The Tyler Daily Courier-Times. (Tyler, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 289, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 4, 1920 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
PAGE FOUR
fa., —=" . —
TYLER DAILY COURIER - TIMES, WEDNESDAY AWIÍST 4, 1920.
LABORING PEOPLT URGED
LABORING PEOPLE URGED
All laboring people < f Trior ,md of
Hmlth County are urged to lio present
and to take un active pur* in the Neff
«ally at the Court House tomorrow
night® ~
This meeting isjl0 he held under
the auspices of the Neff for Governor
t'lubr but thér laboring peopte an'
peclally ur*ed to he present ¡ * some
mattera of vital interest will he
brought to your attention.
Remember at the Court Mouse
Thursday night, at 8 o'clock.
COMMITT '
RAINS WILL BENEFIT CROPS
IN WEST TEXAS COUNTIES
Dallas. Texas, AuKUst 4.—lU ins. that
^yll yesterday and the day before over
a large area in Central Went Texis
will be of Kxeat benefifPto cotton and
corn crops. according to reports re-
ceived.
I
WICHITA FALLÍI MAN SHOT
AND KILLED: WIFE HELD
G30
0
O
Don't suffer the misery of I- digf s-
tlon when you can get relief from
Prickly Ash Bitten . It eases pain and
drives out badly digested food On
dose does the work. Try It. Price $ I -'
per bottle.
Wichita 1 * Texan. Aw? 4 -Jtrn
l.eitimon v '1"' and instantly kill-
ed in the hai k yard ai 11 i s home in
stW#3f- fy,(|hlK afternoon. Hit wife *«.«
arrested shortly after the killing. She
claims site lir<d in sell defense.
to
♦ ♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦ G
♦ Too Late To Classify4 j
♦ «
♦♦♦♦♦#♦♦♦♦♦*♦
FOR HAI.J'J—Now Kurd never driven
any.Address W-12 Courier-Times. 2U1
kiffWiVS
['. Hati's return <1 from
lie s| ent several days.
í ia I las |
BUILDING
BUILDtNfS CONCRETE CULVER!
CSSS®
Plan Outlined to Do Away With Con-
struction of Form*—Remedy
foE for Undermining.
instead of going to the trouhle snd
expense of making forms for the con-
rrete culver's, if ihn ditch Is teúlporitr-
Hv filled with enprl and tunipwf. j) est"
m'av he made with no ftínu ft * '■;
One uncí "ilvort ró&a# •HWi*
tears ago that lias withstood tint* ant)
frequent ua« and I etUi wiUtou* wiy
cracks
The IllUfrtnitton shows how thl| type J
9t culvert or bridge is convicted.'
writes I míe R. Van Horn In MlMOuri
and Kansas Parmer. If 0 piece of
is to he drained, this tn y be
y o o
!> * o ♦. ♦♦♦
t * Y
A nAXTmrXTTT A rnTAXT AU riTTü A
T. H. línmey has returned from a
visit of several days at Mineral Wells.
KOR KA1.K Registered jersey cow.
gentle, rich, and wood papers. Price,
$100, if Hold at once. See Mr. Ilal-
brook, two mi los west on Dixie, or call
1239. 291
Mrs. It. M. Moore and little son of
Terrell are guests of W. A. Strange,
Rust Norvelli street.
How Culvert Is Constructed.
FOR RUNT—Two furnished upstairs
rooms with gaa, for light housekeep-
ing. Apply 206 WeBt Houston, or
phone 28. 291
WANTHJD—To buy 2 or 3 honie mado
quilts. Phone 319. 291
\
FICTfTRD FRAMING — Convex
Frames; Glass, Photos enlarged. Seo
Horace J. Burks, 221 North Broadway
Phone 880. tf 288
FOR SALE— On account of leaving
city, will Bell a Baldwin piano that is
worth $600 or $700, will take $300 If
•old at once. Phone 1384. 291
FOR SALE— Canary birds. Several
\ good singers and two excellent pairs.
" "uaranteed to be good Blngers. Phone
9, or apply 210 South Beckham.
)R SALE}—6 well Improved farms
r sale near Flint and Gresham. Close
school. Write or phone H. J. Booth
re Flint Drug Co., Flint, Tex. 295
JP—Small brown horse mule
loft thigh.
by B. G. Staples, Lindale, Route 1.
291
WANTED—To buy second hand Ford
car. Must be in good condition. Will
pay cash. I. E. Shoemate. 291
For RENT—Three large connecting
rooms, furnished for light housekeep
ing. Phone and lights. Reference.
Apply 405 North Boren ave., Phone
204. 291
)ST—A W. T. Rawlelgh sales order
t>k, somewhere on Bols d'Arc ave.
[Hue. Finder please phone 389 or
leave book at Courier.Times. 291
.Judge MuHoch has returned from
tile Neff rail yat Dallas Monday even
I mi.
Mrs. K. P. McKenna and little son
have returned from a visit to reli.fives
at Lawrence, Kansas.
Miss Krancls Hledpe returned yester-
day afternoon from a visit to relatives
and friends at Dallas.
J. W. Healrd and sister. Mrs. R. A.
Riviere, left today to visit relatives in
El Paso.
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Macon of Ter-
tel' are visiting relatives and friends
in the city for a few days.
J. E. Whlsnunhunt who has spent
several weeks' irt North Texas and
Oklahoma Is back in our city.
Misses Emma and Mary Prestwood
arrived from Dallas yesterday to visit
felAtlves and friends here for several
days.
S. D. Reaves and wife and son,
Gauld, will motor to Marlln tomor-
row. From there they will ro to Min-
eral Wells, and then to Denver, Colo.
btillt first and the ditch dug afterward
If an old ditch Is to he bridged, th«
fill may fie nuide for the time being
and Infer removed. The concrete I
mixed In flie rig!it proportions ami
(aid oil the roiiiHÜim «¡••rf.ire to thf
proper thickness, nmi nt'n Matilde r«
enforcing Trencho* ■ 'd lie dug
at either side to ninke
to hold the culveri r :;i 1
the weight of liiaiN p'.i - !•
Many concrete hrid .e>
the rest of high wale;-.
Inc :s too liiillov '¡:<.y
! fooling
i > ink
■ V " • 11
i
r
Y
Y
1
r
r
I
f
f
r
r
t
if
f
Y
f
Y
I
f
t
Y
f
Y
❖
❖
t
Y
f
f
A CONTINUATION OF OUR
Q
O
—Prices quoted on the lines mentioned below are worth in-
vestigating. The price on every item is sacrificed, and as we
have two more months of Summer, these prices should appeal to
you.
REDUCED PRICES PREVAIL
ON DRESSES, SILKS AND WASH GOODS, SILK GLOVES, WO-
MEN'S AND CHILDREN'S OXFORDS, STRAW HATS, SKIRTS
CURTAIN MATERIALS, ORGANDY AND VOILE BLOUSES,
i x BATHING SUITS, MEN'S SILK SHIRTS, MEN'S Sl'ITS, MEN'S
t AND BOYS' SUMMER UNDERWEAR.
t
Every item represents a Substantial Saving.
Remedy for Undermining.
dnrlng a flood, and either crumble or
are made unsafe. A simple remedy
for this is to provide a shallow wall
running across the upstream side of
the openlnc, and a part of the bridge.
This should extend to the bottom of
the side wnlls and should not he over
five or six Inches nhove the low wa-
ter level. This checks any tendency
toward undermining and prevents
debris fmm wedging In the bridge.
>
Brown, Smith 6- Marsh Brothers
yflorH .old. Branded R, H.
TakWrTnr~9 ^- -5"* -JM"wrtce, Martin, whfv W .bee .,GOQQ.. XW.^VSPENSABLE
1 "^attentftTK' Jtyler Commercial College,
left yesterday for his home In Ard
more, Okla
Mr. aprt Mrs. Jula Smith and daugh-
ters, Mifweg Nellie Mae and fucile 'eft
last night' for an extended trip to Yel-
low Stone Park and thence to Califor-
nia.
Mrs.' Julius Herpfeld and children,
Misses Marlon and Marie, and Julius.
Jr., wll Irettirn to their home in Dal-
las foday, after a several days visii'
with Mr. and Mrs. R. Berpfeid and
other relatives in this city.
Highway Improvement Is a Buslneai
Proposition With Farmer and
City Dweller.
lm BROADWAY
1 1 10c-35c
TONIGHT
10c-35c <
Harry T. Morey
-IN-
When It takes four horses to pull
an empty wagon to town and wheat I*
going off in price each day; when the
mall carrier gives tip In despair, and
the children cannot get to school, the
farmer cannot help wondering how
much this condition Is costing him
each day.
Figure as he may, ne cannot get
away from the fact that good roads
are Indispensable to agricultural pros-
perity.
The city dweller Is alike concerned.
The farm on a good road has scores
of possibilities for the development of
Its resources to every one open to the
farm on a poor rond. Increased ex-
penditures—greater buying powers.
In the early days of poverty many a
county bonded Itself for hundreds of
thousands of dollars to secure rail-
roads to promote agricultural develop-
ment. Three-fourths of all fhe freight
the railroads haul must sooner or later
move over fhe public highways, ano
every ton so moved Is costing at an
avernge rate of '_\t cents per mile.
Verily, road improvement is a busi-
ness proposition—a matter of dollars
! and cents.
10
"The Gauntlet"
\*
Faces new dangers in the Tennessee Mountains.
A tale of love, adventure and figtu. Full of action and thrill .
/ •
New Comedy on Same Program.
i i Matinee
' • 10c-25c
TOMORROW
FRIDAY
Nights
10c-35c
ORA CAREWE
O
. . ONE OP TH SWEETEST OF SCREEN QUEENS
10ot < • ee
* IN A NEW SPECIAL O
o
"Love's Protege"
o
Hall Room Boys 'Comedy
G o £ "¡ 3
>IIIIIII J|| || IIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM
e>
PENNSYLVANIA NOW LEADING
Keystone State Led Nation in 1919 in
Mileage of Contracts Let for
Road Building.
Pennsylvania led the nation In 1910
In mileage of contracts let for mud
construction, according to the state
highway department. Up to January
1 the state awarded contracts for
the building of 07D.Ü0 miles of du-
rable highways. Its nearest competi-
tor was Illinois, which contracted for
610.70 miles.
Pennsylvania's 1020 program call
for the construction of approximately
800 miles of roads. The department
says that Pennsylvania Is far ahead
of other states in the organization
It has perfected to build durable high-
i ways.
: BETTER SCHOOL ADVANTAGES
Average of School Year Is 180 Days
(- In Five States Having Best
Road Systems.
O
Good roads make it po#fclMe to have
better school advantages. In the five
states of the Union which Wive the
best system of public highways the
average length of school year Is I8(i
days. In the five states that have
given the least% attention to rond lm
provemenls the school year Is less
than half that Idbg. -H
Cow's Hair Clothes Next
Men's clothing; made out of cows'
hair will soon rival, woolen garments
declare agents of a packing1 company,
who have been experimenting with
the product in Pennsylvania. One of
the employes of the Gensemer tan-
nery Is wearing a suit made out of
.this material and it is proving of as
Rreat utilitj' as wool.
The new cloth resembles chevidt
fan appearance, but Is said to have bet-
jter wearfrtgr qualities.—Boston Post.
WISE AND OTHERWISE
Hewitt—"Can you get your wife to
try the budget system?" ewett—"No,
she won't budge."—Boston Globe.
Sufficient to each day art the duties
fo be done aná the trials to be todartft
God never built a Christian strong
enough to carry today's duties and
I tomorrow's anxietie spiled on top of.
them.—T. L. Cuyler.
There's two things it don't pay to
worry about—those ye cap v."ip. 'n
iTiooo ya "Wali<«« . v
"A health center tells us thai bad
odors are signs of danger." "T sup-
pose one's nose is that kind of a
health scenter."—Baltimore American.
In Interest of Highway
Tton'vim Texas, Aug. 4.—,T. D. Clark,
«in, secretary of the Jefferson High*
Ivay. has been in lionham in the in-
erests of this highway, which runs
rora Winnipeg, Canada, to New Or-
ans, I«a.. Bonham being on the high-
way. Mr. Clarkson's present trip hnsj
ci do with a financial reorganization < madam," "Well, i ve lost them. -Ros
f the road. ¡ ton Transcript.
If common sense has not the bril-
liancy of the sun, it has the fixity of
the stars.—Cabellon.
"You know those gloves I bought
here the other day—you said they
would last me for two years." "Yes,
Datii
Hfiughlfr—"And wheh X
my dear,
marry I can take it waya will me?"
Father—"Certainly, m ychild. But do
not till anyone; it might spoil your
chañes."—Bdinburgh Scotitman.
ie 8unflower In Russia.
Sunfokver cultivation has become an
industmln southern Russia, whWe the
people hkve found the seeds a substi-
tute fnrAllves in making oil. The Rus-
sian etit^ th< kernel. An acre of -otn-
flowers yiclifo about (30 bushels of
seeds, mft| these l« turn yield rnorr
than HOrlillons of o!1.
K
Open Meeting Sharehold-
ers of Tyler Co-Operative Store
Thursday night, July 29th, 1920, the share holders of Tyler Co-
Operative Store held an open meeting at Labor Hall when they re-
ceived report from the Secretary-Treasurer of the Store covering
the first five months business of the store.
Since opening the doors of the Store on February 7th, 1920, this
institution has averaged between $10,000.00 or $11,000.00 business
per month and have a nice surplus on hand to be divided as divi- ^
jj~ ~~ 4.V>r% ol-Atia Viocs inefííllofl q firaf. r looc find lTn-t.r -Hnf.P v
i
f
x
T
X
t
❖
t
t
t
t
t
C1B lAJ ix « vax v iiAviiv* — —
paying for the market fixtures and after a discussion of the mat-
ter it was unanimously voted to deíér the dividend for a few
months.
Interesting talks were made by W. J. Allen, J. B. Frazier and jH
others and after all business had been attended to the meeting ad- £
journed and refreshments, consisting of ice cream, cake and i
punch were served. 0 * jr
About 200 share holders and th^ir wives attended the meeting %
? and all enjoyed a splendid time. j
? tyler co-operative store J
X :r SECRETARY. X
^ "" " Q • o
T
f
T
X
T
T
Y
x
t
f
X
I
*>
I
f
V
t
f
T
X
t
X
t
t
T
❖
t
T
t
X
T
I:
f
t
T
T
t
T
T
T
J
T
f
t
T
♦
oc
3
V
C;
O
<3
o.QCD
CO
r
o
•3D
0
o
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
McDougal, H. A. The Tyler Daily Courier-Times. (Tyler, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 289, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 4, 1920, newspaper, August 4, 1920; Tyler, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth178089/m1/4/: accessed April 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.