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The Deming Headlight from Deming, New Mexico • 6

Location:
Deming, New Mexico
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

j. ft THE DEMING HEADLIGHT lO'M HOME IS BEST 'The Old Nest Watch the Magazines Clean-up Squad IS Coming: tO I Juiige Raymond R. Ryan apent lust Veterans Claims ray on Mi-s Zii btevens, a teat her trie Mesa, Am, schoois, spent the past AjvRfs have in Oxu-! hett a Xhe puest of hT Bister, ual quarters here that the lean-up jrs jon Mia Lena Leigh Hayes of MaJIson-1 who hr.s been the nsst of her aurt, Mrs. T. Cates, is now people you know out tr.e oeiaytst ciaims om ex-eervicc men will be in Derrung today and on 19tfa, when ii MtPiiay, September it lew-Eted that all who neve ary cLuir.s to present for compensation appear before the squad i visiting: hvr cousin, Mrs.

W. T. Butt, of Douglas, for a month. Mr. and Mrs.

Cecil Syble and Miss ANNODNCEMENT Coal Mines Are Nearer Today Than they -will be when ej! Jen storms fend weather grp n. block free movement of trains; and more coal cars ere absorbed at the need of coal grows greater. Eali-TOaua Ere peu now and cars are I.lertifnl A telephone call will fill your bin today. Phone 263. Deming Transfer and Fuel Co.

health service, and Mrs. B. Mellon-i tnes. ough, secretary of the Red Cross, w-ili Mia. SusaH Wells and son Joe, who lend thejr aid to such men as havej have been spending the summer at1; claims to present.

Venice, have re tome I to Deming. Tha following letter has been re- Carl Deckert, who has been em-J: reived by Dr. Hoffman: ploved for softie time at Fort Bayard, Dear Dr. Hoffman: The Veterans returned to Deming. Bureau is conducting a clegn-up cam-; Jatk VwvaU, motor rcpairman paign for the purpose of advising ex-.

Su and day in lerve persons of their rights under Tufgon Md 0(ra Ar the Sweet bill, recently enacted by 7 i congress; to assist disabled ex-service 7 Sullivan, telegrapher at arsons to secure compensation, meh-j J- depot, has been ill for the past cal treatment and hospital care; to leheved by R- form and assist all claimants regard- r.ow W.E, in. turn mg the procedure necessary for com-i iflievei by J. Suva of Maricopa, pensation and insurance and to assist i Arix. NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC A report has been cireula'ed that I have refused to wait on members of the national guard and ex-soldiers uniform. The report is absolutely untrue.

I am ready to serve sny white naan who comes to my shop during working hours, whether he be soldier or civilian. F. H. Flowers, Globe Barber Shop, N. Silver Ave.

EEBEKAH LODGE NO. 3 4 T. A. Allen, ho was hurt in a mo- tor car accident, has been transferred I from the Hotel Dieu at El Paso to the S. P.

hospital at San Francisco. He is now report to be improving steadily. Mrs. S. W.

Almy, accompanied by her baby daughter and her mother, Mr a Estelle Morgan, returned last week from Long Beach and Pasadena, those whose claims are pending in securing final action where additional evidence is necessary to connect tneir disability with service, or other data required by the Veterans Bureau; and promptly furnish hospitaLzation for urgent cases. An official contact squad, directed ty Lynn A. Burr, will arrive at Dem Sarah Eebekah Lodge No. 3 meets every second and fourth Thursday, in I. O.

O. F. hall, Deckert build.ng, at 8 p. m. Visiting members welcome.

I wish to notify my friends in Deming and the public generally that I will open my new store at 120 North Silver Avenue, in the premises that I formerly occupied, Saturday, September 10 where I will carry a full and complete line of Mens Furnishings of the highest grades. Heavy shipments of new goods are arriving daily, all of it having been bought at todays lowest market prices, and within a short time every department will be fully stocked with the newest and most fashionable merchandise to meet every requirement of my customers. I solicit your patronage on a basis of Service and Satisfaction. A. J.

TIDMORE Peanut Politicians mg, September 8, 1921. This squad here thev had been spending ill co-operate with the American the summer months. Legion and the American Red Cross 0rcutt and her two ch3. represemati yes, and prepare the fieid dreQ on Sanda tJta pending for the medical officer and vocational vscaUon at charleston, W. board representauves.

where they were within 20 miles of The medical officer. Dr B- Cob- the warfare in the coal fields. Mr. enour, will urrtve at your station i on ()rcutt motored down E1 Paso on September 19, 11, to examine Saturday to meet them and brought sons filing initial claims for com pen- nrTt dav sat ion, and who decire to appear "S' foie the clean-up squad medical offi- passed Deming cer for examination or readjustment on Monday night en rou -e to of their claims The procedure will be he, here he attended the grand lodge fully expdained by the contact squad Knights of Pythms as a mem- visitmg Deming prior to the arrival her of the Lordsburg lodge, of the medical officer. Respectfully, Joe Gallagher returned on Tuesday John H.

Cornell, M. D. (to his home in Springfield, after (spending a week here with his broth- 4, er, Ri- A. Gallagher. TOURISTS A.

H. Lowe, who recently moved to Douglas, Aria, spent the week end in We left home at Elkins, W. a pieming business. about the middle of July, and camej Wilcox was forced to under-1 west ever the Lincoln highway. This 0 a slight operation on Sunday, but! rente is fairly good with the exception jg row practically well again.

of the stretch through the state of left for El yesterday Utah, and there we encountered some hcrrib.e roads. However, it must be Bert Ehrrnan in bnsiness college. study a Robt. L'tley returned to Deming yesterday from Fort Bayard, and will remain here for an indefinite stay with his family. Uncle Johnny Rabb left on Wednesday for Globe, Ariz, and will spend the next two months with his daughter, Mrs.

Lorenz. C. C. Bassett of the local Ford said that the roads in and around Salt Lake City are very good. We came around by way of San Francisco.

On this southern route we had our rourh-est driving in western Arizona. We were obl.ged to come around by way of the Parker cut-off insterd of running east from Blythe across the Colorado river. Generally speaking, I might say that if the roads were all Are teceivioe no little amount of publicity these day rw-m, never rud tha, such an araannf situation existed here as has been revealed just recently. Horrors' That each a scandal could develop right oa Mam Street was entire! unexpected and dropped l.ke a til can on our happy little village. All the more startling that sue an awful state of affairs cou.d exist in the rants of the Oral Old Republican Party.

Tiler, was a time when Lfmo-crats did all the fighting that was necessary while the Republicans were engaged principally ia gathering: the political plums. Goodness'. And here is the Republican senatorial situation in the state andtfae local post otfice a pi ointment all jimrr.ed up lit. the League Nations. oooer if this is just a private fight and there is chance for an outsider to gefi in it.

However, we wish to proclaim a policy of strict neutrality, and we demand that the channels of trade be kept open. Speaking of peanut politicians, we have a new large empment of doublf jointed roasted peanuts to meet the local situation, and they are going big a large four-ounce sack for toe. Then we have Brecht's giant Spanish blanched salted peanuts for the discriminating buyer, while our regular line of Golden West suited peanuts is always in demand. All ur other lines are fully stocked for the fail with the exception of bar candies, which will begin arriving about the luth of September, when ail Ganger of chocolate deteriorating on account of the heat is passed. Watch for our announoanent of a complete line of magai'nes.

J. OLEARY The la the Kiaxim the Saa NO BLINKS X. B. AH ads men on the Corona Typewriter. We sell 'em.

nmiiHii well connected up and prcperiy spent Wednesday in Lordsburg marked thus soutoern. route wouU: preferable to the highway One thing I think that is desirable is! Charlie Bates leA yesterday mora- a good connection passing through to, mg for Fort Bayard, vhcra he ex- the east by way of Memphis, Term. Pccto to remain for an indefinite staj. Chas. Ament spent thesweek jend with his mother, Mrs.

M. Ament, at We had only one puncture on the entire trip, and we are EtiU carrying West Virginia air in three tires on our her home in Deming. car and also in two spares. Mr. and Mrs.

M. Phippeny and This is my first trip through this children cf El Paso motored up from country, and I have no axe to grind, pso this week to visit Mr. Phip- Nail That tie! tut I will sav that when New Mexico i and Arizona get water they will rival California. For climate and ail, this country here, in my judgment, is bet-t than California. I am an attorney at Elkins, and am returning home, ac-' compar.ied by my wife.

There are two others in the party, and we are traveling in a Buick. i E. D. Talbott. ponys cousins, Capt.

J. C. Watson and Mrs. C. B.

Morgan. Mr. and Mrs. E. R.

Vallandigham returned to Deming on Wednesday evening after a month spent visiting friends in California, Mrs. B. Kennedy left Monday morning for Lansing, Mich. Mrs. Kennedy visited her son, Mark Kennedy, during the summer.

Mrs. Jos'e Dwyer of El Paso is visiting her daughters and son, Mrs. Walter Russell, Mrs. Mark Kennedy and Arthur Dwyer. A nine-pound boy was born to Mr.

and Mrs. Sam Crump at their home here on Tuesday morning. Mother and baby both doing well. Chas. Faulkner, an employe of the S.

P. at Yuma, passed through Demin on Wednesday en route to his station after a visit with relatives at Herman as. Mrs. Dona Ezell, whose husband died recently of heart failure at Alice, Tex, has been visiting her sisters, Mrs. John A.

Haines and Mrs. Grace Silcox, of this city, Mrs. Ezell deft yesterday for El Paso, where she will make her future home. Eugenia Bennett left Thursday for El Paso, where she will take a bufemess course in a commercial college. M.ss B.r.r.fctt will be greatly missed by many of the younger folks in Deming.

Miss Eusie Emery and her brother Teddy left on Tuesday for Corona. CaL, to join their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M.

Emery. W. W. McCann left today for Me-siila Park, where he will resume his ttui.es at the agricultural college after spending the summer with his parents here. IIARDING STILL HOPES The disabled veterans at Fort Bayard are sore.

They are all whet up, just as are service-men all over this broad land. They are rightfully sore and het up because the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, the mouthpiece of Big Business and the personal organ of a few domineering and selfish dollar chasers, has inaugurated a deliberate and mendacious campaign to defeat adjusted compensation legislation for the ex-soldiers. In a pamphlet entitled Nail That Lie, they are successfully combatting the falsehoods and the designs of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States. 5 As a business house in a little city that does not forget so quickly nor so easily, and as a member of the Deming Chamber of Commerce, which is independent of the domination of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, The Toggery is heart and soul, lock, stock and barrel, with the ex-scldiers in their determined efforts to unmask the falsehoods, mendacities and insincerities of the profiteers who, now feeling themselves safe, have eyes, ears and sympathy primarily for the railroads, the shipbuilding corruptionists and special interests only. The people of Fort Bayard will always find themseh es among friends when they come to The Toggery.

None Better We are receiving new Fall Goods daily. Besides being the home of Hart Schaffr ner Marx good clothes, we are also the home of Dunlap and Mallory hats, Edwin Clapp Son shoes, Manhattan shirts, Bradleys sweaters, Wilson Bros, furnishings, Phoenix hosiery. Coopers underwear, Belbers trunks, handbags and suit cases. Satisfaction or Your Money Back President Harding, in a letter reviewing the achievements of the republican feduiinitLrAion, aud put posing to help Bursum, among oth-rs, out of the ruck, makes a sorry showing in the hopeless attempt. The letter is widely published, democrat' papers gleefully printing it verbatim upon the front page.

They apparently consider it a confession of im potency and the finest kind of democratic campaign material. Tbe presidential encyclical necessarily deals chiefly in futures. Any cursory reading of it will leave the lasting impvssion that Republican achievements consist almost exclusively of what so radiantly optimistic a soul as Ilarding confidently hopes i will eventually be enacted into legis-1 lut.on by a surly and reactionary re- publican cergress tar.ff and taxation measures, ratification of the dishonor-rble German peace, giving 000 to the railroads and sich like" trifles! i i Outfitters for Men, Women and Children Women and Children CLARK CLOTHING CO. HOME OF HART SOII A FFNER MARX CLOTHES Herman Lindauer i.

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About The Deming Headlight Archive

Pages Available:
208,730
Years Available:
1882-2021