The Tyler Journal (Tyler, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, November 25, 1927 Page: 2 of 8
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TYLER JOURNAL
NOVEMBER 25, 1927
Bfcu \
The Tyler Journal
lmwd Weekly By
HENRY EDWARDS & CO.
Publishers
Editorial and Easiness Offices
the men who toil. Locally we ssw
this town and county voted dry, and
it could not have been done except for
labor’s vote. The vote of labor put i deep places of sad or happy hearts
the saloon out of business all over the * Mrs. Walter Ferguson
Southland. ; Press.
And yet we see the partisans of j
Governor A! Smith asserting that la-
queer, but we sometimes find out I Mrs. T. J. McBride, Secretary; Mrs.
why they are. There we can peer be- Charles L. Duncan, Reporter. Miss ;
«,th ,he „*ri.r «. ,
many of the working plans of Smith l
If You Like The Tyler Journal, Tell Your Friends
Houston j county clubs fof the coming year.
Two of the club's members entered
the Rural Homes Beautiful Contest;
another entered the Living Room Con-
806 CITIZENS NATL. BANK BLDG.' bor will rally to him because of his
Tyler, Texas wetness. We believe a great enlight-
Phoae No. - - - ' 1178 ening will happen to these Smith sup-
_________________________________,____________ porters if he is nominated when they
Entered as Second-class matter go to count the votes. We believe
May 8, 1926, at the Post Office at it’s an insult to that great body of
flwr> Texas, under the Act of March ^ber, home-loving men who toil in
8, 1879. jour factories and shops and mills to
„.. say that their patriotism is bounded
HENRY EDWARDS.....^Hby , ,nd a whi.kav ,1a..,.
j —The Marshall Morning News. :
THE SCRUBS GOING R Gibson WM chosen ^ j
*-»- , er to meet with the Girls’ 4-H club |
“No scrub seed; no scrub stock; no and direct their work under direction ;
scrub farming” is one of the sixteen j of Miss Huffhines. Meeting date was I
points of tbe Smith County 10-Year changed from the third Saturday to
Agricultural Pro*™. W. arr ;
ing good progress toward its full t0 the club on the first Wednesday i
realization in certain respects. For, in December at which time poultry]
example: most of the farmers are culture will engage them and Miss j
planting improved seed. You have Huffhines will give a demonstration
doubtless noticed that there are now
J,. • .
. if
Life
in poultry culling.
SUBSCRIPTION
Owe Year-------
Six Months j;---
RATES:
$1.00
.60
BIG AND LITTLE TOWNS
Formal obituaries, resolutions of
respect and personal cards of thanks
will be charged for at the regular
advertising rates.
When requesting your paper to be
changed from one address to another,
be rare to give the postoffice address
to which your paper is NOW going
as well as that to which you wish it
changed.
ten purebred poultry flocks thruout j Cakr0LL LOSES'TO MT. SYLVAN
•; the county to where one could be
| found three years ago. Three years ; Mt SyJvan> Nov. 22—In the basket :
- ] ago, when the 10-year program was ; ba!i tournament held Friday on the ]
Sherwood Anderson, famous novc-i launched there were scarcely enough Carroll school court between the boys’
list, is going back to the editing of 1 hogs in the county to be taken note j an(* £jr{8* team of that school and the < ]
. u. , _ _ . 1 , ... _ . .school here the victory was with tne
a small town newspaper for fun and ; of-but today it appears that most of Mt Sy)yan teams in *both in8tances. |
to come into closer touch with peo- the hogs in the county are thorough-j yjt Sylvan boys won by a score of I
pie.” J breds. j 20 to 30, and Mt. Sylvan girls won i
There is no doubt that he will, in I But there is another feature to the j Yt ?°l..Th£.£?*_,K! !
this way, realize both ambitions. For j realization of this program to which
to those who love the study of man, w-e must give more attention. There
the first game the Mt. Sylvan girls
had played this season.
jor who wish to investigate the queer j are yet too many scrub cows and bulls ! 71 VAN ZANDT CO. SCHOOLS
j quirks of the human mind,t and to j jn the
I
I
Special Representative i understand the strange eccentricities
TEXAS PRESS WEEKLIES, INC. j 0f mtn ancj women, there is no place
H. I* Grable, Manager like the small town.
613 Mercantile Bank Building Tbe dtjr as we know> has long bt.en
Dallas, Texas touted as the place where humanity
~ in the mass may be viewed. And the
1 constant streams of beings who flash
i upon the eye, linger for a short space
PRESS ] and then are gone, are certainly to
! be found nowhere save in metropoli-
IATV)hJ j ten centers. But what are they, af-
____________________________ ter all, save moving pictures of peo-
_ , '. . pie, gliding near and then away from
Fortune does not locate her prizes i f, . - ,, .
. ... t- , ., i the consciousness, performing their
in time-worn highways. Beaten paths
even of
we elimi- j
and the
APPLY TO STATE FOR All)
Wills Point, Npv. 21—More schools
county. It is
’ greater importance that
nate the scrub bulls anu me; v*n Zandt county have qualified
j scrub cow in vietf of the fact that; and applied for State aid this year in
Smith county is gradually getting in- any other Texas county, it is claimed,
to the dairy industry. The planting ] A total of 74 schools in this county
»' ^ i ferity
are only for beaten men. They would
not be roads if others hadn’t traveled
ahead of you, and those who went be-
fore seized everything that was worth
the owning.—Herbert Kaufman.
odd antics and then passing on, never,
perhaps, to be seen again ?
They move us, as sad and lovely
words placed one after another in
rhythmic procession op paper, might
do. They make our hearts ache as
does some high, sweet minor strain of
music. They bring tears to our eyes
as would uppets upon a stage because
they appear so tragic in their futile
gropings after something that is for-
ever out of reach.
But in the city, men and women are
always in a hurry. They seldom taste
the joys of leisure. They rush con-
stantly from one place to another,
„ _ ... . , dodging autos, their ears assailed
Many Smith county farm women, . .
. , :„ . by continual noise, their nerves un-
we hear, are entering the Rural , ..... , .
This is the season of the year when
the Betting of additional fruit trees
should have attention. The farm home
which is without an “all the year
round family orchard” lacks one big
sources of profit. A farm without a
family orchard is also one where the
children do not get a square deal. :
Homes Beautiful Contest for the com-
ing year. Tne contest for this year,
terminating last June, was wonderful
in its results. Now is the time to set
the roses, the hedges, the shrubbery
and shade trees. If you are going to
include in your Home Beautification, ... ,
. . v iv. „ sleepy, tiresome place where the af-
proiect crysanthemums, bulb flowers, ' * . . ..
r / . , .. .... ,, I ternoon mav drair and t.n#> nv^nmers V.a
pot plants and vines, it might be well
to consult your nurseryman, or the
strung, their entire beings taut with
the urge to cram 15 hours’ activity
into eight. They call it living. But
how can the human soul be natural
amidst such surroundings, in such din
and during such haste?
In the small town, however, the
county home demonstration agent, or
the county agent. Let’s make Smith
county homes famous for their beau-
ty. '
j ternoon may drag and the evenings be
heavy with flower odors, while the
voices of children at play in the pale
twilight ring clear on the still air,
there is time and opportunity to learn
the secret of one’s fellow. There we
not only realize that people are
poultry and livestock constitute the
unfailing sign that we have “scrub
farming” and maybe “scrub farm-
ers.” ' :
Do you always have it? Be able to demand it of your-
self by saving some of your income now.
Work to save and save to invest—make your money
earn for you—add an objective to your saving—increase
your possibility of having “ready money" by making wise
and frequent investments.
The Citizens National Bank
OF TYLER
• THE OLD RELIABLE'
HOPEWELL CLl'B ELECT OFFI-
CERS TO SERVE IN 192^
Hopewell (Rt. 10, Tyler) Nov. 22—
At Saturday's meeting of the local
W. H. D. Club the following officers
were chosen: Mrs. T. O. Brown, Presi-
dent; Mrs. Clyde Hitt, Vice President;
TRAIN SERVICE
FROM TYLER
NORTHBOUND
102 Ar. From Waco ............2:20 AM
102 Lv. For Texarkana 2:35 AM
104 Ar. From Waco ..........1:56 PM
104 Lv. For Texarkana ........2:16 PM
402 Ar. From Lufkin .......6:55 PM
404 Ar. From Lufkin ..........11:55 AM
SOUTHBOUND
101 Ar. f rom Texarkana . 4:05 AM
101 Lv. For Waco 4:20 AM
103 Ar. From Texarkana ...1:14 PM
103 Lv. For Waco ..............1:20 PM
401 Lv. For Lufkin ................8:15 AM
403 Lv. For Lufkin ............3:15 PM
JAS. KENNEDY
Ticket Agent
Phone 1318
“SERVICE WITH COURTESY”
HONEST DEALING
THE LEADING SHOP
HOLT TIRE SHOP
SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY AND
ALL NEXT WEEK
30x3 y2 SPECIAL CORD -
30x3 y2 RUGBY CORD -
29x4.40 RUGBY BALLOON
$5.95
$6.60
$8.20
ONE TUBE FREE WITH EACH TIRE
VULCANIZING —
A Money- Back Guarantee
105 SOUTH BROADWAY
TYLER, TEXAS
In a sense the world is growing
harder, because it is growing sound-
er and more mature. Hardness need
not mean harshness. The lines are,
being drawn tighter, but only upon ;
the old weaknesses, the old flabbiness
which used to make such constant j
call upon the virtue of sympathy and
helpfulness. People stand upon their
own feet more than formerly and
have lgas need to ask aid; therefore
the old precepts which made this form
of .helpfulness the chief virtue are
passing away. We are not wise to
. conclude that because things are dif-
ferent they are worse. It is our duty
not to protest change but to interpret
It.—Dearborn Independent.
II
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There is a.weatherbeaten cabin on
the Dixie Highway out a few miles
from Tyleri , Jt is a tenant shack, but
it* occupant entered the Rural Homes
Beautiful Contest last year about this
time. She won one of the prizes
awarded in the Colored Division. That
cabin and its yard are still very at-
tractive—it strikes the passer-by as
a beautiful place, well kept, a place
where the affections center. It is a
borne upon which the loving care of an
humble tenant has been bestowed to
a good purpose. :
IS LABOR FOR LIQUOR?
...
#- _
We note from time to time in the
newspapers when the wet and dry is-
sue is under discussion, that it is al-
ways claimed that the American Fed-
eration of Labor is said to be practi-
cally unanmidusly in favor of a repeal
nf the Eighteenth Amendment, and
that the candidate for President who
n best prove his wetness will get
the miiiions~5rTaboTvotei: W«Trtf-
ten wonder if there is much basis for
this claim. It is true the Federation,
at Its National Convention, went on
record as favoring repeal but we have
never believed that the great body of
organized labor was rightly represent-
ed when this was done.
Certainly Tiot in this part of the
country is there anything like a ma-
jority of the men who labor who fa-
vor whiskey. In fact prohibition’s
greatest ally in the South has been
: ■ , ....
Tyler State Bank
and Trust Co.
Tyler, Texas
Real opportunity comes only to the man with ready money.
Save and save and save and deposit your money with us.
Your Busines Appreciated, Large or Small
C. J. BROGAN, President
J. A. BULLOCH, Vice President,
J. H. HERNDON, Vice President,
J. T. ODEN. Asst. Cashier.
I
Watch For The Advertisement
1 E. WOODWARD
■jfi
HIGH GRADE
Automobile Trimming and Painting
NOT HOW CHEAP—BUT HOW GOOD
240 South Boi. d’ Arc
Get the Cash!
The Standard has opened a house in your
section with plenty of ready cash to pay for
your furs. You do not have to wait for your
money.
.....1—........
Bring Us
Your Furs
Bring- us your fur and get the cash. Do not
wait. The Standard has made a market for
Texas furs and built up one of the
larg-est fur businesses in America.
Before the Standard came to Texas,
trappers and fur buyers had to ship
their furs. Now we have a house
in your section that will pay you
cash ight at home. Bring us your
Furs.
W. W. GODWIN
rv
3k- ■ s............. _
>■ V '
■■■ iVwtw; ■ s?
820 Bo is d’ Arc Street
TYLER, TEXAS
Representing Standard Hide & Fur Co.
DALLAS, TEXAS
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Edwards, Henry. The Tyler Journal (Tyler, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, November 25, 1927, newspaper, November 25, 1927; Tyler, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth637976/m1/2/: accessed April 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Smith County Historical Society.