
bottom figures -on all kinds of
FANCY STATIONERY, BANK
CHECKS, BANK STATIONERY,
CARDS, WEDDING INVITA-
TIONS, ETC
We are riding faster, living faster, and thinking
faster than in any previousvage.
And do you know that we are living better, and
DRESSING BETTER thah our forefathers ever
did? A TAILOR-MADE SUIT with CHARAC-
TER and TYLE will help yon GO SOME.
: way through .col-
college or elaewhere
ek. Now, perhap,
efin to repay yhhat
MQuplicated
Ittakesabaqethingbeniden
engineeringtofurnish a
tractor like theRordson
to mR at this astnisb-
ingly low price.
DAR YOU FAY YOUR DEBTS?
For the average man and woman life is chiefly
made up of the business of l i ring. In that process peo-
ple assume ell sorts of obligattions—they must—which
are as real as businm paper and must be met as
promptly. Default in either case is disastrous; the
I defaulting business man ceases to have credit and
goes out of business; the social or moral or political de-
faulter just disappears.
Few realize that being born puts us in debt.
No fault of ours, but a fact. Dame Nature issues
our paper as soon as we utter that first cry. No won-
der it is a cry of fear! That paper really constitutes
a more serious obligation than any other promise to
pay we ever issue. ___ _ _-C
IT HAS NO SPECIFIC DUE DATE
But it will certainly mature; it will not be forgotten
or lost or destroyed by fire, nor will it be forgiven.
It may mature tomorrow; it may inot mature in
i forty years.
The average man has to shake himself together to
realize that any such obligation exists. Think a mo-
ment! —
Who paid for your upbringing?—Did you?
Who paid for year education?--DM you?
--------------
ster
' / .-2i3
ye
/ SERVICE
mmmumuuumummumm
shiny days," have from time up the linotype, so the metal rise over MW mountain some JS
immemorial been considered woula be hot when the operator morning just for the novelty of E
the ideal weather for fall of the reached the office an hour or it and chewing Wie "cud" of I E
year. ' two lalter, and get settled down uninterrupted reflection, and g
it was only Tuesday that the to our desk by the east window, kicking our heels to the tune of E
Mirror said it was almost cold (one pane oul, hence this cold) "It might have been: 5
enough for frost, and Tuesday where we could face the twin This early morning diversion IS
evening , one of our esteemed mountains that rise so majes- of .watching the glorious fall, R
lady readers called us up to tically to the east of us, and frostv morning sunrises, as it I
inform us that we must be watch the firse bright glances comes up over the eastern I
“frost proof,” or getting blind, of the sun, as it arose from its mountains, furnishes us an a
net to be able to see the frost of saffron couch, casting its bright ideal time and place for solitary 6
Tuesday morning. She perhaps peneilings athwart me horri- reflection, a place and timeti
thought we were up too late to zon, and descending first to she temper the fiery impulses by,
see it, but dear lady it was the court house cupulo, and then the chiltide of knowledge gain-,
other way round. It is an kissing the solitary occupant of ed in solitary study, and calm
axiamatic fact that just before the office, through this broken the hearts warm glow by the
he dawn is the coldest part of-window. before it said good measured pulse of experience,
the night, and that is when the morning ho our less energetic— and (add a cough to that cold,
congealing process of frost or less compelled by necessity— through the broken window.)
forming goes on. friends. It is here of mornings, when
Before the dawn we had had it was thus we were engaged, we were even oblivious to the
—— our breakfast and wended our dear lady friend, that we did presence of frost, that we have
way to the Mirror office. ____not notice the frost until time to review the past,
Te fact is we looked all over that same beautiful sun that travel backtovertherough.and
Mayor Denman’s grass bur that at this season bathes devious lifeieventur
pasture near the depot, where the east in ha golden splendor, back the clock handso tme,be
he is going to pub in a finelum- was up high enough to have a boy again. in that werhge
ber emporium- some time, and dissipated the congealed mois- season when the fairy pri 288
we admitwe were unable to see tore and furnished James waited for us beyonduthehil
anv froet but with those grass Whitcomb Riley—not "Jack" of and think over the time when
burs so thick and sharp they fame name and local fame— friendship, love and truthw re
may have-resisted the frost. with his theme for his famous more than names, andthen.i
Of course there was no doubt poem- our reverie come.p nidown. the
frost all over the scattered cot- “The frost is on the pumpkin.” m e ng.w Y of life ntil"
ton on the square, but that was Here we faced our Underwood, cat UP wi nourselve .it down
• ___________ -' - And here we would sit down
road to come, and fain would E
rest here awhile, but Old Time. S
’ the driver, cracks his whip, and e
the wheels grind in the sand. ||C
! The office force arrives, theji
machine starts up, we awake —
f from the contemplation of the ’
| pretty scene and Vie doubtful, f
{ dream, the frost has vanished
; before 'the bright glances of
that same sun now reaching us
from a higher and warmer an-
gle, and the day for other Gil-
mer working men has started.
, We admit tha. there was
frost, however.
I ' ---: ——
TAILOB
OUR TAP^TlNE 1$ ALWAjg^READYFOR
IL ■
1 . f,
o t
-.2
_—2d, 8
1 —
Subscribe for the Mirror.
|
I
33 iaK
__
_---------
OUR TAPE LINE IS ALWAYS READ? FOR YOU |
LI S T
What have you done with oukold suit
or overcoat? You are going to nedthem
--these cold-wintee-daya.. coming, end vitheen
Years experience in the cleaning and \dyelng
business, I knowhow to prepare these Mothes
for you. PHONE 148. \ .
N. R. CHILDRESS/
5 3 .
E--
____ GILMER DAILY MIRROR
_____
—------ 6-------------------
J4
; 4" ,
r"
. -
—
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.
Tucker, George. The Gilmer Mirror (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 126, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 25, 1922, newspaper, October 25, 1922; Gilmer, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1409124/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Upshur County Library.