Upshur County Echo (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 22, 1923 Page: 4 of 4
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"Vmrwom„en"e# ■
uMo" ■' ME
I
4
AW, WHAT’S THE USE
•That’* One Thing Felix Does Know
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Medicines that aid nature are
Cham-
ous damage is done.
White’s
It allays the con.b.
A
ELLIS-YORK.
MrJ-H. Ellis and Miss Adele
A Judicious ‘Inquiry.
famed their art from the birds.
is their favorite story.
now f "
resident
Gilmer First National
Bank
Proof that the average Londoner la
BETHLEHEM.
I
Feb 19
young days. It wesatthe time of hie
first
We learn that the
were quite
Sold by other places was good.
Hogg’s Pharmacy.
28-41
Bule & Marshall.
tf.
the inflamed and
A box of GROVE’S O-PEN-TRATF
SALVE for Chest Colds. Head Colds ana
Gilmer,
Texas
Him
pores •
To Cure i Gold In One Day
%
aind Eflect COa
TM2W,
d
230.
Geo. Phillips estate for sale,
located east of Gilmer near A ex
Webster; Rev. M W. Lanier,
Rev. A. B. Ingram and Mr Mul-
of W. D. Reynolds, Denver, Colorado,
and W. A C. Hemrich of Aberdeen,
usually the larger shipper, average ex-
ports from that country before the
war (1909-1918 having been between
WELL. WHO Do
Mou SUPPOSE r
GOinG To Do THE
John Spann and D. A. Jones
, are opening a restaurant in the
A mong those who were on the
program and entered in the dis-
cussious we were informed of
the following: Rev. J L. Davis,
Glenwood; Rev.' T. C. Mahan and
ment.
relief.
11.20
ME>. BUT MEBBE
WE COULD GET
ALONG WITHOUT
A MAID
one-third and one-half of all corn en-
tering into world trade and about two
and one-half times the quantity ex-
ported by the United States.
Annie-. Pbillios.
25-2t
\
I LIKE PALM BEACH WELL
EHUF , FANNN - IM havin'
A DARN GOOD TME '
BUT LIVING HERE IN THIS
HOTEL 15 JUST ABOUT |
BREAKIN " ME I
Bro. Jesse Davi, filled his reg-
ular appointment here Saturday
night and Sunday. In the after-
noon he preached at Graceton.
Spring Violet.
Sunday School Convention
and Workers Conference.
F
r
Talas Told ef Two Authors Who Have
Rison to Eminence in Liter-
ary World.
ARE YOU TO BE A
WINNER OR LOSER?
/ -o2"Amateur Radio Meseage.
All tong distance records for ama
tur Mill0 tranamisslon were shar
wbal It costs you Perweekby
the year.
Estate for Sale.
Scholarship for Sale.
In Tyler Commercial College
Good for any course
Can save you money
THE ECHO
back home; the five years we have
| lived here during the Winter mnths .
the thermometer has never reached
' । Monday morning at 9:45 o’clock
— in an attack of acute rheu-jand continued in session most of
matism in which there is much] the day. w- ioa.
pain Ballard’s Snow Liniment is questions discussed
a necessary part of the treat -lute resting and that the attend
A TONIC
drove’s Tasteless chin Tonic restores
Food Along Thames Embank-
ment at London.
Lead World in Corn Production.
Approximately^^) per cent of the
corn entering Into world trade comes
from Argentina and the United States,
according to information compiled by
the United States Department of Agri-
minegs have no such inspiration. As (
far away as possible from the blue
sky the free air, the music of the
birds, and the leaves and the winds
and the sea, they still dream of and
produce music. It seems paradoxical.
But the human soul has Its own music,
as well as the winds and birds and
ether phenomena of nature. Possibly,
* In all the' easier for this human
By L. r. Van Zelm
•mNewp-paUudo
Forgot Her Feet
Sarah had an unwelcome visitor
and one day she told me to tell him
she was not in. She hid behind some
curtains in the adjoining room. After
I repeated my much-practiced oration
be turned to me and said: “Next time
Sarah goes out, tell her to take her
feet alovg."—Exchange.
ES, BUT HEN WED HAVE
To HIRE A MAID,-PAY
FOR THE UGHT - A«O
THE GAS — HAVE ThE
BEDDING LAUMDERED,-
m (AND 1000 AND
‘ §5 h 465 MORE
$h A
—Men: On r catalog tells how we
teach barbering qnicklv, mailed
free. MOLER BARBER COL
LEGE, 910Main St.Dallas. 25 2t
system to a healthy condition,
Ttousands have testified to its
good qualities. Try it when you
1 met a family in Juneau, Alaska,
that had formerly resided in Cleve- |
land. I asked the lady of the house if
it wasn’t somewhat difficult to stand
the rigors of the northern elimate,
writes Sherman Rogers in the Outlook.
She laughed outright.
"Well," she answered. "we endured
□roup is enclosed with every bottle
HAYES’ HEALING HONEY. The m
iould be rubbed on the chest and thr
children suffering from a Cold or Cra
MULES, MULES.
mee,
We are receiving a car load of
Mules, all’well broke and ready .
o go to work.
talnly a paradise compared with Cleve-
land, either in winter or summer. We
have been north eight years in all;
spent five winters here, and three
I
Birds Are Poisoned In Search fer
2 •
VAICEUM--
Conn. The stations heard were those
WELL - WHAT
CAN UEDo?
"4 \
The healing effect of Haves’ Healing Hones
W the throat combined with thehening “
we , O-Pen-Trate Sabre through the |
a shin noon waps a couch.
Obristian discussed Wi ning the
Lost, and J. M. Marshall told
about Living the Christian Life
Field Secretary Geo. J March
then occupied the pulpit with a
splendid talk on Men Taking
Their Place in Church Worship
The Workers Conterence met
beadquarters, Hartford.
feel fine. Price 60c.
Hogg’s Pharmacy.
harmony to escape In expression
when’ it is uninterrupted by music
from without.—-Ohio State Journal
♦ kill gulls with matches
-
per bottle.
Argentina by 21,000,000 bushels, but
prior to that year Argentina was
tered during the transatiantic tests of .
the American Radio Relay league, -tisea*yt get »Id <
M1K
was desinated as the Cuunty
Deposliory by the commission-
era in sesmion last week. This
at league
"“wp
- —_ — —
GREAT WRITERS’ YOUNG DAYS
Research In South America.
The Field Museum of Natural His
tary is equipping six expeditions. Two
will gather geological specimens from
Brazil to Patagonia, while two others
will study plant and animal life in
Peru. Archeplogical Investigations will
be pursued to Oolombia and the Isth-
■mis of Panama, und another party
takes up the ethnology of the Malay
peninsula. The gems and minerals of
Brazil and the silver, copper nitrate
and vanadium deposits of Peru and
Bolivia will be carefully explored
Bpeclmens of pre-hfstorie vertebrate
life will be sought in the Santa Crux
beds, and the great ground sloth aad
the pampas horse may be reprenented
to the finds. The archeological expe-
dition alms st solving some of the
Mysterious interrelations of ancient
evilizatlons and may prove a connect-
ing link between the Mays and the
Inca.—Scientific American,
when the signals of two amateur sta- misery of heartburn or indizen-
tiens were picked up in mid-Pacifc, ci.p. Herbine goes right to the
7,000 nautical miles distant, by R. B. ' i.j „ . * . ,
Roesch, radio operutor on board ths bpot. I drives out the badly
■teamship Easterner, it was announced digested food and makes you lways most effectual.
Both remedie; are packed in one carton aad ehe
•t of the combined rentment is 35c
Just- ask your druggist for HAYES
IEALING HONEY.
ly successful remedy. Price
35c, Sold by Hoge’s Pharmacy.
23-46
American Com la Eurepe.
Less coma was imports, I I* 1921 by
the United Kingdom. France and Bel
glum than during pre-war years. ne
cording to Information compiled by the
United States Department of Agew
tore in 1921 the United Kingdom
took 78,0W,0U bushus, < Jhpareu wih
an average of 83,000,000 bushels dur-
ing the five prewar jears, 1909-1913;
France took 12,000,000 bushels, com-
pared with 19,000,000 bushels; and
Beglum. 19,000,000 compared with
Canada and the Scandinavian coun-
tries, however, Imported more corn in
1921 than during the prewar years,
Denmark’s imports totaling 19,000,000
bushels, an inerease of over 70 per
tent.
relieves the lungs, aids expecto-
ration, opens tile secretjons and
aids nature in rest rirg the
anteed to kill rats and mice,
fremat-e thi-m. Rodents killed
wih RAT-SNAP leave no smell.
Rate pass up fill food to get at
RAT SNAP. Their first meal is
iheir last. RaT-SNAP comes
in cakes. No mixing. Cate and
dogs woh‘t touch it. Two sicca,
85c and 65c. Sold and gunran-
l. e chamberlain’s Cough Remedy
Aids Nature.
Cleveland winters, and Juneau is cer- i culture. In 1921 shipments from the
United States exceeded those from bank
IX- « 5X1 —RAT SNAP is absolutely guar
The Suuday School Conven-
tion of Pitt-burg Baptist Assc-
cation convened with Gilmer
First Baptist Church Sunday
afternoon about 8 o’clock. ,
After opening song and devo-
tional services, M--ionary M.
W Lanier was elected to take
charge of the program in the
absence of the regular conduc
tor.
Dr. R C. Traynham of Pitts
burg delivered an inspirational
Address, giving illustrations
from life.
Prof. J. B. Gay diecussed
General Sunday School Prob-
lems, and Rev. 8. D. Lunsford
of Ore City gave some peculiar
local problems.
At the night service Mrs.
Walter Mar-hall discussed the
Importance and Value of Music
I in the Sunday School, Mrs. Ed
_ puccehs, sad as old towswoman
t Kirriemuir, Brrle’s natve pface,
AM whatjahe“ thought ‘of it
she repiled, cauttously, "It‘•
a gude thing the "laddie tag wek ‘some-
thing at bis wHUn'; h'could' nver
have aaad* s leevlu" at th’ millsr
l’o the Echo:
Lemuel Woods is up after a
case of flu.
J bn I an and Wilson Rash,Lucios
Wiiuht, Burt Cain,Onie Woods,
O O Cain and family, Virgil and
Viola Marks,Cleo Arnold, Ruby,
Alford and Julius Scarbrough
are all sick, principaly with flu.
Jim Woods and family have
come to stay a few days with his
father who is very low.
Mr. Woodie Free from East
Mountain came down Sunday to
Mr .Jim Cain’s. _
T- Stop a Cough Quick
lake HAYES’ HEALING HONEY, a_______________________
cough medicine which stope the cough b Energy and Vitality by Purifying ano ' A . N...L.NI e:...
bealing the inflamed andhritated tissuez Enrirhiny th« RIonri When you feel it, M rs. Arch Marshall, Gilmer,
A box of GROVE’S 0-PEN-TRAT kengthening.invigoratingemectseehowRev.A F. Crittendon, Mr. J T
is not the least danger in giving
it and for colds, croup and
whooping cough it-is unsur-
passed. 28-41
—Intestinal worms destroy
the health of children and weak-
en their vitality. The worms
should be expelled nefore seri-
A well known traveling man
who visits the drug trade, says
he has often heard druggists
ask acustomer, who wished to
buy a cough medicine, whether
it Was for a child or an ad ait and
if for a child; they almost inva-
riably recom nended Chamber-
lain’s Cough Remedy. The rea-
son for this is that they know
that there is no danger from it
and that it al w iys cures There
on daily bulances. which was the
highest bid ofred.
— Liquid Boroznne is an effi-
cient healing remedy for human
or animal flesh. It mends a
•were wound, sore, cut or
seratch in the shortest possible
time. Price 80c, 60c and $1 20.
Sold by Hogg’s Pharmacy. 28 4t
WHY?
Do You Trade elsewhere when
you can get more for less money
at C. H. Hall’, Cash Store.
Look at the men and women
about yob who have reached the
age of fifty or more and you will
see men and women who have
won in the game of business
and you will see those who have
lost in the same game. Only a
| few years ago, they were
, your age. They dreamed the
same dreams of succcess that
you are dreaming Why did one
, succeeedand the other fail?
Make a comparison and you will
find that the one who failed did
so because he did not take ad-
vantage of circumstances but
- followed the line of least resist
i anceand did not prepare himself
• in the Keen competitin of busi-
ardently fond of birds was furnished
'a abort tme ago when the report of
the untimely death of several score
ef gulls out of the thousands that
daily flutter over the foggy Thames
was given prominent space in the
Metropolitan newspapers and called
forth general Indignation.
t One of the oldest customs In Lon-
don la the feeding of the gulls along
the Thames embankment, where hun-
“reds of persons daily stand. throwing
breadcrumb. Into the air dnd watch-
tax the swirling gulls catch the mor
wels on the wing with uncanny ac-
euracy-
The other day the bodies of a num-
ber of gulls were found floating in
the river. An Investigatlon disclosed
that some person. Instead of throwing
breadcrumbs to the birds, had fed
them matches, the phosphorus end.
ef which poisoned them.
, 1,
Increased Output of Lorraine Mines.
Stat l st lea Just published show that
the mines of the Lorraine basin ex-
ported during the first six months of
the present year 4.328,455 tons of min-
eral ore. valued at £1,800,000. as
against 2,666,428 tone, valued at £1,-
100,000, for the corresponding period
of last year.—London Times.
It ia a powerful pain ance from Pittaburg, Mount
Three sizes, 30e, 60c and Pleasant, Naples, Omaha and
Solu by berlain’s Cough Remedy acts or C. eam Vermifuge is a thorough.
-28-4t this plan.
GhEAT SINGERS WERE MINERS
Underground Werker Mavs Con-
tribured Largety to the Ranks
st Famous Operatic Artleta
Fine Art of Pussyfooting-
"Td like to adopt a political career,"
Mid the ambitlous young man, "but
Im no orator and I don’t believe I’d
ever learn how to. make a good
speech."
"You don't need to, son,” replied
the veteran campalgner. "Some of
the smoothest political strategy thia
country has ever witnessed was put
over in a whisper."—Birmingham
Age-Herald.
it brings color to the cheeks and her
it improves the appetite, you will rh
vprecjatotasmueconicvo b ami ‘colm, Pittaburg; Rev A. W
Sanaqutninesuspendedinsiipu ! Reeves and Mr. Cox. Mount
tasant even children like it The bioos ' Pleasant; Rev Albert Spence,
soda QUININE to Purify i and IRON w 1 N.ples,
nrich it Destroys Malarial germa ano • _ ' . . _ ... .
We did not learn the names of
• i
all whocame from other place..
— WHILE at Tic
HTEL You HAWE AU
That done for (
Know JM Whf Mb Wu
Whimslcal Walker, the famous
diwn, has followed the prevailing
fashin and written hie recollections,
which naturally abound with theatrical
shop talk. Among his reminlscences
of Drury lane-—the street, not the
theater—is the following: "I was on
speaking terms with Yin undertaker ।
there and be once invited me into hla
shop and brought out a bottle. I sat
myself down on something covered
with black cloth and we hobnobbed
together in friendly fashion. The un-
dertaker was an enthusiastic theater-
goer. He knew a host of 'star.' by
sight and hail aoquaintance with a few ’
of the lesser lights. We talked theat-
rical 'shop.' and I happened to ask the I
undertaker tf he knew what had be-
come..of a certain actor whom 1 men- -
----e=- i
>
have a cough or cold. 28 44 Irene* York from Marshall were
' Reaa ibe Echo ibrouKb anauvited in m rriageby Rev.T.C,
sec ll you do not get 2 cents ‘Mahan, pastor ol the First Bap
worth of news. Tbat is shout tst Church, At the pastor shome
hare last Saturda after noon
about 4 o’clock. :
Iliads .1 bid oi,4 percent
1; A forelgu dispatet calls attentlon to
s w mderful phenomenon which tea
Ween mantfestins itseif la the eoal
Aelds of Belgium and in other mining
"dstriets. Worn the ranks *te ; Washington.
» jniners, the underground, molellke — "
workers, there hes come a aeries ef , Government Lumber to Alaska,
great siggers, not Just one or two, but Elghty-six per cent of the lumber R. H. William, iron building on
4 a neWer. The • great Dufresne, - used In Alaska is eut trom the govern- Bffalo street. The firi name
Boullllez, Ansseeu • of’ the Opera , ment forests, and Sitka spruce from g... a 1..
Ootulque of Paria, Descampe, . f*- ( the Tongass national forest to finding " be anann « jo * .
Moua Faust, and many others were an outlet in ths markets of the world. 666 quickly relieves Cold, ana
all miners. Of couse, we all know of Thie sawmil at Wrangell during the nn.. c.ca. mu
Be unusual rine <o tame of the rol- 1 past summer made a shipment of 45,- —aariPPe- Constipu»le«, »ll-
‘Meking Harry Lauder, whose irrs- i 000 feet, board measure, of Sitka ieusness and Headaches.
"pressfble lilting mirth had Ita origin spruce for the London market, and an- i '
'Jn . Scotch mines But these conspicu- other lot of 450,000 feet, board mesa- ' •
ous examples are not all. It la re- ' ure, was shipped from Wrangell , For Sale at barxaiuP; Scbolar-
jported that In the coal mines of Lege ; through Prince Rupert to eastern ' .pip in Tyler Commercial College
’the men have the habit of‘.singing a pototo nd scholarship io the Sham;
they work, and often with magni- —=n* l . •
‘centetfect. j . I WRONG IDEAS ABOUT ALASKA burser SeltcL Business Cotleze
Pres agents for the great singers i __- in Dallas. I be Ecbo. if
have been fond of telling how they Wintera Thore Ars Mild, Thermometer ----------------------
..1t, In Region of Juneau Barely I ' . . ...
But these Reaching Zero. Honed by name. Yea, said the man, Ingram old store. For informa-
— composedly, ’you're asittins on him tion phone 433.. Wi. BrOadres,
। zero. Do you Imagine It takes a rig
1 orous person to stand such a cilmnater
Thia was followed by peals of laugh-
ter and further remarks about the
•Illy ideas of people In the States re-
garding the climate of Alaska.
Southeastern Alaska has an Oregon-
Washington climate, due to the Jap-
anese current, which has the same ef-
fect from Ketchikan to < . ivencer
as it has on Puget sound. cs !dng in
very mild winter, and extremely de-
lightful summers. Very setoun, in the '
last 20 years, baa th • t' rrmometer
reached zero in this euie iection.
The Interior of Alaska, mads famoua
by exaggerating novelists, has a cli-
mate closely duplicating Minnesota in
the winter, and Maine or Oregon in
j summer.
Mr. Rudyard Kipling was in the
habit of selling hla old schoolbooks to
a dame who kept a curlosity ahop at
Bideford. In recent years many peo-
ple have viaited the shop, hoping to
pick up a volume with an early com-
position of the greet man scrawled in
the margin. They have been disguat-
ed to hear that the eld dame rubbed
out everything of the kind.
"No," she -autd, aa one occaston,
"Master Kipling waa always fair to
me, aad he may have written things
not a. good as those he has sold slnce.
I wasn't geing to have them poking
fun «t hh." Which shows the popu-
larity Mh Kipling enjoyed •• hia
achoqiday
t TT chur County Be ha Thursday, February 88. 1928
teed by Hoggs Pharmacy. if
WE MIGHT RENT
A COTTAGE -That
WOULD AT LEAST
SAVE Tipping
—A
/ wuen Mou ASK LIKE
I That I KNOW I
269
ness. The . successful man r
woman prepared for emergencies
at your age by training for
business You can do thia with
much less effort and in a more
modern and up to date manner
than the successful business
men of today did when he was
your age.
The Tyler Commercial College
has pr vided the means by which
you can secure your business
education at least cost and a
shortest possible time. You
can put yourself in the class of
trained workers in a few months
time by enrolling at once in the
largest business training school
in America, with a faculty of
over ubirty specialised teachers,
all modern equipment, using the
famous Byrne System, of Busi-
ness Training. You will get the
most thorough, complete and
practical training that can be
had. Socure your business
training with us now. We are
continually being called on
acco nt of our influence and
prestige, as a result of rapid
growth, by business men, a
large number of whom are grad-
uates, for you voung people to
fill positions. Our Employment
Department report shows many
more calls than we could fill
from our gradaates in one week.
This ia true today and every day
In the year. Every month, we
help many to atari on the road
to success. We are prepared to
help a limited number through
our Student Loan Fund Depart-
ment for those who are not
financially able to pay cash in
full for their services.
• Fill in and mail coupon for
large free catlgue!
I . > Ml
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TYLER OOM MEROI AL 00L
LEGE, Tyler, "Taxus:
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Stephens, J. J. Upshur County Echo (Gilmer, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 22, 1923, newspaper, February 22, 1923; Gilmer, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1439492/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Upshur County Library.