Wise County Messenger (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, May 31, 1929 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Wise County Messenger and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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I
Page Two
W ISE COUNTY MESSENGER
Friday, May 31, 1929
)
1
STOP
married
welfare.
Not
much, perhaps, thru
wi
......••■••••MM
ers, business men, and men of oilier
By County Agent
which tells how to control
EL......
7
-pound sample if
a '
• i
mu
&
‘1
RieQer Dry Goods Co
BIG TRADE EXPANSION
AL,
Three
Friday,
More
A
Saturday and
Days
First Monday
da
a
ears and have his tail stepped
never do anything bur
The same way with the farmer.
you can scrateh his neck ami
H
where his
HATS
Men’s Dress SHIRTS
DRESSES
SPECIALS
98c
O,
4
$5.95
MEN’S SUITS
„"k
■
$9.85
4
LAKI)
$2.95
SPECIAL
$12.48
10 lbs.
$I4..95
$3.50 and $4.00 Hats—
• •
17c
$1.95
■
doz.
19c
FINE FOOT-WEAR
2 for
25c
SMART
A
35c
On Sale
1 Lot ladies’ and Chil-
1 Lot $5.00 and $7.50
dren’s Hats—
Shoes
$3.98
1 Lot $3.50 and $4.00
Shoes
98c
$2.98
Sizes 14 to 20; 36 to 46
1 Counter Shoes, now $1.95
■
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A Home-Owned Institution
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Spring and summer Hats,
Saturday, regular $5.00
and $6.00 Hats—
hind the
on and
$7.85
$9.85
Go to the Majestie Theatre. Deratur
when you are looking for real enter
coc-
to
79c
13c
23c
15c
purr.
Feed
will stop your losses from this
dreaded disease and grow bet-
ter chicks. As a developing, egg
producing and fattening ration,
dry skim milk can’t be beat. Ask
us for FREE Bulletin No. 202
ORANGES
APPLES
CORN, No. 2 cans.....
BROOMS, Good Ones
Play Suits, 2 to 8
36-In. Percale
35c Voiles
15c Socks, 2 pr. ...
home in Englewood,
afternoon.
Summer sleeveless mod-
els in sports, crepes, pas-
tals and prints.
■
I =
i
qt. jar
doz.
!
LONE EAGLE IS
WED QUIETLY
I
1"
V
3 \
SKYGAK HERE
WITH FARMERS
■
■
I
ft
1
Lovely Dresses !
at—
) N 8 P331
NN)
g.5g
you will send 50c to cover cost
and mailing.
Tennessee Dairies
DECATUR, TEXAS
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On Sale
$1.50 Broadcloth Shirts,
collar attached, sizes 14
to 17—
■
■
SCOTTS
EMULSION
Watch youchil
grow srong.
I
F-
Just arrived. 25 of these
Dresses placed on sale for
Saturday and Monday at-
i
sec
fol
Co
the
W
dui
tal
< re
rac
lik
on
the
ove
da'
Bol
sto
do
am
t hi
our
abo
cou
hal
Qu
Bol
and
woi
rhe
inti
tor
nen
Dr.
Ol>H>IIH(ll •••»•■••••■ >■•••■ IMMaM im«M* i, a[•
20 Suits left, values up to
$25.00—
l
I
i
Chick Losses
from
Coccidiosis
RIEGER DRY GOODS CO
iiiVMMaiMI1l«IIBII»tl*ll0l»l«!li
■ - Fa ;
I
ENTERTAIN WITH FORTY TWO
PARTY
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hang together or be hung one at :
time.”
The gathering was made up of farm
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xi
Collins, at the signing of the declara-
lion of independence : "We must ali
The ceremony, witnessed by only a
few friends and the immediate family ' inE made to realize that the business
was performed by William Adams I man is very much concerned for his
Brown of Union Theological Semina- welfare. Not so much, perhaps, thru
him and :
even put
9
as they arrived, with Mies Sabra Pa.-
sons of Denton, presiding at the punch
bowl.
A color scheme of pink and green
We were glad to meet a number of our farmer friends at the gathering in Decatur
- Monday night; other meetings will be held with others of our friends. It is good
11 that we meet, and talk over problems that vitally effect us in our daily lives. °
will be glad
Kev. McKinley Norman. pastor of I
i the first Baptist church of Quanah,
will preach the baccalaureate sermon
your hand in his pocket
money is supposed to be.
Mrs. Buel Raney, Mrs. L. M. Acheson,
Mrs. Will Huttrill, Mrs M. A. But-
trill. Mrs. E B Brown of Greenwood.
Miss Amelia M. Thurmond ami Miss
shbra Parsons of Denton, Mrs. Cha-
‘ Peery of Valley View, Mrs. H H. Hall
j of Heuley. Mrs. Wallace Gregg and
Mrs. Elwood MeDaniel of Decatur,
' Misses Edna and Melba Buttril, Thel-
’; We make our own prices. Also sell things • ■
; ' the people can use every day.
Miss Anne
Ambassador
Morrow, and
bergh were
*
I
♦
X
X
Mrs. c. M. Vaughn and Mis. s. it. j
Powell entertained with a progressive
forty-two party at the home of Mrs.
D. B. C., and the friends of the old
achool take great pride in his success
and eminence and will hear him with
unusual interest.
The service at night will be in the
nature of a farewell service for the
college stueients. Kev. Arthur VanArs-
dale and Miss Dorothy Wolf will rep-
resent the student body in talks on
what the First Baptist church has
meant to them during their student
days here, and Supt. W. W. Boyd and
Pastor Bell will tell what the students
pink roses also being used. Refresh-
ments were served in two courses to
the following guests and the honorees:
and he will only smile. He knows
there is nothing in that pocket.
But, laying all jokes aside, all of
those who were the guests of that
worthy body on last Monday night
2m
8 lb. pail $1.14 X |
FLOUR, Bewley’s Guaranteed, 48 lbs. $1.55 X 5
FLOUR, Bewley’s Guaranteed, 24 lbs 79c X f
and news photographers who for
weeks have looked forward to depict-
ing the romantic event in great detail
in print and picture.
Colonel Lindbergh and his fiancee
went for a ride in the early afternoon
and stopped for a brief visit at the
home of a friend in Englewood. Short-
ly after their return—barely time for
the bride to change her chip motor en-
semble for the soft chiffon—the small
wedding party gathered in the draw-
ing room and centered about the min-
ister. There were no bridesmaids, no
best man, no music, it was stated au-
thoritatively—just the brief ceremony
f the Presbyterian church.
you have selected ma Atcheson, Bethel Waide and Mar-
ar success in the guerite Moore.
cid iosis. We
send you a
at the bride’s
N. J., Monday
lines of profession, including the min
istry and Pat Lynch. There didn't
seem to is* any consumers present ’til
chow was called—then all forgot their
previous profession and turned con-
sumer. Talk about good eats: we had
'em. The main item on the bill of
fare was supposed to be fried chicken,
but this writer could get nothing but
rabbit.
Our city friends are pretty slick,
but they can’t fool us farmers on rab-
bit. We know that the drumstick of
a chicken don’t have as many crooks
in it as a rabbit’s hind leg. of course,
it might have been chicken that we
ate, but if it was, some crook raised
it. because no honest chicken is sup-
posed to have rabbit legs.
There is hope for the farmer when
he, with the aid of his fellow friends,
the business men, and that mysterious
force at Washington, D. C.. known as i
the government, all get under the his ,
load and help him to help himself. ■
ry. New York City.
Immediately afterward. Ambassador
Morrow left for Washington.
The honeymoon plans of the couplo
were kept secret.
The bride wore a simple white chif-
fon dress, with short veil, made for
her by Mis- Mary Smith, the family
dressmker for years. She wore no
gloves, but carried a boquet of blue
larkspur plucked from the Morrow
garden, just beneath the drawing room
window where i he couple exchanged
their vows.
So far as could be learned, there
were no witnesses outside the imme-
diate Morrow family a in] possibly a
few of the household staff.
Apparently decided upon the spur
of the moment, the ceremony took even
the most intimate neighbors of the
Morrows by surprise and completely
"scooped" the small army of reporters
Beautiful Fiber Rocker to be given away abso- :
lately FREE Saturday at 4:30 P. M.—COME! i
? {e
24c | |
Our worthy chamber of commerce
hit upon the right idea in feeding a
bunch of farmers to get them to come
in and talk over their farm problems.
Everyone knows that when a tiger is
fed a good feed he can be tickled he.
Do you know that dry skim
milk in sufficient quantity in
your chick ration is an effective
control of Coccidiosis? Experi-
ment statins and feeding tests
on infested flocks have demon-
strated and privel this.
DRY SKIM MILK
Give laying hens epsom salts twice
a month during the summer at the I - -
rate of one pound to the hundred hens, i "a carried out in table appointments
Dissolve the salts in water, then use
enough dry mash to take up the solu-
tion.
rurmertesurrermtttra all
-......- - pirisksdak.re
tor Decatur Baptist College in the col-
lege chapel at 11 o'clock next sunday
morning. He is a former graduate of
and refreshments, with boquets of
Morrow, daughter of
and Mrs. Dwight W.
Col Charles A. Lind
; ■ '. -
de
r 8
Beautiful, Bright, New
I TIMELY HINTS
Powell in Slidell Saturday afternoon.
In honor of Mrs. B. F. Vance and Miss
Berta Chambers, who are leaving Sli-
dell. The guests were served punch
have meant to the Sunday school and
church. Miss Isabeile Hunt will give
a reading and there will tie speciat
musie.
Some one said the beautiful little
animal was put there to Hear up the
atmosphere after the meeting Broke i
altruists motives as self preservation. It may I..... but we don't vouch for
in fact the affairs of the farmer and the truth of it.
farmer's troubles. The farmer is be- the
m-- --s 5
part of the local business men to hell. j The meeting was hela in th. arg.. Free all houses of mites.
016 farm problems, and solve armory hall which was nicely decora Every inferior pullet should Is- mar-
'hem in such a way that the farmer ed with white ana black 'streanai. keted at once.
nixhtttaxreater share of the dollar ; and iron bars at the Windows Tsi Give laying hens a.l the milk they
door- A large banner over the stage will drink at all times.
Such meetings as was had last Mon entrance bore the likeness of a large The ram which j---'
day night serve to dissipate the idea black skunk. We are familiar with will determine your success in the
Iha, has been held in the past, wheth- the iron bars, but we fail to lean: sheep business. Do not use cross-bred
er true or not, that the business man just what the skunk represented. Bin rams or ewes in the breeding flock,
had no speciat conern about the i w hatever it is we heartil. .a _ . .
' .. " ' „ nr! endorse Lambs which have been docked and -____
eents expressed therein castrated are bringing two cents p r tainment. You rant find a better
pound more than those which have show anywhere in a town the size of
been neglected. i Decatur and the price is lower.
A pedigreed sire on every farm will •
make Wise .-ounty wiser. ’ BAPTIST CHURC H
X SUGAR, In Cloth Bags
X PICKLES
;: Ask for tickets for the cow that is to be sold
j July 20th for only 50c. Also don’t forget
; your silverware coupons with each 25c pur-
« •
!! chase. - - - Bring Us Your Eggs.
©
©
i A
Our local paper, the Messenger, re- =
cently carried an article setting forth •
in glowing terms the amount of money m
paid out in Lecatur for farm products, m
The grand total was staggering, ami =
made a good showing for Decatur. 8
What the ordinary farmer would next '■
like to see is the amount of money. m
time and labor he has been out to pro- g
duce all this stuff. He fears that =
should this he shown along side the=
other, the actual profit to the produc- ■
er would be about like the hole in the g
doughnut.
Bui. with all the gloomy outlook. । =
there is hope for the farmer loomin . 8
in I he offing. This generation may ■
not realize it but the coming genera- g
lion will. Farm relief will not comeis
so much thru congress nor business 8
Sat, June 1
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Collins, Dick. Wise County Messenger (Decatur, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, May 31, 1929, newspaper, May 31, 1929; Decatur, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1611220/m1/2/?q=hamilton+county: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .