The Plano Star-Courier (Plano, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, August 22, 1919 Page: 1 of 6
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July 2i, ]y]a
PLANO STAR-COURIER
VOL. XL. XO. 28.
PLANO, COLLIX ('01 NTV, TEXAS, !•'WI i».\ A(!(il'ST22
Subscription $1.50 Per Year.
TIRES TUBES
Storage Batteries
require close attention in hot
^weather. They should have
water every two weeks. We
iive vou free water and in-
you
spection.
Batteries repaired and
Recharged.
AGENT FOR EXIDE EATTERIES
THE K.-T. GARAGE
FOR!) *PARTS
FORD SERVICE
/
l
*mXSS&MS} Ml. iwra—w-Miu
J. T. ELLIOTT LUMBER CO.
DEALER IN
All kinds of Building Material and Coal. Highest
grades at lowest prices.
Call on us before you buy.
F. Schimelpfenig, Mgr.
f—mi........j ^ zwum&saoL:fwsen*
Revival Meeting at
Christian Church
I'int* audiences ur»* greeting Brother
I'ord. both morning and night, in his
tin cling, at the Christian church, and
he is delighting them and building
them u|> with his deeply spiritual
preaching. As you listen to him you
led that here is a heart message free
Irom boast aud cunt, lit* grows on
you and leaves you wishing to hear
him again. I lie people of Plano and
surrounding country are going to miss
something really worth while if they
don t hear this man. A large chorus is
furnishing inspiring music and there
will be specials in the way of solos
and duets. Brother Ford is also a
fine soloist, and will sing for us oc-
casionally.
IIis sermon subjects for next Sun
day will be “If a Man Die, Shall He
Dive Again,” at 11 a. m.; and "The
Second Coming of Christ," at 8:45 p.
m. Everybody welcome to these meet-
ings- A. N. GLOVER,
M inister.
Marriage Southwest
of the City Sunday
Harry C. Boggs and Miss Maud
Groves, living in the community six
miles southwest of the city, w. re unit-
ed in marriage Iasi Sunday afternoon
at 4 o’clock at tlie home of the bride’s
parents.
Itev. A. L. Leake, pastor of the Plano
Baptist church, performed the mar
riage ceremony.
Many friends and relatives or the
young couple were guests at t he
Groves home, and wore served with
cake and ice cream.
■ -Afsrayarnam nwacr
: (JnwwM 'K n*e% m-a
«ll
Thomas D. Cox
Scientific Optometrist
Will be at S. M. Harrington’s drug store, Plano, Texas, Satur-
day, August 123. Will extend a tree examination of the eyes
to any one who calls. I can correct any error or refraction
that any other optician can correct and I have corrected many
for patients that hove given others an opportunity to fit them
and have failed. I can do the same for you if you have had a
like experience. Gail and let ne demonstrate to you that I
can do ail that I claim. Respectfully,
Thomas D. Gox.
The Baptist Church
Buys Car For Pastor
The congregation of the Baptist
church have given an order for a
Ford Sedan cur that is expected
to arrive soon. It will be equipped
with self-starter. The car is lor the
use oi (lie pastor of tlie* church, and a
garage is now being erected at the
parsonage to receive it.
Dies at Dallas After
Surgical Operation
w. ID Angelo, forty years of age.
died at ti Dallas sanitarium last Sat
jurday afternoon, following a surgical
operation.
He had made his home in this cit> ,
for the past year, but was reared at
Allen. While residing here lie might i
school in the count ip north ot ilfis
city.
The funeral was conducted at the
Allen Baptist church at 5 p m Mon
day and the body laid to r. ,t n ;||, ,\1
len cemetery. Many from I’lano at
tended the obsequies. A quartette
composed of Mrs. A. D. Leak., Mrs
10. O. Harrington, Joe Bradshaw and
T. A. llughston, accompanied by Mrs.
T. A. Hughs ton, rendered beautiful
music, and the floral oil. rin; were
many. The large auditorium au.l bal-
cony of the Allen church yas . rowded
The deceased was for many years a
zealous, consistent member ol the
Baptist church, and had been a mem
ber of the local church and superin
tendent of the Sunday school since
coming to this city.
He leaves a wife, mother and falti-
er, three sisters and one brother.
M. ('. Portman, the land dealer, has
a good right to boast the soil that he
sells. He showed the Star-Courier re-
porter Tuesday specimens of a first
and a second crop already grown on
the same ground this year and he is
going to plant the third crop on it
shortly. The first crop was fine Irish
potatoes. The ground replanted to
corn June 30 now shows as fine well
matured corn as one need wish to see,
and a little later Mr. Portman expects
to get a good crop of turnips where
the corn how stands.
.*rarr
Plano Wins From
Sachse: Score 4 to 3 j
The Plano and Sachse baseball
teams crossed bids on the Plano dia
round at the school ground;; last Mon
day evening.
It wvis a good fast game. In the
third inning, the score was made Hire,
to three, where it. stood until the ninth
inning, Plano winning the fourth
score and winning the game.
A game was expected to be played
yesterday on the Plano diamond be
tween the home learn and a team from
New Hope, near Wylie, but the lioui
at which the Star-Courier went to
press yesterday made ii impossible
to get a report of the game.
A party from l’lano reiurriei Mo.,
day alter a delightful outing at Dake
Worth. Among the numbei w.c
Mr and Mrs. ,1 D Aldridge and . liil
(Iren, Mrs. J. p Aldridge and two
daughters, M ; rid Mrs. Fred liar
rington and two dnughlers, D. M.
Beasley and family, Mr. and Mrs. J.
O. Smith, of Dallas, Mr. and Mrs. W.
P. Aldridge and Miss Bert Sidles, of
Denton.
Attention Fa
We have a 12-25 Waterloo Boy Tractor and a Four Disc John Deere En-
g ne i iow doing actuul service on tho Fortner Farm two and a half mile3
west oi town. This Tractor is large enough to do all kinds of farm work
and it will pull your separator too. This is no fake talk but it has pulled
them all over this country for the last several weeks and has given perfect
satisfaction. It will pay you big to investigate the merits of this Waterloo
Boy before placing your order. It is better to be safe than sorry.
Mr. Fortner is connected with us now in the sale of Tractors and
he will take pleasure in showing you what it will do.
plows
Misses Mary nnd Pearl Alderson. of
Prosper, Texas, have been visiting
their brothers and sister. .Lime and.
mil Mrs. Chyjdo
Mweek.
---ZisSra
TIMES-HERALD AGENCY.
Robert Webb has the Plano agency for
the Dallas Times-Herald. Subscribe
no tv through him.
The Star-Courier $1.50 per year.
Dr. C, J. Hicks and family and D.
A. Huguley and family left Tuesday
for an outing at Lake Worth.
W. j. Hines left Monday to spend
week at Mineral Wells, Texas.
Mrs. W. T. Wyatt, living six miles
oast, took (lie train here Wednesday
for Portland, Tennessee. She was ac-
companied by her brother, Alex Hob-
by, of the McKinney section. They
go to visit relatives, among them
mother seventy-three years of age and
H grand-mot it. * ninety-three years
old. They will be absent several
weeks.
Rev. A. D. Deake left this week foi
Texline, at the northwest extremity oi
the state, where he will conduct a re-
vival meeting, Hie Plano Baptist
chureh, of which lie is pastor, having
granted him a leave of absence for
that purpose.
♦♦♦♦♦<»«.&•»->«» sv W<f><■> •>«•*•&<>*■><14" * •>*.O <£••:•.>* * <•<- »
| Our Prescription Business
: v Grows
| B ’.CAUSE WE PROMISE DEFINITE THINGS
I ** AND DO THEM
I;i our advertising we announce features which
tend to make our prescription service popular.
Prof. A. M. Blackman has been elect
ed superintendent of the Farmersville
city schools for the 1919 1920 session.
He was superintendent of Plano
schools for five years and left here to
take a position at Greenville, where
he taught the past year.
W. M. Hedgcoxe, of the Haydon
grocery store, gave tHe boys of tho
l’lano fire department a watermelon
feast Friday evening at the fire sta-
tion. Fine iced Hopkins county water-
melons were served to the firemen as
well as a number of their friends.
—........
These s’rttements are not mere claims, but
lual conditions which are applied regularly in
important department of our business.
this
When prescriptions are brought to us they re-
ceive the kind of attention your doctor would wish.
Experienced pharmacists only do compound-
ing and they have at their disposal, drugs of stand-
ard potency and every scientific aid for facilitating
their work.
4 C, f>romPt service and accuracy are also features
vvg viftich you’ll appreciate, especially when medicines
needed in a hurry.
Tillie (’linger says that the re;ison
she thinks she isn’t going to like hm
new boss is because when she fooiti.
him in the eye he thinks she’s trying
to vamp him, and when she looks
down he imagines she’s admiring his
socks.
Still selling lumber at the same
small profit that we always did.
Therefore it is to your interest to
$ | buy from us.
J. T. Elliott Lumber Co.
666 has proven it will cure malaria,
chills and fever, bilious fever, colds
and lagrippe. It kills the germs that
cause the fever. Fine tonic.
Bevo
Grairso
The Popular Soft Drinks
Always Ice
Cold
Always on Hand.
EQUALLY WELL EQUIPPED
TO SERVE ICE CREAM,
MALTED MILK, ROOT BEER
AND ALL THE POPULAR
FOUNTAIN DRINKS.
BUSY-BEE
CAFE
Dinwiddie & Barnard,
Props.
Phone 112
If interested ring No ,50 and we will take you over lor a look, and show
you the best tractor on the market for the price.
IVturralr & Clark
Gotlin County Fair
Opens September 30
TwiPi
>my |
S. M. HARRINGTON. Pharmacist
I Fred C Ttarrnn <>f Wichita F:.l!«
! is the guest, of his jmrentB, Mr. and
Mrs. J. M Barron, at Plano, this week
STOVE WOOD
SALE
FOR
HJ'htRjStar(foui jef ha:
oPhir premium list and’ purlicuim s of
tiie Collin County Fair, to*!),. held at
McKinney September 30, October I, 2,
and 3. Ii is a book ol thirty-ioTT
| pages, and exhibits the 1919 meet of
tiie Collin County Fair Association as
an enterprise of large proportions. It
I will do much to instruct, amuse and
| advertise this county, at well at slim
ulate industry and production in many
j important ways.
FOR SALE
One pair six-year old mules and one
7-fool McCormick binder, b( en used
cutting one hundred acres only.
, J. F. TIMMINS.
* hades Harrington took a parly or
the returned soldiei boys out to White
1 Rock Tm sday for a day’s outing
I The party was Buster Schimelpfenig,
Fred Schimelpfenig Jr,, Lllburn Ken
| drick. Robert and Charles Harrington
Miss Clara Cook, who lias finished a
| summer course at the Stale Normal
| school at Denton, returned home tin-
week. She made a perfect examina
lion arid received a four ; .ear's teach
er's certificate.
Mr. and Mrs. Audrey Harding, of
Dallas, are the parents of a daughter!
born a few day.- ago, and named Mary ’
■Line Caroline Flizabeth. Audrey Hard
ing is a grandson of Judge w D. m< i
Farlin and was reared at l’lano.
Rev. R. c Hicks, pastor of the Plano
Methodist church, was called to I
Clarksville the fit of tiie week lo
preach the funeral of Mrs. Albert (go, J
of that city,
Mrs. G. A. Carmichael returned to
ter home at (Praia, Fla., this we •/.. af
ter a visit to her sisiter, M:r. F F
I.rock, in Piano.
SATISFIED CUSTOMERS
Are one of our best assets. Bread. Cakes, Pies,
and pure home-made Candies, from the Plano Bak-
ery, go out Irom our shop cases just as fast as we.
put them in. We appreciate our liberal patronage
It is growing, too. We solicit its continuance, and
thank everyone for helping to make it better each
week.
THE PLANO BAKERY
J. J. VAVRA, Proprietor.
-!1 ‘ ' A,< COURIER DOES FIRST C LASS COMMERCIAL JOB PRINTING.
, ■ ____
r cipte
son
t&zz 1
'■£
All Oak. $3.25 per
rick at my hOiue ill
Plano. $3.75 delivered
Wisl<■ Mary, Manila and Kali Bur
d< ttc and Mi1 Katin ’inc WcnUinjdo d
; n iiirncd Iasi Saturday from a visit to
I'-lativcH at Wcatlic.ford, Te/.ua.
Mi. ami Mm. K. M. Williams return
• ■I home the first of the week aft. r a
i'irat to ndati . and fric/jd.: In Jonn-
on, Montague and Clay counties
A Home is a Lifetime Joy
We know of a joy lhat’3 !a ting, a pleasure that
is uplifting, a place where every 1 /ember of the fam-
ily may have a good time—IT’S A HOME,
Now many people remain homeless because of
(he fact that they spend all they make on question-
able pleasures, their chief aim in life is to have a
good time.
But there comes a time, usually too late, when
they wish thal they had spent less and paid for a
home.
Let us figure for you ihe cost of a home or any
other building. The cost will be the lowest.
I hirty-seven Piano people are stockholders in
this company. Keep Plano money in Plano.
Piano Lumber C’a
” I
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The Plano Star-Courier (Plano, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, August 22, 1919, newspaper, August 22, 1919; Plano, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth570518/m1/1/: accessed March 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Collin County Genealogical Society.