Coleman Democrat-Voice (Coleman, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 8, 1928 Page: 2 of 20
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0
resses
Combinations
An assortment of dresses that will
please you. They arc wiirlli. mam
fifties wind wo arc asliing for lliefn.
Only —
Dresses of silk Combinations that arc
Wonderful values. Lot us sliow vmi
this assorlitieul. Priced al only
These are. real Values and
.1 lie latest sirles. at only
Fur Trimmed
Coats
Here is where you w ill find a roat
that is trimmed with the iuHv fur
at only—
''purl Coats and others ait this bargain
price is why we lead in values. Come
in and let us show you this buv at only
Best Value
Coats
These are trimmed with very warm
fur and are Wonderful value* at
onlv —
Extra
Hosiery Bargain
3 pairs Silk tfj | A/
Hose for 1 «U'
WE LEAD IN VALUE
Novelty Shoes for Ladies in
all the new styles. Real val-
ues at— i
$1.98 to $4.95
i n 3rjcJrNCoir pa.rv/
2,s A .Bel le.r Bri
■fc . Beaten. P®-lK,
To CoWma-n.
PAGE TWO
THE DEMOCRAT-VOICE, COLEMAN, TEXAS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1928.
COURTHOUSE NEWS
land out of Moritz Lappa survey,!
$1.00. ■ „
j Warranty Heeds.
1 W. E. Edgerton et ux to R. D.
Furry, south' 1-2 of the northwest
j 1-4 of block No. 1 of Flippen, Per-
y. Stockard and Branch subdivision
ot blocks Nos. 14 and 20 of R. J.
flow’s second addition to town of
Coleman, $750,
Marriage Licenses.
Roy Cullins and Mae Evelyn Slu-
der.
G. L. Walters and Mattie L§g-1
gins.
Richard Montgomery and Allie
Duncan.
Rastus Jack Cogle and Jewel
Prances Chambers. _ >•;
Thbmas C. Laws and Jeanie Mae
Mrs. Herbert Hoover
Roy1 E. Howell to J. F. Gained Beaver.
!< No. 7 and the west 10 feet of, Henry Creek and Le!a Wayne Ar- ;
lot No. 8 in bldck No. 8 of South i n°W-
V...,k Audition to Coleman, $700. | W. Rudloff and Marie Cason
A. M. Norris et ux to Wess Brown,
b. Nos. 19 and 30 of biock No. 2
in town of Talpa, $4,000.
R. W Nowlin et ux to Oscar Se-
■ . t., i«;> feet square out of the
northeast corner of block No. 17,
17owV subdivision of farm blocks
i 19 of Clow's seoond addition to
1 >u man. *350.
’ P. Barnes and wife to J. C.
c m lot No. 1. bk>ck No. 33
:.n town oi Santa Anna. $2,300.
Hoy E. Howell to L. J. Wilson,
' »• NO. 2, block No. 8 in South Park
'anion to town of Coleman. $600
J, A. Stobaugh and wife to R. C.
v amuck, south 1-2 of lot No. 4,
No. 1 of J. A. Stobaugh's sub
G. Hinds and Ora Bell
Ben'Wallace and Mrs. Lula Tay-
lor. . s
R. N. Curry and Lorena Fields.
Births.
Born to: r
Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Sullivan. Cole- j.
man. a girl.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Sanders, |
Goldsboro, a boy.
Agustui Gait air (Mexican), Cole-
man. a girl.
Deaths.
Sheldon M. Lowe, ago 86 years, 6 j
blc
months;
ion of farm blocks Nos. 5 andI senility;
Clow's second addition to town [ Anna,
oil man. $750
died Nov.
place of'
1. 1928: cause,!
burial, Santa !
1 For sale—Second hand drilling,
Kstem-s. bits and jars in. first class
condition. Mitchell and Groves,!
Drilling Contractors,-phone 829.
45tfx.
Oil and Gas teases.
• -H. W. Kingsberry et al-to L. C.
'i ,-trnan, 330 acres out of block No
1 Wharton county school land stir-j
1 Jll: j VACCINATE YOUR TURKEYS!
■ fiflynes to Barnsdali Oil Co , I NOW AND SAVE THE FLOCK WE
1 to acres out of the northeast cor- HAVE raE VACCINE. COULSON'Si
DRUG STORES. 45x
l .or,
s.
Uie Pleasant Young survey.
\i Russell to C M. Jones. 147 6
known as block No. 16, sub-
on of John Martin survey, $10,
Shiloh Baptist church of Loss
. bv W. L. Sparkman et al
i Wm Miller Ross, one acre of
Vityij-
Piggiy Wiggly.
Pure cane syrup, per gallon, 58c,
six gallons in case. $3 00 ,
FRESH PERSIMMONS- -We have
them —Jeanes Grocery.
“Beads on a String
Comedy in Three Acts
Produced by Dramatic Club of Valera High School
* .....-H;’ : ■
Al Valera High School Auditorium
Friday, Nov. 9, 1928
ni* Da vi*
,'nlee Davis
Malferton.
Direction of .Mrs. Marion E. White
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Clrtus Moser Benjifmln Dsvi,« Esq
Mrs Jefferson Davis
Mr. Jefferson Davis.
Dlnk’eer.i______
Cleopatra O Johnson.
----Gene Lynch
nute Blue -Mary Luch Shannon
oM Beem............Wilma Stewart
Johnnie Carroll
. .Genevia. Reid-
“Clyde Crenshaw
. ’Dale Grimes
Linde I Lowe
45x Waterloo Ia. "i Nov. C—Clad !n) Her 'parent s heartily' approved- of her
shinfh* armor made of tin discs athletic activities and when the fam-
|: bought ai the local hardware store 1 ily moved to Whittier, California.
Lou Henry Hoove*;.wife ol Herbert j from Waterloo, they employed a
■' Hoover, posed as a gallant little Joan i physical instructor to pome out from
-oi An lna school tableau when she!Los Aiigctes to give their daughter
,v.a a>litile. girl here., private lessons.
Always the gallant and the ad- The residents of. that town and
venturous Have appealed to her and of Waterloo were not at all surpris-
she chose the courageous Maid of ed to hear that Mrs. Hoover had
i Orleans Irom all the characters in l been made head of the Girl Scouts,
;history as the one she would like to Knowing her girlhood love of outdoor
represent. , ■ life. She used to ride horseback and
‘People of. Waterloo recall Mrs. j would often shoulder a little .rifle
Hoover,as ah enthusiastic, unafraid.and go into the woods hunting for
voung -ter, with pig tails flying in the j small game.
j breeze as she coasted down hill or! The life of the youngster who was
rode- horseback She was always j so fond of adventure swung > into
fci.d of the outdoors.' One of the 1 strange wide trails when her path
eucalyptus trees she planted when j crossed that of. Herbert Hoover, the
‘a girl still stands in the dooryaxd of!young senior at Stanford university
the. old Henry home in Whittier, and when he left- for Australia he
California The house the Henris and (tie girl who had studied along
occupied in, Waterloo has been torn with him in the university were tac-
down to make room for city expan- ttly engaged. When Hoover was of-
sioh. Charles Henry, father of Mrs. | fered the chance to go to China un-
Hoover was a banker. George E. der the Chinese government’s de-
Lichty, a wholesale grocer of ’this part ment Of mines and railways he
city,' used to. haul little Lou Henry sent a long cablegram to Monterey,
'.from school on his sled in winter, California, where Lou. Henry was
and in summer'she . prevailed on him then living. ■ Her reply went winging
to haul her about in her red toy w lp h;m anc! soon he-was cross-
! Tea parties and dolls did not play Ilug thc ocean t0 gtt the girl whom
‘so much of a part in. the, early life hiutuii friends declared ‘ was made
‘of Lou Henry as did outdoor sports, for him," -
.‘of
J. Tom Padgitt Has
Call From Indiana for
Answers to Questions
We are indebted to J. Tom Padg-
itt for the following which was sent
him by an Indiana friend who man
manures , playground equipment,
whom the local (m£m met on a tour
of South America. Mr. Padgltt
passed it to us for publication be-
cause he needs help in answering
some of the questions propounded.
How many can you answer for him?
•Without obligation." the Indiana
man says, "I want to know”: (
Why do dumb bells and Indian
clubs never wear out?
Why manufacture refrigerators in
the north and sell them in the
sou tii?. ......r?
Why are there any democrats?
• Why do legislators vote dry when
they are sloppy wet?
1 Why manufacture Fundamental-
ism and Kti Kluxers in the south
and then permit them to come
north?
Why can't a Methodist in a Ford
catch a bootlegger in a,Straight
Eight?
Why do those elected to office
think they own the earth and all
it people—a la Ed Jackson, et al?
Why manufacture Y. M. C. A.
secretaries at Geneva Lake and in-
flict them upon us everywhere? And,
why do they make only one model?
Why do church organizations save
and slave to procure a pipe organ
and then run it on low gear?
Why should policemen, firemen,
school teachers, professors and min-
isters be pensioned?
Why do school teachers expect an
increase in salary when our edu-
cational institutions are annually
turning out hundreds of thousands
of competitors?t
Why do farmers want more leg-
islation while they are now sub-
merged with it?
.Why vote the republican ticket
when the democrats need votes so
badly?
Why -tire "dim bulbs” so vocifer-
ous?
Why are so many homely women
Club Jiners?
Why are there no penalties for
the crimes committed uhder "homo
cooking?"
When Hoover Invaded the Solid South
Now- is the time to
taxes. ,
Here js a part of the crowd that lined the streets of Elizabetliton, Tenn., to greet Herbert Hoovpr when
he arrived to deliver his first southern speech' of thc campaign, -The arrow points to Mr. and Mrs. Hoover
enroute to Lynn Mountain, where thc republican -'candidate spoke to a huge throng.
Armistice Day and -the Poppy.
“We Lead in Value." Try us for
savings. The Leader Dry Goods Co.,
Ike Shapiro, Prop. 45x I
Sunday, Nov. 11, 1928, will be the
tenth anniversary of the end of
the most horrible struggle human-
ity has ever known. We cannot
forget the .joy we felt in our heart?
on that Nov. 11, just 10 years ago,
when the signal was sent over the
world, that "the war was over.” Yes,
the war was over for you and me,
perhaps; but today there are still
some who are "paying the price."
The little red 1 Hippy offered for
sale in memory of this day, Nov: 11,
tells the story of those for whom
the war is not yet over.
In the government hospitals all
over the United States these beau-
tiful little flowers, typifying the
courage of the men who fell, are
being made by those men.still "car-
rying on.”
Picture in your mind this scene
in one hospital. Three men are
making one poppy, one a blind man
who could do only so much; the
second man with a hand so crippled
he could carry the work only so _r„ _ _______ ,T ....
far and he turns the poppy over! Of the flowers that bloom above
to the third man to finish. Ip an-
other hospital thc blind man fash-
ions perfect poppies. In still, an-
other will be found men whose
minds are shattered and who have
only one idea—that of taking their
minds distracted from this obses-
mind.s distracted fro mtliis obses-
sion through' the poppy progiam.
Saturday. Nov. 10, and -Monday,
Nov. 12, poppies will be for sale.
Lei us ratch their message as Mpina
Michael lias, in "To Keep .the
Faith." ■
“Oh you .who sleep in Flanders
Fields
Sleep sweet—to rise anew
We caught the torch, you threw
And holding high, we keep the
faith
With all who died.
"We cherish too, the poppy red
That grows on fields where valor
led:
It seems to signal to the skies
That blood of heroes never dies,
But lends a luster tp the red
the dead
In Flanders Fields.
And now the torcli and poppy red
We wear in honor of our dead.
Fear not that ye have died for
naught;
We learned the lesson that ye
taught . ,
In Flanders Fields."
Fool Apartments to Be Set Fire
Sunday Afternoon.
For the first time’in history Cole-
man people are warned beforehand
about a building fire. This time,
however, there will be no property
damage. It will be merely "on lo-
cation" in the making.of the "Story
of Coleman” by Victor Schuler and
Edwin Cooper.
Sunday afternoon, at.l o’clock, the
Pool apartments will be set fire in
such way that there will be no
damage. The Coleman fire depart-
ment, under the direction of Kelley
Dalton, will be on hand. The mOvic
-hero will rush through the flames
to rescue the heroine, jaccording to
the movie men.
I
Announcement
of Interest
To the Women of Coleman and
Coleman Countv
j
I have installed the Eugene Method
of Permanent Waving and am now able
to give both
tugene Permanent Weaving
• and
hederic Permanent Waving
1 have'just returned from Dallas where I took a Post
Graduate course in ail Beauty Cultufe.
Call or Phone jor Appoinlinenl
Phone 226
Mrs. Faires Beauty Shop
I Over American Cafe)
Coleman. Texas
I IN THE WORLD OF SPORTS :
,./! ■ • . . . - . 1 ■
/ --T------ - '
1 Let s Have Fifteen Rahs for Hiram College -It
I Won Its First Football Game in F ive Years
Recently—Other Grid Dope.
By PIULIP MARTIN. |
I' seerti: that a salute or 15 rahs j
‘ or something is in-order for Arnold':
Horween and Harvard and for
PILES
Cifred Without the Knife
Blind. Weeding, protruding, no matter how jong
si.tnding, within a few days, without cutting, .tying, burn-
in-:. sloughing or detention from business. Fissure, fis-
tuW and other rectal disease* successfully treated. Four-
teen years .in our permanent location, Fort Worth, with
more than seven thousand cured patents. This is your op-
portunity to be cured' without the expense and income:
nieiit i of going to Port W orth. Examination is free.
Dr. £». Wm. Van Haltern, Specialist
of the firm of Drs. Waltrip & Van Haltern,
^ Fort Worth, Texas.
Now at the Coleman Hotel, Coleman, Texas, to see
patients- on
Saturdays, Tuesdays and Thursdays
Our time is limited here so please see us'at once.
Nibs Price and California.
And 10 a lesser degree, cheers are 1
n order for the football teams at
Hiram .and Alfred and Alabama ;
p0)y
Listed to ‘his, mates:
On Saturday. Oct 27. Hiram Col-1
lege which happen.-; to be one of the ;
dozens oi colleges in Ohio, won its I
first football game in five years. On j
tiie same pay. Alfred, a college in
New York o small that no one
eem: sure wl.at town it is in. scored
: its first touchdown to win its firs!
game in three years. And, we must
add. Alabama Poly won its first!
game in 17 starts on that same day
■ What a grand old day in history;
that will be for. the student - body j
! of those three whools!
Why the cheers for Harvard and j
>' California, you ask?-
- Well, it seems that before the sea- j
son got under way there was a lot (
! of chatter to the effect that both'
| Horween and Price were1 going to
'have to do something this year or
else off their heads would come.
'! As you know, neither Harvard
nor California has had any wow of
a team for the past fe* years, but i
j October told a different tale this \
'' year. t
-| California | tied Southern Califor-j
I nia, and that is one of those great
! morai victories. There war a time.
I, in the past, when such a result'
would have been a moral victory
] for the Trojans, but' i't is a moral
| victory for the Golden Bears this
year That shows how the power
has been in recent years.
Harvard, took a walloping from
j the Army, but defeated Dartmouth
and the boys are whispering now
that old John Harvard is going to
j take an; awful wallop at their old
I rivals. Vale.
Ar .rvnr.ve ear to the ground
also hears that several other perti-
nent things are on the way bn the
sports world. For instance—
Vanderbilt and , Georgia Tech
meet on Saturday. Nov. 10. That
is the game which will decide the
southern championship.
The Army is going to have a man-
sized job when Nebraska journey*
their wgy. The Cadets probably
will wade through the Comhuske»,
but what if they don't? Won't that
Nebraska team be after that na-
tional title?
The big game of the year, how-
■ ever, will be that 8tanford-Army af-
' fair at New York on Dec. 1. Both
”v
"Nibs” Prict- oi California (above)
and Arnold Horween of Harvard
teams are liable to reach (hat spot
with a claim at the national title..
If such come:; about.'’there won't;
be any argument as to which team
deserves the. title. It will be set-
tled in that game
There are many bargains In the
classified advertisements eack
week. . 12-tfx.
--———'
Pay your taxes now and avoid, the
rush. |-?*7 45x
Typewriter jjap'-r in tablets or ■
ream packages at the Democrat-
Voice office ‘3Mtfx
Read the D -V want, ads.
The Leader Dry Goods Company
IKE SHAPIRO, Prop.
mmm 1
v
mmm.
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Williamson, J. T. Coleman Democrat-Voice (Coleman, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 8, 1928, newspaper, November 8, 1928; Coleman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth747635/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Coleman Public Library.