Winnsboro Weekly News (Winnsboro, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, January 7, 1921 Page: 3 of 8
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FORD
THE UNIVERSAL CAR
A mighty valuable booklet just issued by the Ford Motor Campany. It is yours for
the asking. Drop in and get one or drop a card or letter and we will mail you a copy
free.
This l>ook is not wh ' the Ford Motor Company has to say about the Fordson Tractor
but what the teiui of thousands of users have to say. Get th • book! It is yours for the
asking. Keep in mind the fact that behind every Fordson Ti actor are all the resources
of the great Ford Motor Company, likewisethat reliable "Ford After-Service" which
assures the keeping of the Tractor in working order every day in the year. . Remember
also that the Fordson Tractor, like the Ford car, is simplicity itself in design and con-
struction ; easy to understand and easy to operate. Come in and let us tell you more
about it. It is mere important to the fanner today than anything else.
The Age of Machine Power on the Farm is no longer a matter of speculation; it is
here—an established fact. It is the latest advanced step civilization has taken. It
comes to the farrier with the full promise to lift the great burden of drudgery and
wearisome, wearing-out toil from the muscles of man and carrying them with much
more profit by power of machinery, with the result that larger production, more comfort
and greater wealth will come to the farm homes wherever the Fordson is employed.
Come in and talk it over.
T. L. MOORE
Authorized Dealer, Winnsboro
Advice to Dititrict Trustee
The American Forestry Association of Washington, D f
? the war-devastated areas of France and nelgintii
urt rrom the American people was : shipment of
'rn eomnino'i in the hree bags shown i
he
ymvm
Winnsboro News and the
Dallas Semi-Weekly News
%
One Year for
$2.00
It's a cinch
to figure why
Camels sell!
.11
m
You are very important coun-
ty officers intrusted with the
expenditure of the school funds
for the education of the children
in your district. This is a sa-
jcred trust and you are expected
under the law and your oath to
! exercise the same care i nd diK-
I fence in the management of
! these funds that prudent busi-
| ness men use in the manage-
iment of their own affairs. Per-
; haps your greatest duty is to
see that these funds are not
wasted: that the children get
the full btnefit of every dollar
expended for their education.
Paying teachers for services not
1 rendered or any other expendi-
ture that you would not permit,
if the money came out of your
own pocket, is wrong. You are
trustees of the funds of inro-
cent childhood and when you
permit waste of these funds,
you are untrue to their interest
and are not treating the tax
payerR right.
I call your attention to this
matter because there is a ten-
dency now to look upon the
school matters very lightly, and
to pay for services not render-
ed and I want to state now,
once for all, that I do not a|>-
prove of it. The scht>ol is a busi-
ness and you are the directors.
You are the representatives of
your district in school matters
and your acts are as binding as
other laws. You are to manage
and supervise the schools, and
in the discharge cf these duties,
do not fear being termed med-
[dlesome or a local boss. Do
your duty by seeing thaL the
school is conducted according
to law and in the interest oi |
the children. It is much better
for you to !>e criticized by the!
ungrateful than for the school
to suffer from your neglect.
If you find that a teacher is
neglecting school duties from!
any cause, you not only have
'th*. LftJt it is your duty to
correct same. You should meet
at least once a month during;
school; and I suggest that if
you can do so, meet at the I
school house the last Friday af-
ternoon of each school month
to see that everything is in1
good shape for school and,
Ito encourage the teachers anal
pupils. The school cannot bel
I successful unless you do your . — .....y Q - _
duty as trustees; many failures J. T. GIBSON OL UU>
in school work are caused by
the failure of trustees to do
what is required of them by law.
This is not intended as
|criticism of your acts, but as
advice given as directed by law.
1 want you to consult with me
freely about school matters and
I assure you of mv hearty re-
operation. J. U. Searcy.
County Superintendent.
TWELVE ^LLION TREE SEEPS TC EUROPE [
i
over twelvi
<r'i£
Ita
'ion
i h >1
Fire steals the wealth
of the nation at the rate
of a million dollars a day.
Only by sound insurance can
you be indemnified for the loss
fire may cause you. Only by
applying the knowledge of
hazards can fires be reduced
to a minimum.
The Hartford Fire Insurance
Company has sold sound insur-
ance since 1810. Besides at
no extra cost, it offers expert
Fire Prevention Service, which
protects against loss that can-
not be covered by insurance.
Insure through this agency.
INS JUNE
M. A P' Rank Building
Winnsboro, Texas.
STADIIT" r.jwL FOR
OLYMPJC \h OHIO
J
■r
I ■ .
*ELlc>5. Ffonims
rather hard to associate a
beautiful yotjuK lady like Mlns
Bloise From me of t'rhnna O
•v^'h 10 2 4 Olympic athletic
ciuni's N*'v«rt hel<'SN Columbus
(O ) citizens working hand in
hand with faculty and athletic
leaders of Ohio State !_'nlverstty
had this yoiinR irtdy lead them In
a drive for 11 001,000 to erect
a now n' vtio <*f:i<1hii?) on th<i
school campus A strong bid l*
to be made for the next Olymple
Kamos Miss Fromme. a senior,
was voted the most popular and
crowned "The Stiidlutn Olrl "
Co-operating Selling
what they titok in the past.
While the European demand is
low, why not organize direct
contact between growers and
European spinners? Can it be
possible that the spinners would
not welcome such direct action.
To Stop a Cough Quick
like H\Y!>.' MKAI.IVi; H< >N'EY •
■ "tigh medic •■•litrh stops (he cough l>y
healing tlic i ' ' ii' Trii.it (1 tissues
A iw)x of i.KoVhS (<• I'l.N-TRATE
SAI.VK fi.r On ("Ms. H■ 1 Colds and
Croup is enclosed with every hottlc of
HACKS' HE \ I I N't, lit NFV. Ttie salve
should 1>i' "ii• 11■ • f• on the ehest .«t;11 throat
of children 'iifTcrimj from a ; I or Croup.
m
%
r&DOMES
BLEND
HI * W IT t I ■
You should know why Camels
are so unusual, so refreshing, so
satisfying. First, quality—second,
Camels expert blend of choice Turkish
and choice Domestic tobaccos which
you'll certainly prefer to either kind
smoked straight I
Camels blend makes possible that
wonderful mellow mildness—yet all the
desirable body is there 1 And, Camels
never tire your taste 1
Youll appreciate Camels freedom
from any unpleasant cigaretty after-
taste or unpleasant cigaretty odor I
For your own satisfaction compare
Camels puff by puff with any ciga-
rette in the world at any price !
•mM at30. U*.
ci(inttul try a jlm-%1
imrnnd I htm carton tot
Cmmotm in mM mrjirtef* in moi—tttlnmltr «
raftN fbr JO will, or ten pmrhmfttm I 300
paptr.MWMf Mrton Wm mt ronjly rmmtm
homm or atfk* mupp/y or whan you Irani
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO, Wm.ton-3aJ«^ N. C.
,
The weakest place in
American commercial office
that occcpied by the middlemen
There are too many of them,
and their glutton fingers are
taking too much toll from both
the producers and the consumer.
If it is true, as affirmed by sta-
tisticians, that the producers of
food crops get but 30 per cent
of the price paid by consumers
then there is a rotten spot to
be mended. There must some-
time come more practical mar-
keting on the part of the pro-
ducer of agricultural staples.
Co-operative marketing ought
to be easier in cotton than in
most items, for cotton is non-
perishable when given ordinary
intelligent treatment. Its grades
are few and its value should be
approximately stabilized from
the beginning to the end of the
season. The Europeans took
only about three million bales
of American cotton last year,
whereas they used to take as
many as eight million bales.
This year tlw,- will take more
than last y<ar, but far from
Thi ln-alini! t'ffn't of Havos" Ht'iiimj
11 . i . i, , * . ' "Wo the tlinwt n''nod with t)io lionli
pr<>\ ,(Ie(1 I hi* CI edit I hclSOS r,r, v.' * i> IVn-lrm • Snlvo thrtmj!h tin
• i . ij a . i • ^ Ihr nkin -<oon Htop* n coufih
mijrht he worked —
Hoooy in
a ofToct < f
lM>ro« A
be worked out satisiac-
ol11' torily? The price is worth the
i* exjieriment.—Tyler Tribune.
To Cure .1 Cold irt 0\,e Day
Take I.AXAT1VE BROMO QUININE (Tnhlrts It
nto| «* the rough and Headache* and works off the
iVJd K W, iiROVE'S diunature on each box. 30c.
Both romodlos -ir pnt-kod in on# carton nnd fli«*
co«t of (he c( nl'itu,tl in atiueut is ISt
.lust ask vottr druggist for HAYES'
HKAUNt, HOM-.Y.
Piles Cured in 6 to M Days
DnirtfllntR reftin<! nnncy il I* N/O
tocure Itchind. Hlind. Bloodinil or I
Inntantly reliev« * I* P lo-
•■ostful /vieei) ullt r ihc iliHt ;ii>i)lu«
V n IA'T.Vi fiiil%
Votr\iditi4 Pile*
th4. >on *nn t
1 mn. Price <Mle
VERMONT HAS PAIR OF OLDEST SENATORS
tlw,'
TOT,
There are munjr of nt-
tractlng attention, but 'Vermont
has a way. all her own. Beth
her senators claim the distinction
of betiiR the two oldest men in
the U. S. Senate and both are the
same age. They are, Snnntor
William P Dillingham and Sena*
tor Carroll S Page, the latter ala
biuista that he ia the only great-
grandfather itt the Seuatu The*
were bum lu
r
.i.' j
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Weir, Homer R. Winnsboro Weekly News (Winnsboro, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, January 7, 1921, newspaper, January 7, 1921; Winnsboro, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth268153/m1/3/: accessed May 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mineola Memorial Library.