The Tyler Journal (Tyler, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, May 9, 1930 Page: 7 of 8
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MAY 9. 1930
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THE TYLER JOURNAL
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News From Our
Corresoondents
SALEM
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Jones and
Mrs. Charley Moore, of Good Springs
visited Mr. and Mrs. Tobie Jones
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Emory Wilkinson
and son, Kenneth, of Henrys Chapel
visited Mrs. Wilkinson’s father and
aunt, J. A. and Miss Betty St. Clair,
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. A. U. Thompson and
daughters, Misses Ollie Ruth and
Tommie Gene, of Red Oak Flat vis-
ited Mrs. Thompson’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. E. W. Garrett, Sunday.
Thurman Lanham visited his cous-
in, Elliott Stone, at Troup.
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Layne and
daughter, Miss Charlene, visited
Mrs. Layne’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Wiley Stone, at Red Oak Flat Sun-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Tobe O’Neil and
family of Red Oak Flat visited Mrs.
O’Neil’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Young, Sunday.
Mr. ahd Mrs. J. A. Toole and chil-
dren of Red Oak Flat visited in this
son’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. S.
Jackson, Saturday night and Sun-
day. y
Mr. and Mrs. George Shuttles-
worth and family visited Mr. and
Mrs. Claud Scates at Bell Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Otice Ledford and
children, Chri&tene and J. W., vis-
ited Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ledford at
Henrys Chapel Sunday.
Miss Katie Mae Jones of Tyler
visited Mr. and Mrs. Bill Stone Sun-
day. _ ’
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Reid and fam-
ily visited Mr. and Mrs. Sam Suber
Sunday.
Miss Louela Wilkerson of Troup
attended singring here Saturday
night.
Mrs. 0. D. Burns and Mrs. W. S.
Jackson attended the county council
at Tyler Saturday afternoon.
iMiss Alice Ledford of Henrys
Chapel is visiting her nephew and
niece, Mr. and Mrs. Otice Ledford.
Mr. and Mrs. Clem
Chapel visited their daughter, Mrs.
Butler. Shuttlesworth, Sunday.
Several of the young people went
to the Van oil field Sunday.
L. W. Pipes of Terrell visited Mr.
and Mrs. Otice Ledford Friday night.
A Teacher Increas’d
Her Earning Power
POPULAR CANDIDATE AR-
RAIGNED IN CHURCH COURT
She Was Earning $720. Now
Her Income is Close to $2,500
MURPH
community Friday.
Leonard Young ............... ...... ...............
Oak Flat Saturday. — spent the past week with Vaster Ol-
siiP
Clifton Layne of Arp visited
uncle and aunt and Mr. and Mrs. J.
A. Layne, recently.
Mrs. Jennie McCoy and daughter,
Mrs. Kilton McCoy and son of Red
Oak Flat were visitors in the Cum
McCoy home Friday evening.
wisg Lenora Mond of Red Springs
Mrs. Eva McDonald has been a
public school teacher for more than
fifteen years. And, with all her years
of schooling and experience behind
her, one winter found her working
under a contract that called for a
monthly pay check of $90 for only
eight months out of the • twelve.
That, if you will remember, was
the year in which wages paid com-
mon and skilled labor soared to
heights never before known. Forced
of Henrys' to keep up with high living costs on
“ her meager salary, seeing former
students of hers, without experience,
earning more than she could com-
mand, Mrs. McDonald resolved to
find a way to increase her earning
power.
She loved teaching work and had
no desire to give it up. Commercial
teaching offered her a way to re-
main a teacher and still greatly in-
crease her income. When her school
closed that year, she took a Com-
mercial Training Course. It was in
-Mareh that ^She—Te*
ma. » .
They are talking about resorting
to injunction to get the names of
some of the gubernatorial candidates
on the ticket —and they are talk-
ing about resorting to the same pro-
cess to keep some of the names off
the aforesaid ticket. Now the fever
is catching—and one of Smith coun-
ty’s candidates for the office of
County Commissioner finds himself
arraigned before an august court on
a very grave charge. We do not
know what the final consequences are
to be.
A very- large audience was pres-
ent Tuesday night at the East Tyler
Methodist cBtnrth to hear—and par-
ticipate in — the trial of D. M.
(Mack) Lyle who stands charge with
the possession, ownership and ap-
propriation to his personal use, of
domestic fowls which, it is alleged,
he never raised, nor reeeivBif gr~nrflfl“
ARP PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Shelton of
Tyler visited in the H. A. Kasse-
baum home here Sunday.
Miss Johnie Lee Mills visited
friends in Henderson during the
week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Parker, Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Mills and Mrs. Hor-
ace Moore spent several days of last
week visiting relatives here. Thy
were on their way from Arkansas
to Big Spring.
Mrs. Walker Johns of Jacksonville
visited in the J. L. Johnson and
Charlie Bateman homes last week.
PERSONALS FROM DEAN
Dean, (Rt. 2, Tyler), May 7.— A
number from Dean attended the
singing at Brownsboro Sunday af-
ternoon.
Jim Gilstrap, who has been ill of
typhoid for some time, is reported
to be slowly improving.
James Lloyd underwent an opera-
tion for appendicitis at Tyler Gen-
eral Hospital Monday of last week.
He is resting easily.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dykes visited at
Pine Springs Sunday.
Mrs. J. V. Walker and Mr. and
Mrs. Alton McCurley visited at Ty-
ler Saturday evening.
Irvin and Lloyd Easley of Dixie
visited friends at Dean Sunday.
Misses Lottie Mae and Marie Lu-
ther and Charlie Gilstrap spent Sun-
day at Jacksonville.
Mrs. Carl Dykes has returned
home from a visit to Hubbard City.
Willie Everett of Gresham visited
at Dean Saturday evening.
Tommy Bedair of Independence
spent Saturday night with his bro-
j ther, Thad Bedair.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sloan and
children of Independence spent Sun-
day evening with Mr. and Mrs. Thad
Bedair.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Olson and son,
Elbert, spent Sunday with her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Brown, at
Baseom.
Mr. and Mrs. Vivian Shafner of
Tyler spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Hose Swinney.
Mrs. Vera Bedair and little daugh-
ter, Helen Murlene, spent Saturday
with Mrs. Lela Bedair.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Barcrow of Ty-
ler spent Saturday night with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alf Dicker-
son.
, Mr. and Mrs. George Elliott and
children of Tyler were visitors here
Sunday.
school^employment department ask- fhc ^cns^rc^wed^y^the^Court *5
ed her, the very day of her gradua- ---1 o-i-..:— ---
tion, if she would like to work im-
mediately at $120 a month. She ac-
cepted the position offered. Because
of fyer ability as a shorthand writ-
er and typist, she earns about $300.-'
00 more each year, doing spare-time
“odd jobs” or reporting, letter writ-
ing and manuscript work, etc.
HOPEWELL
(Kilgore, Rt. 3)
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Brooks of Ty-
ler recently visited relatives here.
Andrew Clinkscales of Starrville
visited Buck Dozier and family Sun-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Jordan and chil-
dren of Livingston spent the week
end with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Jordan.
Clyde and Wilburn Bamberg re-
turned heme Sunday after visiting
relatives at Alba.
Mr. and Mrs. Hamp Godfrey vis-
ited at Starrville Tuesday.
H. F. Bass and son, Garland, were
Tyler visitors Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Bradberry of
Kilgore visited friends here recently.
What a wonderful dividend her
business education has paid her, and
what a wonderful dividend it can pay
YOU, or any other young man or
young woman with a foresight; en-
ergy and ambition.
The Tyler Commercial College has
many teachers in attendance at their
school during each summer. If you
are a teacher, or if you intend to
take up teaching work, arrange to
join them. A few months’ training
there can make a life time difference
to you.
You are interested in a better po-
sition and a bigger income or you
would not have read this article. To
make the first step to the higher po-
sition, fill in and mail the coupon
for “Achieving Success in Business.”
This large free books tells of the
wonderful opportunities offered for
a person who is trained for busi-
ness, either for teaching or in the of-
fice. Send the coupon NOW.
We have no branch schools any-
uv tv* * ifiovU) iiui ICVVI’V v* ,_JHk
gift. It is even alleged that the birds
did not come to his home and take
up. This publication is not going to
take sides in this important and far-
reaching controversy. We never got
any of the chicken, no, not even a
sop of the gravy. Wc are riot going
to say who the piuintlff in the suit
is, nor even give the names of the'
court officer j. It’s a two-sided prop-
osition—and can kick both ways.
In the preliminary go-round Mack
/le was- proven guilty. We under-
stand that he is to take an appeal
to the Supreme Court and that if
number killed by automobiles is ap-
proximately three times the total
homicides and twice the total of sui-
cides in the United States, there be-
ing 10,050 homicides and 15,500 sui-
cides.
Comparing the automobile deaths
to the total number of acidental
deaths annually, in the United
States, the figures show that approx-
'■" ■■■'—■*-
imately one-third of all such death*
are due to automobile accidents.
It was pointed out that the in- ]
crease in automobile registrations
last year was 8 per cent, while the
increase in fatalities was approxi-
mately 12 per cent. s
The Yale theatre at Cleburne is
to be remodeled at a cost of $30,000.
HERGESHEIMER & SONS
PAINTS, VARNISHES, BRUSHES, AUTOMOBILE
__._____________-
GLASS AND WALL PAPER.
PHONE 403
International Relations. You can
pay your money ’ and take your
choice.
LARGE TOLL EXACTED
BY AUTOS LAST YEAR
Washington, D. C. — A total of
31,680 persons were killed by auto-
mobiles in the United States last
year, according to revised figures of
the American Motorists’ Association.
This represents an increase of ap-
proximately 12 per cent, or 6,780
deaths, over the total number killed
in 1928, and brings the grand total
of automobile fatalities in the Unit-
ed States, during the past ten years,
up to 190,850.
A comparative analysis of the fig-
ures for last year shows that the
MAY 17-18
Tickets will be sold for triune scheduled to
arrive Galveston Saturday evening May 17 or
prior to 2:00 p. m. Sunday, May 18. Return
limited to leave Galveston not later than 11 JO
a. m. May 19.
where. We lead; others follow.
TYLER COMMERCIAL COLLEGE
AND SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
ADMINISTRATION
Tyler, Texas.
Tickets - Informs-
BfiP
LINES / * ...
Name
m vl '% ■
tion, Telephone Jas.
Kennedy or J. D.
Jones, General
Agent, Missouri Pa-
Address .................................................
See Editor of this paper for schol-
arship.
“A Service Institution”
cific Lines.
SMITH COUNTY WOMEN AT-
TENDED SHORT COURSE, C. I. A.
EXPRESSION RECITAL AT
WHITEHOUSE SCHOOL HOUSE
Whitehouse, May 7.—On Tuesday
evening, May 13, Mrs. Golson will
present her expression pupils in re-
cital at the high school auditorium.
Also there will be special music by
an orchestra composed of several
band. Ad-
and the
basketball
members of Doc Witte's
mission is only ten cents,
proceeds go to the girls’
team.
There will be a special Mother’s
Day program at the Baptist church
Sunday evening at 7:30.
Mrs. McLaughlin, known and call-
ed by her many friends here as
“Granny,” passed away at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Will Horton at 2:30
p. m. Sunday at the age of 86 years.
Funeral services were held Monday
afternoon with interment following
in Whitehouse cemetery. She is sur-
vived by one daughter, Mrs. Will
Horton of Whitehouse, and by one
son, Emmit McLaughlin of Shreve-
port.
Miss Esta Hill entertained the
girls and boys basket ball teams
with a party Tuesday evening.
Nin.ce Ray and Jesse Bass of Bul-
lard visited in Whitehouse Sunday
evening.
Walter Leard, Jack Warren, and
Mr. and Mrs. Coleman Leard of
Hope, Ark., spent from Saturday
evening until Monday morning vis-
iting relatives here.
Johnie Anderson and Miss Oljce
Griffen visited in Nacogdoches Fri-
day and Saturday.
Warren Hisal of Fort Worth spent
the week end visiting in Whitehouse.
Three ears carrying a dozen Smith
county women who are leaders in
Smith county home demonstration
work left at 4:30 Thursday morning
for Denton. These women expect to
attend a one-day short course at
the College of Industrial Arts. The
personnel of the party follows: Mes-
dames C. L. Duncan, Claude McKor-
kle and C. B. Barron who are offic-
ials of the Smith County Council of
Home Demonstration clubs; Mes-
dames Anthony. Roberts of Swan, J.
M. Taylor, J. C. Bean, W. E. Beaird
and Manning Ingram; Misses Shultz
and Jewel More. Messrs. Tom Sikes
and L. P. Merrell provided two of
the cars carrying the delegation a d
served as drivers. We are sure that
this delegation will obtain some val-
uable aids and ideas to bring back to
Gordon
Line
their fellow club women of Smith
county.
“Things I Ate
Hurt Me”
STOCKINGS
TEACHERS ENTERTAIN MURPH
P. T. A. AND TRUSTEES
Murph, May 7.—Mr. and Mrs. Roy
W. Smith, teachers in the
w • omiin, !«»..«n ... Murph
school, entertained at the school
building Saturday night in honor of
the local Parent-Teacher Associa-
tion. Forty-eight guests were pres-
ent, this number including the for-
ty-one members of the Association,
six trustees of the school,
"I had a severe
case of indiges-
tion,’* says Mrs. Bell
Buckheister, 7 River
St, Piedmont, S. C.
“So many things
that I ate hurt me,
I almost quit eat
ing.
"I would burn in my chest I
had severe headache, and such
a tight, smothering feeling. I
would be obliged to eat a little,
then it would hart me.
"A Mend said to me: 'Why
don’t you take Black-Draught?’
1 was just too weak then to
do my work. I began taking
■mall doses after meals and in
Just a few weeks I could eat
anything I wanted to, then
vw1
County Superintendent R. S. Boul-
ter. Misa
who will
lertha Hanley of
be prims
Dallas
school year at Murph was also pres-
ent. Miss Hanley favored the party
with a selection of beautiful piano
numbers. Supt. Boulter and president
of the board, A. E. Sanders made
short talks. Mrs. Smith served a de-
lightful plate luncheon, the menu
consisting of pressed chicken, gravy,
“ “V — ---
Draught and feel fine. Iaoonre-
r health and i *
. mbCT
THEDFORD’g
BLACK-
Brown, Smith
—
i
UNION GROVE
Tvler
Mr. and Mrs. Vemle Jackson-and
family of Brown visited Mr. Jack-
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Edwards, Henry. The Tyler Journal (Tyler, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, May 9, 1930, newspaper, May 9, 1930; Tyler, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth619789/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Smith County Historical Society.