The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex), Vol. 14, No. 44, Ed. 1, Friday, November 2, 1923 Page: 10
four pages: b&w; illus; page 15 x 22 in. Digitized from 35 mm microfilmView 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:
Tug No 2
Blank typewriter pnper put up
In packages of 25 and 75 sheets
for sale at this office
o
SANTA FE TIME TABLE
Tulia Texas
Northbound
No 93 Due to dcpnrt 1000 a ra
No 95 Due to depart 400 p m
Southbound
No 94 Due to depart 845 a m
No 95 Due to depart 11 26 p m
CATARRH
< tirrh Is ft Iornl dlsoase BTpntly In
flurn fil by Conptltulionnl conditions
HUT S OATAItUH MEDICINE con
bis if an Ointment which Rives Quick
JU if t > v local application ana the
lrtfnl Medicine n Tonic which acts
trro gh the Wood on the Mucous Surface
and assists In rlddinfi your System
cr Catarrh
Sold by dniRRi ts for ovir < 0 Tears
F J heney A Co Toledo O
A Chance To Clean Up
Clotbei Called for aid Delivered
Those 1S4
E L RICE Propriotor
Eagle Tailor Shop
OITY TAILOR SHOP
A B Keim Prop
FOR
CLEANING AND PRESSING
Call Phone No 20t
Imperial Barber Shop
COMER CROW Prop
BARBEBB AND LAUNDRY AGENTS
West Side of Square Phone 184
Olympic Barber Shop
Khuie No T2
M Q STANFORD Prop
LATJNDBT AGENCY
Prompt Barrier Rath tn Connection
D H CULTON
LAWYER
Tulia Texas
B E EHRESMAN
General Farm
and
Live Stock
AUCTIONEER
Kress Texas
FARM LOANS
5 12 Per Cent
WHY PAY MORE
Scnre a Federal Farm Loan on
BM7 Terms payable at yottr option
throngh the Tnlla National Farm
loan Association
G C HUTCHISON
Secretary Treattrr
C F SJOGREN
General Auctioneer
Kress Texas
Special Attention Given
to All Sales
of whatever size
ASPIRIN
Say Bayer and Insist
Lukse you ee the auie Uuyer o
package or ou tablet you are aot getting
tha genuine iiajer product pre
tcrihed by phyficiune over twentytwo
year and proved tafe by iiiillioci for
oldt Jleiduiun
Toothache uuibiijo
Kuruclie tl euuiutimn
Neuralgia Pain 1uiu
Accept only Ilayer package whhh
contain proner directions Handy
boxes of twelve tuhlett cost few cent
DruggUts fclso cell hottlen of 24 and 100
Aspirla is tho trade mark of Haver
Manufacture of Monoucetlcatldeater of
Balicylicaeid
Blank typewriter paper put up
at 10 and 25 cents per package
n packages of 25 and 70 h ets
for mile ut this office
RICHARD LLOY
SAYS
in our affairs will nller add insistence
iril momentum to our itires n
in temliu fo our
overplus < > f UtvrIessnos >
tricks will leave the monthly balance in a
misnty ticklish tlx
It aint mi mil i of s enee as it is of
common sons that com V a man is
lazy when he aller li the niico and to
see a filir iii list nt m front of nrseiit
j
ills I < to vUtializi the brain le that will
l liiri a he tall
I here in n mi a the run
nin mat of u ind the shortest
itfst vi n is lie kind that trust
iHk Ve to hae tin plodder
Ith the metar on his pants for hmhli
ain t a pastime that can stop to fool with
hance
L
WHOS WHO AND WHY
In compliance to requests for
the publication of the following
I would lilie to give an explanation
of same
Ii is written in answer to questions
sent out by T P W C in
regard to Who s Who of the
Womanhood of Texas
Tulia Texas Oct 20 3923
T F W C
Committee on Publications
Dallas Texas
Mr T L Brown is my very own
name
Am noted neither for riches neither
for fame
Born near Decatur an Indiana
City
So being a IJoosier am neither
wise nor witty
Moses Bixler my father good
and true
With aneestors in Switzerland
whom I never knew
But they claimed no kin to the
monkey man
Whom Evolutionists put in their
creative plan
Mary Polison
mother
Ho good then
Bixlor
another
She was horn in Newark
was uiv
never was such
a New
Jersey town
A place of beauty and of some
renown
I ve lived in Texas ten years or
more
Ifai learned many things I never
knew before
In Tulia City whrere I am living
To all good work my best Im
giving
One day president of a Civic League
I became
Then I thought surely Im on Uio
road to fame
Three times I ve filled that place
of great renown
Four years of hard work for Tulia
town
And yet from fame Im a long
Ti
long w j
s oniv a
Will of the wisp
to this very day
I wonder if St Peter knows the <
truthful storv
Of hi In ie loigue works
v ie or gldis
I wonder if when b < opens vH
the door
Id nill av Knter til coininit
f
IJ I i Ilcaeii her
HO HUrA VJHLL
i guess ill < bocTA
WT TO LlCK
l r s
THS TULIA HBKALD
C To Be Happy Keep Busy
You cannot test your muscle sutlnjr still You ennnot tltul out what
your brain ciin do liy tsolnR to sloop lleiese s not a prouder to progress
Its proper plivcv Is nftcr work not before work Work Is for tho living
rest for tho dead He a live one
Work Is the noble yardstick by which we determine the worth of nil
things It is a blessing not a curse
Tho man who never dcos anythltig never knows anything Tho man
who never works inicr gets anything He may bo given things but ho
can only again give He knows no buildliit game
The traveled rail and tho drlilng piston rod are polished by use Tha
idle pieoo of stool is roil with rust lletter to wear out than to rust out
History Is the story of work the record of Rchievemonts In Its
Index you cannot ilnd the names of idlers Contribute something to
the history of something
To ktfow work as n friend is the hallmark of wisdom It Is by
Journeing through the shadows of life that we learn the solace of
daily tasks
The tenderness thnt denies effort Is cruelty It mnVns ehuneterlws
that which was endowed with strength
Work Is expression If J0 I express yomsclf oti way try another
but tr > If you cant build a cathedral dig a ditch Hut do
something
Only workers win the worlds respect God doe not hold us responsible
for results only for faithfulness
Work Is the createst educator Tackle a Job that is a little above
you grow to it and you encago in work Tackle a Job that is below
you and you engage In drudgery Put your heart into work and your
labor becomes the lisht of lifeWork
Is the highway to human welfare
Copyright 1923 By Richard Lloyd Jones
A blame haphazard method in transact C fEiESSN S
surely will be
For all who deserve it and maybe
for me
Ettetette
iWhAtWHen
i to do t
Any questions on etiquette
iHIl J > c tfJniitj answered
this column if addressed tt
A heda euro of this newt
paper
Heforo mo I lmvo a letter from
a render nnd though ray readers argument
Is very plausible it is how
over Incorrect Tho letter rends ns
follows
Dkau A Ikiu Will you kindly ad
vUo through this paper the correct
petition of a gentleman walking
with a lady ns regards being between
her and the curb and between
her and others walking on
the walk I contend the man should
bo on the womans left thus keeping
himself between her aud the passersbyYours very truly
A llEAnEB
Though it seem this assumption
inljtlit tie correct It is not A man
should always walk on the side nearer
to the curb whether he is with
one two or three persons this rulo
has no ceptlmi The origin of this
rule on I tliiuctti like many others
we do not know but probably It was
the losliiiity of n horses nose or
cuti motile ltimplne those nearest
tl i curb that ruled that man tho
protector as wull is provider
should take that place
Okab A Iida If a woman meets a
man at n tea or dance may she in
vito him to call at her home or
should slid wAlt for him to suggest
it Whose place is it to speak
firstThank
Thank you
Marion D IrNN
This is a very technical point
Marlon and varies in different parts
of the tnlted States In certain
sections a woman takes to herself
the right to invite gentlemen to call
upon her while in other localities it
Is the custom for the man to ask
permission and the woman to grant
It There is however an unwritten
law In the code against a young lady
asking a man to call on the lirst
meeting Far better to wait till a
second or even third meeting and
then say something like this
I should be very glad to see you
Mr lirown we nre usually at homo
In the evening
BAPTIST CHURCH
j Sunday was a fine demoiistri
tion of the fact that our people
Poetry is my delight for cant I are a churchgoing people It was
you sec Such a delightful surprise to see
Rhyme and Blank verse are all so jnajjV out on such an inclement
the same to me
J sail the great poetic
seas
I read and write whatever I please
The greatest work 1 have ever
done
Wtis to raise a daughter and a
son
They helped to hold the starry
Flag on high
When wur made it a duty to door
die
Life is too short to live for self
alone
We must not build a wall of stone
A life of service is the life to
give
All wrongs forget till wrongs
forgive
Tis said that the song of the
flitting bird
Or the music of a kind cheerful
word
Or a flower s sweet angelic smile
May make some life seem worth
wihle
in al
my
day
STALE NEWS
Suitor Bobby how do you
ihinl nu will like me as a brother
Your sister promised to
many me at tin party lust
nigh That s in isnt it
Btbby Naw That was what
I lie ini I v was for
ii
1 rib for he Tulii I
silvern inrge congregation for the preacli
l ing service llow it thrills tie
life the very darkest
Will at last have clearly passed
awiiy
1 forget the shadows and smiling
lend
A helping hand to some sadder
friend
Vcrv sincere v yours
Mrs T L lirown
Postscript
Into Who s Who Id surely like
to go
But huvin t tho money as you will
know
Perhaps in later ears there ll be
a time
Wlien a page will cost only a nickel
or dime
Ive answered all the questions
you sent to me
Ki naught but good wishes for
the T F W C
1
inart of a pastor to witness such
loyalty and devotion to the obuivli
and her services
The pastor spoke in the morn
illg Oil til classes nf people described
in lolin li Jl One dims
rejects the light and goes ddiber
ately into the darkness This elas >
hates the light because their
class
deeds are evil The other no
cepis the truth or the Li lu
sfChrist l and comes to the light
that it may be known to all that
their works an wrought in Cod
To which class do you belong tin
class that hates the light or the
class that welcomes the light 1 You
arc in one or the other of these
classes for there is no middle
ground
The study course continues
through the week Our lesson Mou
dtiv night was on the Meditation
of the Codman This is the
very heart of the gospel dealing
as it does with the substitution
ary death of Christ for lost men
It would have been ti blessing to
every member of the church to
have been present at this class
meeting We have other subjects
of great interest Come with us
You will enjoy it much
The Civic League of our City
has planed a program for Armistice
Day This program will be
participated in by all the churches
of the town and the preachers of
tin different churches The program
will be given in the Baptist
church Sunday evening Nov 11
Mke vour plans to come
Dont forget the services next
Dont away
Sunday slay
you feel like slaying for that is
the time of all times when you
most need to come
B C LAND Pastor
PRESBYTERIAN SOCIETY
The Presbyterian missionary
study class unit Wednesday at Hie
home of Mrs T A Cray There
were eleven members present The
class was led by Mrs A IC Bass
assisted by Miss Annie iMeSpad
deu Airs J I ODaniols and
Airs Douglas Burns
After the meeting which ws
i quite an interesting one the class
idjnuriicd to meet N omuiI Th
vrli Mr D d I Id
Best Grades Colorado Coal
Deliveries made anyplace in
City or Country
l > + > + l
44 + + r + +
+ < + + + + + +
Let us fill your bin now and
Save You Money
WE ARE ALSO IN THE MARKET FOR
YOUR DRY HAND HEADED
MILO HEADS
Star Coal Company
D
Phone 185 F L Wigle Mgr
Subscribe now for The Tulia Herald
2 ib box Blue Ribbon Peaches 40c
1 lb White Swan Coffee glass in each
Package 50c
Fresh package and bulk Figs
S H Green Stamps with each purchase
uiiJKnmiiiitKMniirjtirara
Phone No 88
Tulia TexasB
We think the market will open on tm
keys around the 5th of November When
you think of selling be sure and think of
the HANEY PRODUCE We will treat
you right
B
Tt
B
B
BBBBBBBBBBBBBaBBBUBBBHnHBBBBBBHBBSBHBflBB
+
aney Produce
W D Haney Prop Phone 72
t
t
> < < < 4S4 > > 44 > ii <
> s > > 4 444 44 4 444
otaoc
o
D
o
locaoc
LISTEN
30E30E
I0E30EO
D
o
HOME building is one of the factors in
character building You cannot be a freeman
with Rent Day constantly loontg
ahead
BUILD YOU A HOME
ZIOE
Rockwell Bros Co
LUMBERMEN
30E30E
= IOE30l =
= 30dOI
n
o
D
o
n
o
IOCX6
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.
Engleman, J. S. The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex), Vol. 14, No. 44, Ed. 1, Friday, November 2, 1923, newspaper, November 2, 1923; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth45519/m1/2/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Swisher County Library.