The Democrat-Voice (Coleman, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, August 5, 1921 Page: 2 of 8
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Page 2
THE DEMOCRAT-VOICE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5,1921.
DEMOCRAT-VOICE
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BY
THE DEMOCRAT-VOICE PUB. CO.
H. H. Jackson................................Owner
Barry Hubert. ........................Editor
Entered as second-class mail matter
at the postoffice in Coleman, Texas,
Oder act of Congress of Mar. 3, 1879
SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN
COLEMAN COUNTY: ,
One Year $1.50
Six Months ....................................80
Three Months ..................................50
OUTSIDE OF COLEMAN COUNTY:
One Year............... $2.00
Six Months ......................... 1.25
Three Months .............................75
Voice established 1881; Democrat es-
tablished 1897, consolidated 1906. Re-
view established 1893, acquired 1899;
News established 1907, acquired 1912.
Any erroneous reflection upon the
character of any person or tirm
appearing in its columns will be
gladly and promptly corrected upon
calling the attention of the man-
agement to the article in question.
Persons returning from vacation
trips to ‘‘Cool Colorado’’* state that
this has been a hot season there and
not the “joy ideal” of other years.
Also, Los Angeles has been warmer
than usual, it is stated. One tourist
who returned to Coleman earlier in
the week—and has since been sleeping
in his refrigerator—stated that in
Colorado Springs the nights were un-
comfortably warm during his stop
there late in July.
'---%---
The Texas cotton crop is only 52 per
cent of normal, we are overdrawn at
th^, bank, the Legislature is in ses-
sion enacting more laws and the ther-
mometer is showing one hundred and
some in the shade; otherwise this is
the end of a perfect dav.
—’-£-=-
Approximately 200 million dollars’
worth of silks are imported into the
United States each year. The Mohair
Growers’ AssOl''i'tion of New' Mexico
"k Texas have started an education-
al campaign to bring about the substi-
tution of home-grown mohair products
for this imported silk. A large va-
riety of articles that the average per-
son would call silk are made from mo-
hair, such as ‘Persian’ rugs which are
made in this country, plush for Pull-
man seats, shawls, wigs for theatri-
cal purposes and even Santa Claus’
whiskers. The Texas Angora is right
there with the goods.
THE UNIVERSITY MUDDLE.
In its efforts to reduce expenses the
Legislature, by adopting the Bonham
amendment to the University approp-
riation bill, which amendment propos-
ed reductions in the ..salaries of Uni-
versity faculty members, has stirred
up a hornet’s nest in and around Aus-
tin and particularly in the vicinity of
the University.
The Bonham amendment would re-
duce the University appropriation ap-
proximately $435J)00. If the same
policy is followed with A. & M. Col-
lege the cut there would amount to ap-
proximately $225,000, and there wlould
be similar reductions at the C. I. A
and a few of-the normal colleges.
The adjustment effected by the
Bonham amendment adopts as sala-
ries at the University the raises al
lowed in 1919 and the first part of
1920. It rejects and denies the third
and last raise given the University
faculty in the second called session
of 1920, which-amounts approximate-
ly to 20 per cent of the maximum
salaries of $5,000 for full professor-
ships, 15 per cent for $4,000 salaries
anti 10 per cent for $3,000 salaries.
What are the facts, and is the Leg-
islature in its retrenchment program,
justified in slicing off the University
appropriation 7
Representative Bonham, author of
the amendment says: “When the com
mittec was considering this budget,”
he said, “they had before them a num-
ber of University people, but they did
not have before them' representatives
of the stockmen and farmers, who
have been so hard hit by drops in the
prices of their products. The $424,-
000 appropriation of 1920 was made to
meet an emergency faced by the Uni-
versity professors. It was understood
at the time that the money was only
for an emergency. Prices have now
dropped. That emergency no longer
exists. Now that the conditions are
reversed, these men should see that it
is only justice that their salaries be
placed back on the old basis, thereby
reducing the tax burden.”
Senator Joe Burkett, who support-
ed the measure to reduce the Univcr-
Bill Ensilage says his idea of ultra
emperance is the holding of three
cks revival meetings in July with
> thermometer shimmying around
i05 in the shade.
—-—--
The United States Senate has pass-
d the Sheppard-Towner maternity
11 which was designed to relieve
dress in the mothering of babies
oughout the United States. The
carries an appropriation of $1,-
900 to be distributed by the Fed-
i Government to the States to aid
i saving the live* of mothers and
abies. The maternity hill. like many
her paternalistic measures origin-
tinf in the National Congress, has a
igh sounding meaning, but. to the
rage layman, it looks like a popu
tr move to create other bureaus or
immissions to place more men and
imen and clerks on the public pay-
lalf of this year of our Lord is
>e, and it is not saying too much to
>e that it is the worst half.
—— -m-— -
he following incident happened in
Saba county: “T E. Stinwell and
ly had attroded prearhwg i.n
okee and were returning to their
■ by automobile. The sheriff i f
ounty, with two deputies, v.as on
mad looking out for i jitney
ng from the direction of l lano,
* been notified by the Llano
if that the car contained a man
woni^ji who were outlaws. The
r»* party accosted the Stillwell
Mr, Stillwell, not recognising
presuming th^y were
speeded up his car instead
opping. Two shots were fired
" ing automobile, one taking
' rrs in-
kers
in Mr. Stillwell’s leg.” A man
nperils the fives of Innocent peo-
y the exhibition of such wreck-
s# as cited above, is unsafe
‘icer of the law ami should
! to tender his resignation, if he
iot already done so voluntarily
'1*8 aw getting in a bad way
two men- will hijack a woman.
A at very thing happened at
r niwLi
sity appropriation, cites the follow-
ing facts in reply to an editorial
criticism of his action by the Dullas
News:
‘‘The appopriation bill carries ap-
propriations for approximately 240
professors, assistant professors, ad-
junct professors and instructors. Dr.
Vinson told me that the average size
of the classes taught at the univer-
sity is twenty pupils,
“Dr. Vinson irtfurmed me that the
adjunct professors worked two and
one-half hours per day, 0r fifteen
hours per week. 1 asked Dr. Vinson
what the adjunct professors do and fee
told-me they are assistants to the pro-
fessors and do teaching just as the
professors, assistant- professors and
instructors do. I)r. Vinson further
told me that the standard” universi-
ties and colleges have a working
schedule of from fifteen hours to
eighteen hours per week of class in-
struction for their professors.
“1 said on the floor of the Senate,
ami 1 say now, that I do not object
to the university professors getting
a good salary, but that I believed they
do not work long enough each day.
Two hundred and forty professors
working two and one-half hours per
day makes a total of 600 hours of
teaching pcrfoVmed in the University
each day. (’lit off forty professors
and that would leave 200 to do the
work, and if they teach three hours
instead of two and one-half hours per
day, they will perform a total of 600
teaching tours per day. I
motion to cut off the adjunct profes-
sors because they are assistants, as 1
thought it better to cut off the assis-
tants than the main professors.
“Dr. Vinson said some standard
universities and colleges have eight-
een-hour weeks of instruction for their
professors to perform, and I see
real objection to our State Univer-
sity adopting the same teaching sched-
ule. By cutting off approximately
forty adjunct professors and by the
remaining 200 professors doing thirty
minutes’ additionaH classroom work,
there will be saved to the State about
$100,000 per year, and thirty minutes’
additional work certainly will not
(make nervous wrecks of the highly-
trained professors, whose fidelity to
their trust is only exceeded by their
desire for more money. * *"
--g--
. Senator Robert L. Owen of Okla-
homa, who was instrumental in draft-
ing the law which created the Federal
Reserve Bank, is dissatisfied with the
as I manner in which the policies of the
be [institution have been formulated and
carried out. He insists that defla-
tion has been Ifastened arid accentu-
ated to the needless embarrassment of
many legitimate enterprise
Do you
know why
it’s toasted?
To seal in
the delicious
Burley flavor.
It’s toasted.
A LIBEL ON EAST TEXAS.
(Furm and Ranch )
The Public Health Service at Wash-
ington has reported that famine con-
ditions have developed in the South
from East Texas to the Carolinas, due
to the low price of cotton. It also adds
that because of these conditions pel-
lagra is developing to an alarming ex-
tont.
A report of this condition is a libel
on East Texas. There may be instan-
ces found where poverty stalks, as a
result of low priced cotton. There are
cases where tenants have neither a
garden, fruit tree, cow or pig. Such
has always been the case, and it is but
little worse this year than at anyjpressly reserved
time in the past. Not one of these^
but what could have had a garden and
a few chickens. Mqgt of them could
also own a hog and a cow, but they
don’t because such things require at-
tention and a little more work.
There is no reason whatever why
any family in East Texas should he
starving. There is no reason why
every family should not have such a
variety of food that the disease known
as pellagra should be unknown. Fruits,
foodstuffs and feedstuffs grow in
abundance in every East Texas county.
They are produced with less labor than
in any Other section of this great
State. No farmer in East Texas
sheuld be without good things to eat
and in great variety no matter what
the price of cotton is, and it is safe
to say that no East Texas family iron
the verge of starvation which has
made the proper effort to produce
fruits, vegetables and meat for his
own table.
E^st Texas should resertt the re-
port made by the Public Health Serv-
ice. If there are any localities or any
families deserving of help, then East
Texas, out of the abundance of her
products, will see to it that they are
taken care of. No section of the
Southwest has less need of charity.
--£--
the Mark Izod Survey No. 176. That
plaintiff was in actual possession of
the said land under the fee simple ti-
tle from and under the - sovereignty
of the soil.
That Plaintiff was riot only the own-
er of said land by fee simple title but
plaintiff was the owner thereof un-
der the statute of limitation of ten
years in that the plaintiff had been in
the actual, peaceable, continuous and
adverse possession of said land culti-
vating, using and enjqying same under
deeds, duly registered, for a period of
more than ten years next before the
said 1st of January, A. D. 1919, and
by reason thereof was the owner of
sakHland under the ten year statute
of limitation.
Plaintiff had been in the actual,
peaceable, continuous and adverse pos-
session of said land, cultivating, us-
ing and enjoying the same, under
deeds duly registered, and paying all
taxes due thereon for a period of more
than five years next before said Jan-
uary 1st, 1919, and by reason thereof
was the owner of said land under the
five year statute of'limitation.
That thereafter, while plaintiff was
in such actual and peaceable posses-
sion of said land, to-wit, on January
2nd, 1919, the defendant with force
and arms entered into possession of
said land and ejected the plaintiff
therefrom and still withholds from
plaintiff possession thereof to plain-
tiffs damages in the sum of $500.00.
II. That heretofore, to-wit, on the
8th day of May, A. D. 1918, the plain-
tiff, Grier M.oGray and wife, Mary M.
Gray, made, executed and delivered to
defendant Skelly-Sankey Oil Company
a certain oil and gas lease in and to
the following tract of land, situated in
Coleman county, Texas, described as
follows, to-wit:
60 acres of land out of M. Izod sur-
vey No. 176, and being all of that cer-
tain 100 acres in the form of a square
out of the northeast one-fourth and
the northeast corner thereof of the
said M. Izod survey No. 176, except 40
acres in the form of a square out of
the said northeast corner of the said
100 acres, which 40 acres was ex-
it being expressly
provided, among other things, in Said
lease that said lease shall remain
* » ’
* The July statement of the Dallas
Reserve Bank shows that for the first
six months of this year, compared
ai him. with the same P«riod of 1920, the bank
| clearings of the eleven largest cities
made ^the 0f district decreased 28 per cent,
most of which occurred in Dallas,
Fort Worth and Wichita Falls. The
bank clearings of the eleven cities for
the month of June, last, were 1.2 per
cent larger than for the month of
May. The slump jn the, oil industry
is said to be reflected in the figures
ntU for the cities which were the central
points tor oil field developmnt.
--—£-.
The cotton pool of Texas Farm Bu-
reau is practically financed to the ex-
tent of about $15,000,000, according
to the statement of Aaron Sapiro,
marketing expert, who addressed the
farmers short course at College Sta-
tion last week. Articles of incorpo-
ration of the Texas Farm Bureau Cot-
ton Association, with headquarters at
Dallas, and no capital stock, were fil-
ed July 28 in the State Department
The purpose is to promote the co-
operative marketing of cotton and its
products, also to stabilize the cotton
market. The business of the corpo-
ration is to be managed by a board of
directors consisting of- twenty-three
members. The association is incor-
porated by Jeff. F. Montgomery,
Mount Pleasant; W. W. Pitts. Wills
Point; toslie Elliott, Temple, and
others.
in
full force for a term of five years
from said date and asf long thereafter
as oil or gas or either of them is pro-
duced from said lands by the lessee,
which said lease also contained the
following clause with relation to the
termination of said lease prior to said
five years, to-wit:
“If the drilling of a well be not com-
menced on said land on or before the
8th day of August, A. D. 1918, then
this lease shall at once terminate as
to both parties; but if such drilling: be
begun on or before said date and the
first well drilled shall be a dry hole,,
then in such event unless the lessee
shall begin the drilling of another well
thereon within six months from the
completion or abandonment of such
first well, this lease shall at once ter-
minate; provided, however, the lessee
may secure an extension of twelve
.months within which to begin the drill-
ing of another well by paying to les-
sor or to lessor’s credit at the First
National Bank of Coleman, Texas, or
it’s successors, which shall continue as
depository regardless ofwchanges in
ownership of said land, ontor before 6
month's from the date of abandon-
ment of. completion of said first well,
the sum of $600.00 which shall be con-
sideration !» full for extension of
time within which to begin drilling of
second well.”
That thereafter under said lease the
said defendant entered into posses-
sion of said premises an<l began drill-
ing of a well thereon on June 19, 1918,
and continued the drilling of said well
until said well had reached the depth
of about 2500 feet and that the said
defendant Stopped drilling oP said well
and abandoned said well oP August
20, 1918, and has never since said
date drilled or offered to drill any
further oq said land .
That the said well so drilled was a
iklTCH?
i Money bock without question
if HUNTS GUARANTEED
SKIN DISKASB REMEDIES
f (Hunt’s Salve and Soop ), foil in
the treatment of Itch, Ecsrtns,
Ringworm, Tetter or other Itch-
_ ing akin diseases. Try this
' treatment at our risk.
Coulson, Drugs and Stationery.
dry hole, That the said lessee did not
on or before the expiration of six
months from the date of the abandon
ment of said well either pay or pffer
to pay lessor or either of them the
sum of $600.00, provided in said con-
tract, and did not deposit to the cred-
it of the lessors of either of them at
the First National Bank of Coleman,
Texas, or its successor said sum of
$600.00 as provided in said contract.
That the said lease terminated by
its express terms on the 20th day of
February 1919.
That the plaintiff herein was in the
actual possession of said land, culti-
vating, using and enjoying same at the
time of the termination of said lease
and has ever since said time been in
the actual possession of said land cul-
tivating, using and enjoying same
within an enclosure.
That the defendant placed upon said
land, during the time it was operating
under said lease, about 800 feet of
12V4 inch casing, about 1000 feet of
10 inch casing and about 1950 feet Qf
8 inch casing, one derrick and rig
irons, line pipes and tanks all of which
were affixed to the soil and were at-
tached thereto and became a part of
the said real estate covered by said
lease.
That from and after said date, to-
wit, 1* ebruary 20, 1919, this plaintiff
has been in the actual possession of
said lands and all of said property so
placed thereon by the defendant,
claiming same and adversely claiming
same against all persons and that this
plaintiff has acquired title thereto
under the two years statute of limita-
tions which is specially plead.
That the defendant herein has at
no time, since placing the said prop-
erty on said land and since the ter-
mination of said lease made any ef-
fort to remove same from said prem-
ises.
That no offer was made by the de-
fendant or effort made by the/defen-
dant to remove said property so placpd
on said land and affixed thereto with-
in a reasonable time after the termin-
ation of said lease.
That all of the said property so
placed/on said land became the prop-
erty of this plaintiff not only by rea-
son of the two years statute of limita-
tion but also by reason of the fact
that the defendant made no offer or
effort to remove same within a rea-
sonab'e tim^after the trmination of
said lose. '
That the defendant has never at any
time since the execution of said lease
discovered any oil or ga3 :n on or un-
dr said land and has never at any time
singe the execution of said lease pro-
duced any oil or gas from said land
and has never drilled any well on said
land other than the one mentioned
which said well was a dry hole and
did not produce either oil or gas.
Wherefore premises considered
plaintiff prays for judgment against
the defendant for the title and posses-
sion of said land and for judgment es-
tablishing his title and ownership of
all of the said property so placed
thereon and affixed thereto and for
judgment cancelling the said lease and
'removing same as a cloud from the
title of the plaintiff herein and for his
writ of possession and for cost and
general relief.
Herein fail not, but have before said
court, at its aforesaid next regular
term, this writ with your return there-
on, showing how you have executed
the same.
Given under my hand and the seal
of said court, at office . in Coleman,
Texas, this the 2nd day of August
A. D 1921
31-34x. W. E. GIDEON, Clerk.
District Court, Coleman County.
Citation on Application for Letters of
Guardianship.-r-No. 829.
THE STATE OF TEXAS.
To the sheriff or any constable of
Coleman county; Greeting:
You are hereby commanded to cause
to be published once each week for ten
days, before the return day hereof, in
some newspaper of general circulation,
which has been continuously and regu-
larly published for a period of not less
than one year in Coleman county,
Texas, the following notice:
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
To all persons Interested in the es-
tate of Vastine Moore, a minor, R. S,
Grimes was on the 9th day of June,
1921 duly appointed as Temporary
Guardian of the estate qf said Vastine
Moore, minor, and whjfh said order
appointing such temporary guardian
provided that unless said appointment
was contested, it would be made per-
manent at the next regular term of
the county court of Coleman county,
Texas, which will be heard at the next
term of said court^commencing on the
first Monday in September A. D. 1921,
the same being the 5th day of Septem-
ber 1921, at the court house thereof,
in Coleman, Texas, at which time all
persons interested in said estate may
appear and contest said application,
should they desire to do so.
Herein fail not, but have \ou before
said court on the said first day of the
next term thereof, this writ, with your
return thereon, showing how you have
executed the same.
Witness, L. Emet Walker, Clerk of
the county court of Coleman County.
Given under my hand and the seal of
said court, at office in Coleman, Tex-
as, this the 20th day of July A. D.
1921.
30-32x. L. EMET WALKER, Clerk,
County Court, Coleman County, Texas.
By V. Rawlins Gilliland, Deputy.
Business Cards
CULP & PEARCE
REAL ESTATE and'LOANS
CULP BUILDING
Coleman .... Texas.
Dr. J. M. Armstrong
PHYSICIAN and SURGBON
Coleman, Texas
Office ,over Mayes Drug Store
Res. ’Phone 463 Office ’Phone 417
J. F. GAINES
. DENTIST.
Office Over Bowen’s Drug Store
’Phone 95.
Please phone for engagement
Coleman, Texas.
■ilwod last Thursday night.
All inmates of the Confederate
Home arid of the Confederate Wom-
I an s Home and all those Inmates who j
leweat ennrfiTinn f eh hereafter to received in the1
lowest condition report of the tomes are entitled to benefits of the
’?tto!<U7 ner^cent *erf norm.I™ *et of th«- regular session of
tb“~#i,T per cent the Legislature, the Attorney Gener-
** th* PTgy*- Si’s department ruled ,n
condition
<ued August
f Agriculture. The
crop In Texas was
nt of normal. The Depart-
estimate was 8,203,000 bales.
■ strength of the report cotton
"d about $5.00 “ a bale. The
ment report says, in part:
t suffered mere than the usual
in Jo,yL P*r'
l boll weevil. The dam-
is placed at 52
The D
v by the
m this source throughout the
■ -een heavy, and the threat of
is very serious. In
; promises to take all
. This condition re-
ly from the heavy July rain
t has. also bleached much of
jly of fertiliser and en-
svy growth of weeds,
meet, of the belt the con-
•jttjars*wi
_ ........- — opinion
given State Comptroller ton A. Smith.
The set referred to allows inmates of
the Confederate Home and the Con-
federate Woman’s' Home one-half of
the pension received by pensioners
outside of these homes.
Oil production in Texas for month
of June was 8,206.000 barrels. Cali-
fornia showed 10.120,000 barrels pro-
duction. Oklahoma 9.736,000. Kansas
3,480,000, Louisiana 2,277,000, Wyom-
mg 1,867,000. The total production
in the United States for June was 40,-
405,000 barrels.
Texas ranks second in value of live-
stock and third in value of farm proo-
Umtedf"th“ forty'piltht ,utM & “*■
forty-eight i
States, according to figures an
I by the Texas Industrial Con-
Dallas. Iowa outranks Texas
Iowa and Illinois lead
... yivyerty. The value of Tex-
The value of livestock in
ails
J. R. Hatton of Whon left his re-
gards with the Democrat-Voice while
in the county capital Friday.
Citation by Publication.
THE STATE OF TEXAS.
I To the sheriff or any constable of
[Coleman County—Greeting:
You are hereby commanded to sum-1
roon Skelly-Sankey Oil Company, ■
private corporation, by making putol
lication of this citation once in each’
week for four successive weeks prev-
ious to the return day hereof, in some
newspaper published in your county,
if there to a newspaper published
therein, but if not, then in any news-
paper published in the nearest county,
to appear at the next regular term of
^district court of Coleman county to be
holden at the court house thereof, .in
Coleman, Texas, on the 4th Monday in
October, A. D. 1921, the same being
the 24th day of October, A. D. 1921
then and there to answer petition filed
in said court on 14th day of July A. D.
1921, jn a auit numbered on docket of
*a*d court No. 2553, wherein Grier M.
Groy ia plaintiff and Skelly-Sankey
Oil Company, a private corporation, is
defendant and said petition alleging:
That heretofore, to-wit, on January
1, 1919, plaintiff was the owner of aid
in the actual possesion of the follow-
mg tract of land, situated in Cole-
■n'rzj'p “it ■
ut of the northwest quarter erf
I
* I
.....I
HOW’S THIS?
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE
will do what we claim for it—
cure Catarrh or Deafness caused by
Catarrh. We do not claim to cure
any other disease. .
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE
a liquid, taken internally, and
acts through the blood upon, the
mucous surfaces of the system, thus
reducing the inflammation and re-
storing normal conditions.
AH Druggists. Circulars free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
FEED
Wheat
Oats ✓
Barley
Corn
Alfalfa Hay
Johnson Grass
Wheat Bran
Corn Chops
^j/hite Shorts
Gray Shorts
Chicken Feed
Cotton seed 1
your cow
Kasch Pedigreed Cotton seed, to plant,
to meet everybody's
Quality and Prices
?• A. Benham’s (Caldwell County) Early Improved Mebane
Triumph Cotton Seed, $1.75 Bushel.
ROGERS & STROTHER
v‘'*»
Special Price-
Five Passenger
Ford Slip-On
tops for $ 10.00.
This price can
npt be beat,
even by the mail
order houses!
Cover That Old
FORD TOP »
Gray Nercaatile Co.
J. E. STEVENS COMPANY
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
ANDEMBALMERS.
*
Day Phone 21
Night’Phone 411
HORNE HARDWARE COMPANY
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
l ANDEMBALMERS.
Automobile and Horse Drawn Hearse
Day ’Phone 152. Night ’Phone 137.
J
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Hubert, Harry. The Democrat-Voice (Coleman, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, August 5, 1921, newspaper, August 5, 1921; Coleman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth747354/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Coleman Public Library.