Winnsboro Weekly News (Winnsboro, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, September 8, 1922 Page: 4 of 8
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WINNSBORO WEEKLY NBW* Friday, Sept. 9th.
IH ' ■ ' ■
Are You A Subscriber to "The News''?
THE CAUSE
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1 1{:
MM $
m J
ii 1 i
If:'
! ill'
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If
The beat
moderate
priced
healthful
baking powder
obtainable
C/w it—and9000!
Contain* No Alum
Dr. Prlee'a Phosphate Baking Powdar
makaa light, dalicious biscuits, cakes,
muffins, ate., that will give a zest to
any appetite. It insures wholesome-
^PRX<$*
Powder
can
12
neea also and never leaves a bitter taste.
Ask your grocer If he haa any cans left
of Dr. Prtce'a at the special sale price
Ounce* i^cantly offered.
only
25c
Send for the "New Dr. Price Cook
Book."/*'• Free.
Price Baking Powder Factory
1001 Independence Boulevard, Chicago
"
Service Garasre
Where you can get individual
service at the cheapest possible
prices on automobile work, battery
repairing, welding, and soldering.
0
In fact anything in the auto line.
M. L. McCalman
Fred Nabors
Roy Boyd
North of "Quick Fill" Station
Telephone 221
J gentle
mont you wtll eee
something fine whin
Willim Jonm oot* a
1phol* groat hdg box
ni Kollogg't Corn
Flakoa 6«r«iu« thmt's
1 only kind hm will
1 whoU 6M •//"
flLUC
JOHtj
WlLW 1+r* wUvkM £-« I
It's a ~r—
joyous treat'®
to sit down to ^
a bowl of
Kellogg's Corn Flakes
You'll agree that you never ate such dclicious, such
satisfying cercal as Kellogg's Corn Flakes! Those big,
sunny-brown "swcet-hearts-of-thf-cc-'" a™ so fasci-
nating in flavor and go crispy an.I truuciiy th.it you don't
wonder tho children arc thrived t- rat thrm!
Comparo Kellogg's with imltp^ons to realize their
quality, their appetizing appeal, twtmder-crispnessl
Unlike imitations, Kellogg's are « -vor tc\:< h or leathery
or hard to cat! Each heaping spoonful of Kellogg's is
even more joyou.; the iast—there
*4'
TOASTED
CORN
FIAKE?
jg&fe
ii no end to the happiness tl at is yours
eating licllo^j's Cuiu i'loLes!
ASK FOR KriLOCCT! Be sure
that you get Kellogg's—t! e dclicious
Corn Flakes in the RED a.id GREEN
package that bears the signature of
W. K. Kellogg, the originator of
Toasted Corn Flakes. NONE ARE
GENUINE WITHOUT IT1
Itijr
CORN VXa
At** aaktri «f KCLLOCCS LfCHCLU uul mJ10Cu« .mm. i.su lnu V«J
OF WAR
_J DR. FRANK CRANE
Phllit h Kirr,. formo- i*irrht
man of Primier Lloyd George,
javi his views on the cause ol
;ho war the ether day in « lec-
ture at Williams college.
Ho c. a med to speak with rntnj
er thorough knowledge of the
s tuation becsusu from 'tho end
if tDlfi to r. year ago he was
id most jis close to the center of
world affa rs as it was po .s 1 :e
fcr a man to be.
'Th-~re was no secret of tilt-
British government that I din
not know," lie said, "no paper
Hi at I did not or cou d not r ad.
no conference hardly thrt I could
not attend. I have witnessed fro
the inside ths gigantic e/forts
made to win the war and the
hrrdly le<*s titant'c efforts made
to save the peace. What I have
to say, therefore, is bai«"d u on
some real knowledge of the way
'n which the affairs of the na-
tions ore conducted.
It fs Mr. Kerr's opinion that
fh" international world has no
bond of union nt nil and thar
the h'gheet condition which any
stafe hns r" che'' is ndifferent
to its neighbor state.
He believes that all the time
the forces are piling up which
years hence w 11 drag new arma-
das and fresh armies across the
waters of the world in order to
save by human slaughter what
can be secured by other feann.
"We shall not abolish wars
by passing pious resolutions or
having processions aga nst .w
or saving ourselves from the to-
ture of hard thinking by sui>-
scribing liberally for the rel et
of the distressed, or even in cho
long run by intei nat'onal confer
°nces at Washington or The
Hague."
Lord Balfour declared that
such demonstrations do not deal
?>th the real causes of the war.
hey iust put up a paper screen
painted to delude the people into
thinking that something isrealv
bei ng done to prevent war while
in reality being the paper screen
the forces of militarism a?-e
sharpening their knives all t;te
time. t
Coming to his conclusions Mr.
Kerr said that the most active
and constant cause of the var
was the division of humanity in-
to separate states, each owing
loyalty only to itself, each recog
n'zing no law higher than its
will, each looking ut every other
problem from its own point of
view. This cause may be and is
aggravated by national and re-
ligious nad linguistic and color
differences, but the d vision it-
self is none the less the funda-
mental cause."
This is sound sense and it
brings home the fact to us that
right here in America we are as
busy preparng for the next war
•'s others are anywhere else in
the word.
We are emphasizing isolation
We are boasting of having noth
ing to do with Europe We are
abstaining from world couns©3
We are emphas'ziiiK passports
and tariff barriers.
And in all this we are patting
ourselves on the back and strut-
ting around calling our.M-lves 100
per cent Americns. Add to
which the fact that we are talk
ing about imbuing the rest ol
the world with American idea:3.
The fact is that the biggest
American ideal of all is the ia'eu
of federation which me ins a un-
ified and cooperative world.
IF WOMEN ONLY KNEW
What a heap of liapninoss it
would bring t o Winnsboro
Homes.
Hard to do house work with
pn aching back.
Brings you hours of msery
at leisure or at work.
If women only knew the cause
—that backache nains often
come from weak kidneys.
Twould save much neediesa
woe.
Doan'« Kidney Pills are fcr
weak kidnevg,
tt-a-' what a WinnsWo Citi-
"ei say*:
M'ss Nellie Steed, Myrtle St.
nys: "I an glad to "ecommend
"^T.n's Kidney Pill* fo'- I know
hev are 0 eood rum^dv. 1 b* -
-♦ —« .,.n PT1(j r*«rvou&. Mv
•■o v Pc'nrH n,,jj nv Vidn«vn act-
1 lv n times. Down's
Viflne" "!1U r«MrUjn+„.i mv
«nd benefited me in every
wav."
ROc it r'1
burn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo N. Y.
Read want ads
THE SHORTAGE OF TIME
In his address at the openin*
of the Chicago Pageant of Pro-
gress, Postinuster-Lreiurai, Wain
made a lorceuble presentation of
'the biisic jvil in the coal m ning^
.ndrustry. t i3 an evil taut every
ibody recognizes an yet nothing
effective is done about it.
ah i)i. Aoik sayc, tnc.u ar?
bout twicc bt many co. 1 m 11 era
11 tho Uni.ad States as are ne:d-
d to prelorm the work of get-
ting; out ths nations supply ot
3 ail. There ; re also very many
more 0per.1t ng coal mines than
the country need. The resu t is
that'the miners ordinarily work
fboUt half the time. Though an
extrt nu< y powerful un.011—a ua
on which causes its member-
ship ciues fc 1 lie collected by iae
employers out of the wages oi
Ihe men—they demand a liv ng
.vug* for half time work.
"Tho sabotage of time by the
idle under pry," says Dr. Woik,
"and of propei*ty intrusted to
them must be added to the coat
price of any product." And the
price is paid by the consumers.
And the consumers in most in-
stances are wage earners who
work steadily through the year
to earn a living. A large percen-
tage of tho striking mine worlc
ers are not needed in the coa;
mining indrutry o nany terms.
There are industries where this
surplus labor that will now nei-
ther mine coal nor let anybody
else do so might be employed
at g «d wages the year round.
Thus the rest of the miners
might have steady employment
minin&r coal. j
It is impossible to sse why
the peop'.e and the industr.es
of the country shou'd pay for
coal prices sufficient to keep min
trs in idleness half the year
and give the profit to the own-
ers of thousands of producng
mines for whose product under
property arranged eonomic con
ditions there would be no sale in
competition with mines where
production costs are less. Even
this, by no means the whole
story. Coal mining can lie done
largely by machinery at onxy
a fracton of the cost by hand
lal)or. The miners' union forbids
the use of such machinery.
Here is far reaching sabotoge
that makes coal dear and hard
to get. No settlement of tliet
coal strike that does not bring
with it a searching investiga-
tion of this evil by a competent
federal eommisssion wi 1 nold
out any reasonable prospect of
leading to a fair reducton in
the excessve cost of the fuel.— J
Chicago Daily News.
11 a rdI)' Conipi i 111 en tary
"Thank you so much for your
song, my dear," said the elder-
ly woman when the daughter 01
tho house where she was vis-
iting had finished her solo, "it
took me back to my childhood
days on the farm. And while I
istened to your vo'ce I seemea
to hear the old gate creaking :n
the wind."—Boston Transcript.
Winnsboro Circit
Sunday School
Oh! Sfcfas—«ey! |||
What about thatf-C
J
FALL SUIT
Ktthn Bros. Suits are sold by Turner
Mercantile Co. $5.00 to $10.00 le8.\
Made to order suits. We give our cus-
tom?r! the best values and the best
service by giving first quality for less.
Our Clothing Deparlment is com-
pJett. See us before placing an order
Turner Mercantile:
« o
*Knhrt*8 Suits'
❖
♦♦♦ $5 to $10 less
Company.
Sulphur Springs-Winnsboroj
JITNEY LINE
Leave Sulphur Springs 7:30 a. "m.; Como, 8:05 a. m.
Leave Pickton 8:26 a. m.; arrive Winnsboro, 9:00 s. m.J
Leave Winnsboro, 10:00 a. m^ Pickton, 1035 a. m.
Como, 10:56 a. m.; arrive Sulphur Springs, 11:30 . m.
Leave Sulphur Springs, 3:30 p. m.; Como, 4:05 p. m.
Pickton, 4:26 p. m.; arrive Winnsboro, 5:00 p. m.
Leave Winnsboro, 5:30 p. m.; Pickton 6:05 p. m.
Como, 6:25 p. m.; arrive Sulphur Springs. 7:00 p. m.
nl^FS!ntar£
The officers and teachers of
the Sunday Schools on the Winn
sbcro circut are asked to meet!
at the Methodist Church in Win
nsboro, Saturday afternoon, Sep
tember 9th, at 2:30. Other rural 1
schoo s also are invited to take^
part in the meeting. Come along
and lets make a better Sunday j
School for our rural communi-
t'es.
Phone 130-printing
To The Boys Who
Will Leave For School
Our new faV -.samples will be arriving daily
and we are prepared t« *hew you the laie
fabrics and styles for fall and winter
Come in and let us show you our line.
Cleaning and Pressing
That Pleases
WADE WEATHERBY
You Are Invited To I II
State Fair Of Louisiana
S H REVEPORT
October 19 To October 29 Inc.
ELABORATE AMUSEMENT PROGRAM wJtfc 1ra-"—1 ^
br Ml. L1LUAN ^U,«£%A?SSr?a."
AUT0MC3I1.E RACING, AUTO-POU1. lamy y^iniT.ll IBW1"8'
and rOOTRALI. GAMES.
Rword-Hr. kinc EXHIBIW W AOMCDI.TUITK UYBSTOCI.
Free Parking Spate Fer AnloiuU.
p.r -"80W
"IT'S YOUR PAIR SO BE THERE"
ii ii 11 1 1 n—— 1 u
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Weir, Homer R. Winnsboro Weekly News (Winnsboro, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, September 8, 1922, newspaper, September 8, 1922; Winnsboro, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth268239/m1/4/: accessed May 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mineola Memorial Library.