Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 182, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 16, 1928 Page: 6 of 8
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1
Pi
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==
—
ews of the Oil Fields
DOTUl 01
v
HI
LO1
New Producing Area
* i
© 1928 by NEA Service
—T
I
Daily Report From
District Office
t Notifications filed with District
. t Superintendent at Cisco.
1
it I. PUCES
1«;
This Anchor Oil Opnapany s No. 1
c- \TvJor. three and a half miles
w**t*°t JVownwood. appears to be
on» bt the best
thad. has been drilled
;1
...................* • r-*
Records far May 14th
J. B. Blanchai’d. Eubank No. 1;
well record, Intention to plug 5-
13-28. and,plugging record; Brown
County, Robert Mitchell Survey;
20 acres.
I Charter Oil Company. C. A.
Crump No. 1; Intention to drill 5-;
*ha“ow ““'“8 ””^*0;
i Brown rw>nth itnn ft rcls. says the weekly summary of
uwpm nwo it. , . the. American Petroleum Inatltute
■t-.-,__.. . . . Lamb Mattie H. Sweet The daily average produc-
TlwnreU picked up the sand un- No. 1; Intention to drill 3-14-28. llon cast of California was 1.733400
eapaatedly at 530 feet. It drilled 12! Brown County. Jas. Grant Survey, barrels, a decrease of 11.830 barrels.
No. 54; 40 acres “
i
iNEW YORK, May 16.—<>P>—The
dally average gross c»jde oil pro-
duction in the United States de-
K2* ***» of hole b*‘n«' Fred Moellendick. Stone Sc WU-
Depth 1500 ft.
. - ■ f Fred Moellendi
*• >4* when drilling stopped, yester-. n* NO. 3; well record and Inten-
ds fftemoon. and still in the sand, tion to shoot 5-12-28, Brown Coun-
Th* dti>ose 23 feet to the hole in ty> 8,0■ 157; E T Survey; 37
” c>u*ln« *n estimate of ^Seedfi^^Hutson^Mrs. A. A.
73 barrels a day to be placed Lane No. 1; well record, and Intftt-
oq the production. The oil appears tion to plug 3-12-28. Brown Coun-
ty. 8. Manklns 8urvey; 40 acres.
Mendenhall Oil Co.. J W. New-
ton No. 5: statement before and
after shooting; Brojvn County. Wm.
Miller Survey; Small Increase In
production after shot
J. H. Fulcher Sc et al., Ed Sel-
vedge No. 1: well record. Intention
to plug 5-11-28. and plugging rec-
ord: Brown county. Sec. 32; block
15-38; 40 acres.
Continental Oil Company et al.,
M. % Overall No. 6. well record.
— puuuvuun. ine
to b{ iBout 32 gravity.
This is in a
ton apd opens )
tow tfea in the
thouoh a
of Ux
new producing hori-
an entirely new shal-
in the Brown wood territory
couple of wells were drtll-
thp Tkylor* land some ten
year* ago. a' few hundred yards
from* thia.one. that had production
at«£ feet
{present well was started as
• ttme test, expecting to drill
fe^. At the 450 feet depth.
In view of the previous wells, the
h°le Was reduced to test for produc-
tion. d. t nothing being found, the
drilling proceeded.
Thfe Well was referred
terdgp’s reports, and also
port* at the time the location
1 on the Perry Taylor tract,
the C. E. Taylor tract, be-
the Taylor heirs, of
Whor* Perry Taylor is one.
The Anchor Oil Company of Dallas
has a 100 acre lease including the
land on * Which the w*ll is drilled
Earl ^r*i*n.an of the’ Anchor com-
pany -has been in Brown wood look-
in* «Wter the company's operations
in thfp T<?ki Simon Sc Jones are the
cootatatars
*'»»,* •
COLEMAN. May 16.—tSp.)—The
fourth well‘to' the Breneke pool, 6
miles southeast of Coleman, loomed
a producer Tuesday when with the
sand barely scratched around 1.840
feet the Smith-McManmon No. 1 -A
T. B. Hill, south offset to the Nq.
1 hreneke discovery, well and west
offset to the No. 1 T B. Hll) a small
pumper, flowon head and oil men
in Coleman predicted the best well
in the pool. - \
The well Is located 720 feet from
the east line and 150 feet from the
north line of the Hill farm in the
Samuel Sprague survey No 664. Jim
McManmon. part owner of the will
was In Coleman to supervise drill-
ing into tlie sand which lias yield-
ed three commercial producers prior
to the showing in the No. A-l T. B,
Hill.
Rex-Tex Sc Py-Trx No 1 J M
Byrd which U an east offset to the
East Central Texas 23430, decrease discovery well has been flowing it
|Aq 1 J is understood from the Breneke
.sand at the rate of 35-40 barrels
daily since dulling that well In more i
thin a month ago
Dally average production:
Oklahoma 613.300. decrease 3 800.
: Kansas 109.150. decrease 1.150.
Panhandle Texas 66400. decrease j
2)000.
North Texas 73.600. Increase 850.
West Central Texas 54.750, de-
crease 750.
■ West Texas 313.950. decrease 113.-
150
5-12-28 Brown County. J. Hernan-
dez Survey No. 350 ; 20 acres.
Sinclair Oil and Gas Company.
J B. Eubank No. 1; Intention tp
drill 5-12--8 Brown County, Sec.
141; R. Mitcneli Survey: 80
Depth 1225 ft.
v Southwest Texas 23450, decrease
noj
1 North Louisiana 43.450. decrease
1450:
Arkansas 86,100. Increase 2.000.
Coastal Texas 111.850, increase
5,750,
Coastal Louisiana 18.000. increase
SfO. |
Eastern 111400. increase 1.000. I. 1
|Wyoming 6t.««30. increase 1.750.
Montana 11,500. decrease 50.
Colorado 6.350. decrease 500.
New Mexico 1450. decrease 450.
California 022.900. increase 600.
Total 2.355 400. decrease 111 250.
-Daily average imports of petro-
leum at principal ports for the
Tins HAS HAPPENED
NATHANIEL DANN, struggling
artist is engaged to VIRGINIA
BREWSTER,, whose father is a
prominent Wall Street financier
After losing his fortune in spec-
ulation BREWSTER dies of heart
i failure and leaves his daughter pen-
niless.
NIEL urges VIRGINIA! to\ marry
hhn at once, but an old family
friend. FREDERICK DEAN, and
his tighter, CLARISSA, persuade
her to make her temporary home
with them. This decision angers
NIEL, foe he suspects DEAN'S mo-
tives and doth not like CLARISSA.
Returning to a *tudio he finds his
model. CHIRI, waiting with hot cof-
fee for him. He knows that Chief
Is jealous of Virginia, and fearing
that she will become a nuisance hr
repulses her and she leaves In a
temper.
Meanwhile,. Virginia Is puzzled
and unhappy by the insinuations of
Clarissa to the effect that now she
will have to marry for money and a
veiled warning against trespassing
where her fiance. Rt'RKELL WAIN-
GOULD. Is concerned. She
worried by the attentions of MR.
DEAN, and resolves to tell Nlel her
fears. She phones hts studio in
the evening and Is surprised to
hear the voice of CHIRI over the
wire, j
Lo>we§
It DEWEY GROVES
NOW /DO ON WITH THE STORY
CHAPTER VIII
yiROINIA recognized that slow
2 New Locations
Are Made
, COLEMAN. May 16 (Sp^) Two rigs
were standing over new locations
and two other new locations were
scheduled/for immediate drilling tit
drawling "hello." instantly. It
was the fame voice that had an-
swered her early that morning when
she had called Nathaniel and been
told that she had the wrong num-
ber.
What
_____could It mean? Surely It
was not possible that she wouldujret
the same wrong number a second
time. Virginia was stunned into si-
lence. held in the grasp of a great
fear Then her faith in Nathanlfi
reasserted itself; and she felt her-
self pricking with shame at tl)e
thought that had flashed through
her mind. . : J if
I the J. Scott survey directly west of j “Oh. I'm sorry.” she said politely]!
, Santa Anna where D H. Byrd-W. I “I'm afraid I have the wrong nunf- '
{T. Daniels-Ketchum et al No. 1 W her ''
replace the tn-fri
the |
studio at this hour as a model but
v . . why had she been there so
early that morning? And why had
she pretended, when she answered
the telephone at that time, that It
was not Niel's number? Nlel had
answered a moment later . . . then
he must have known what Chlri had
done.
Virginia's cheeks blazed with out-
raged pride. Could Nlel deceive her
for a girl like Ohiri Mond? And
now—at this time when her head
was already bowed with grief for
her father! It was too cruel—too
cruel to believe of Nlel.
‘ TThere must be tome explana-
tion” Virginia protested agpinst her
fear that the only true explana-
tion was one that would break her
heart. "Ntel couldn't do ^hat." she
cried over and over to herself.
She was sorry after a while that
she had told Chlri she was going
out It has been a gesture of pride
to say that. And to pay for mak-
ing It she must forego asking Nlel
to spend the evening with her. The
lingering bit of doubt that she could
not remove from her mind made It
*■ Impossible for her to telephone again
and let Chlri know that she had
been piqued if nothing more. The
girl was sharp enough to see that,
Virginia surmised,
t Perhapa Nlel would call her. Vlr*
glnla found Some comfort in the
thought but it left her as the day
woie on and she did not hear fromI
him. ■ • .
Niel working aw*y at high speed. I
forget the hours, until the arrival of
dusk compelled him to lay aside
his brushes. Then his thought*
turned to Virginia. He would have
liked to go to her but he knew that
he never could bring himself to be
a familiar caller of pean household.
1 No. he would wait for her to call
him; he believed it was understood
that she would arrange their next
meeting
Virginia did not call him.
Just before diAnrr Clarissa had
come to her room to tell her they
h<fr mind again when she met Mrs.
Farley in the drawing-room. She
was there when Virginia came down,
looking very lovely despite no at-
tempt Go do so. Her thin black dress
enhanced the rose-tinged white-
ness of her skin and brought out
the undertone of gold in her'hair.
Virginia was aware tht Mrs. Far-
ley was taking her measure, weigh-
ing her appearance, even as the lat-
ter made some sympathetic remark
about her loss. Why should any
woman be particularly interested in
her appearance, Virginia wondered?
Besides, she was a trifle disturb-
ed. Mrs. Farley’s manner appeared
friendly, but Virginia was not ob-
tuse. and she sensed a hidden ani-
mosity behind the soft hand pal
and low-pitched words
Clarissa was, watching with poorly
concealed Interest the effect Vir-
ginia's beauty was having upon the
older woman. She seemed satisfied
with what she saw. At any rate her
lips curled slowly in a smile of
triumph.
And when Mr Dean came for-
ward and placed an arm In fatherly
attitude across her shoulders Vir-
ginia was certain she detected dis-
approval in the slight lift of Mrs.
Farley's eyebrows.
At the table there was a moment
that threatened to become uncom-, asked her father
“For her type,” she replied. “Pity
it's so common." \
“It's about as common as hen's
teeth.” Russell remarked inele-
gantly.
“Oh. well.” Clarissa said, backing
water now. “of course gray eyes
and brown hair aren't rare, Rus-
sell.”
"Maybe not,” Russell admitted;
“but there's something to Miss
Brewster beside hair and eyes; she
has got IT.”
It was now Mrs. Farley s turn
to smile at Clarissa s expense. She
knew that Dean s daughter wanted ,
to worry her about Virginia Brew-
ster; and in doing so Clarissa had
caused' the weapon she used—the
girl’s beauty—to be pointed direct-
ly at herself.
Clarissa threw down the cards
“I can't stand this stpuid game any
longer," she cried petulantly. “Let’s
do something."
‘How about a club?” Russell con-
tributed. *
'I hear the Chez Secret Service
has some devilish dancers,” Mrs
Farley remarked disinterestedly.
Clarissa glanced at her keenly. "I
know what you're after.” she
thought. "You want us to get out
and leave you alone with Dad.”
"Care to go out, old boy?” she '
■t;
xj
l
•j.
fortable before Mrs. Farley turned
It off with a hollow nttle laugh
She had gone to a place beside
Dean, with the manner of one ac-
customed to sitting there, and stood
waiting for her chair to be pulled
back for her.
Clarissa floated up and said easily.
"Oh. my '.dear, would you mind
sitting over there beside Russel?
You know so much psychology. He’s
dying to discuss the Oedipus Com-
plex with you.”
RusAell : was heard faintly to j
gau>p and mutter something dark,
and dismal. Frederick Dean start- j
ed slightly and Virginia stared at |
Clarissa in amazement, but sensing,
that she was asking Mrs. Farley to;
"I think not. I’m sure you three
will have more sport wHhawt me.”
Mrs. Farley looked at him hard
“I'm not up to a club tonight” she
said firmly. TU tor perches!1'
Russell groaned. “Come on.
Claret."*—he called Clarissa that at
times—’there people are danger-
ous.” .
Clarissa saw that her father was
annoyed. She pushed back hei
chair and got up.
”1 hope you won't lose your heads
at . . . parchesi." she sakl with a
taunting smile.
(Te Be Continued;
I
T
would have company—Russell and take other place so that she. Vtr
week ended May 12 totaled 162.857
acrefc j barrels compared with 269 572 for
_ (the previous Week and 232422 for
Ffc'inrrtc fr,r vTow isth the f6ur weeks ended May 12. Daily
Mendenhall Oil cL'pan\ J. W jav*r*f re^ipLs 2^?™“ °l,fat
Newton Ho. 3; statement after. £lantic ant GuJ Coa,U porta for
shooting;: Wm. Miller Survey; Slight ^ MaL12
increase in production after shot jbarrels compared with 85.174
Young Brothers & Alexander Inc.. I °r lfhe P^ious week and 74471 for
__ ____ S S! Differ Ncx 6; Statement after! lhe tour end<* May 12.
who drilled the new well, shooting; Lun! My. 8uhvey; Sec
j 52: Production increased by shot.,
--—--- : H. H. Ramsey No. 7; Intention to,
drill 5-21-28. Callahan County. Sec.1
L. Moody started flowing from rthe
3reneke sand last week
Directly wrst of the new producer
which Is still flowing around 200
barrels- dally. Byrd-DameLs and as-
sociates have made a location for
the No. 2 Moody. As a west offset
to the No. 2 Moody location. *^ow-
cr & McKeown have made a loca-
tion and have the rig complete. A
north offset is ready to drill It is
reported and the test will be sunk
by E. J. Cunningham and Oreen
while 'the Union Oil Company Ac
Humphries Brothers, are said to
She started to replace the
itniment on the -tand when
ether voice stopped her "Are you
iMlis Brewster?" it asked
| Virginia's hand paused in mid-
|air. She was. for an instant. imi mumcating with Nathaniel that eve-
able to move Again doubt of Ng- mn$~TShe felt she . hardly could
thamel was. fi(hng her mind with pe .excused from dmner and
a woman Virginia did not know.
"Sorry, dear, if it appears incon-
| rate, but you see Mrs. Farley
mes in rather often,' I'd chuck
out tonight only it's Just as well
at you should meet her now as
l^ter. She's a widow Dad got chum-
; my with w hile I was abroad I
rather hate her. myself."
j Virginia gave up the idea of com-
% Well> Near la^ttfKr’SrTjBS1
Town is Cemented
fV L -I 80 acres. Depth 750 ft. H. H. Ram-
At the Trapp ♦ell. offsetting the sey No. 2; Intention to plug 5-17-
faig frpunds tract, the bottom of 28 D. Sc D. Asvlunv 8urvey; Cal-
tha hdU has been cemented, with the lahan County. Sec. 3J.
belief'that-hy saving the oil in this Archie Shaw. W T. Burns No. 42;
tnaahfr a commercial producer can Intention to drill; 5-14-28. LCole-
be made of it The cement is now man County. Asa Wickspn. No. 168:
being sallowad to set. and the result 870 acres. Depth 400 ft.
be known, it is said, in the. Pandeni Oil Corporation. Texan-
4r three days. | na Hutton No. 9; well record;
i weff was drilled In a few Brown County, J. A. Noble 8ur-
weeks^ago and was regarded as hav- vey; T. D. 1177 ft. Producer,
tog aJpWduction of around 10 to 30 j Cranfill Sc Reynolds. S. O. Loop-
bartaft. but the oil has been wasting er No. 1: Intention to drill 5-17-28
In Rfgfcalt break just below the pro- ! Brown County. Jose Padillo Survey
nfrgtoal
iuc|p4 c
TOS IS GIVEN
IIIOTHER TRIAL IN
‘ SLAYING OF MM
a y • •' • ___
JtuftnN. Tex.. May 16.—UP)—
Rosetta Davis Carney, negress got
mother chance Wednesday to beat
the :<j;r j^gar murder sentence as-
senadk her in Robertson county for
the fatal stabbing of Leslie Samuels
when * the Court of Criminal Ap-
pels tyund that her victim s wounds
were stuffed with cobwebs and de-
cktodsth*t treatment and not the
k-nlfs ‘light have caused death.
Qoamenting on that possibility
the Ogurt reversed and remanded
■h« dase. holding among other
thmy* that the trial court did not
rafc! the.issue clearly enough in its
charts w v
The court s day was one of the
"lightest1 to months, there being
not afhfe PT death sentence among
the eases passed on.
Tbfr state was refused rehearing
in Wt^attempt to sustain, the felony
hutdfe theft law recently struck
dowwShenthe appeal of Dick Red-
ding , Franklin county^ was
The appellate- court
elded 'that the act. passed b;
ature was too. indefinite
jnade fowl theft either
or a felony. .. i
One to the opening of
Toper Tavern” Fri-
'Evening at 8 oMock-
No. 646: 100 acres. Depth 1400 ft'
, Hodges and 'Hodges M. E Fry
No. 1; Intention , to drill 5-10-28
Brown County, D. Y. Pyron Sur-
vey No. 8; 1000 acres. Depth 1600
ft. ... ' ’ ,
Charter Oil Coihpany, Hamp By-
ler No. 1-B; Intention to drill 5-12-
28, Brown Counter. T. Sc N. O. Ry
Survey No. 43; 40 acres Depth 1350
ft.
M. C McDonald. A. C. Loban No.
27: Intention to drill 5-16-28. Cal-
lahan County. Blk. 2995; F. E &
L. Company Survey; Depth 270 ft.
Milha/n Corporation of Texas.
Waid W Rosser No. l>MfFktion to
drill 5-15-28 Brown (Jounty, W
Q Cross Survey No. 117; 80
Depth 1600 ft. , |
acres.
j NEW YORK. May 1I 44>P>- Har-
ry F. Sinclair, chairman of the
beard of SmClatr Consolidated Oil
Ccmpany today was re-elected a
Iducctor at the annual meeting of
Sstockholders. - It , ~-j
Reports had been current In Wall
Street for several weeks that control
of the company had been acqaired
to the open market by outside in-
terests, and that Mr Sinclair v re-
election would J>e opposed because
of developments in the U 8 Senate
investigation of oil reserves, but
nothing of this nature arose at the
meeting Mr., Sinclair s vote, how-
ever. was noi, as large as that for
other director*, all of whom were
re-elected. The vote (last for Mr
Sinclair represented 2.752.005 aha res,
while votes for other directors were
2,755.648 shares each.
Refinery runs in the first four
months this year increased 16 per
cent to 10.548499 barrels. Mr Sin-
clair reported. Gasoline produc-
tion gained 16 65 per cent to 351.-
216.000 gallons and gasoline sales in-
creased 24 per cent to 251.757.000
ggllons compared with the same
first four months of 1927.
have made the location for an east Mond I recognnlzed
offset to the flowing well j Mws Brewster. Shall
Slightly more than 3-4 mile north- cgll you when he comes ya?”
west of the discovery well. Byrd- “No. thank you. Miss Mend I'm
Daniels let al are preparing to SjfP going out immediately. Jhst tell
on the E. Hickman property. Five Nathaniel I called, will you?"
miles southwest of Santa Anna. When the connection wa.> broken
Meek-Dufficldf et al are moving tn 1 Chlri congratulated herself upon
for a test on the A Taylor proper- her luck. She had found Nathan-
ty located 200 feet from the south iel at work a few minutes before, as
end west lines |of 160 acre tract in lie tojt Virginia he meant to be.
mind with
torturous conjectures. Then .she __
lifted the instrument and brough? | ~'it^ Nathaniel. Neither could she
herself to sajr with a bqave think of seeing him with the oth-
ure of calm. Yes. I m BjLss Brew- rrs present—not with matters as
ter; may I speak to Mr. DannE' lhey wprp them
"Nlel is out." the, other voice re- “You'll be down, won't you?" Clar-
turned brightly. •’This is Chlri
‘'your
gima. could have the place of hon- j
Slight as the incident was it seem-*
ed to hold them all in a. spell ,of j
awkwardness for no one could mis-,
take the fldsh of. real. anger that :
Hared in Mrs. Farley s countenance.
Clarissa waited, aolh an insolent air
of satisfaction, against which Mrs.
Farley Vas helpless.
Virginia was. juat going to say
she’d like to sit by Russell herself
when Mrs Farley broke, the tension
QABY'S COLDS
| M or* aoon "nipp*d in ib* bud?
hr without "doling” by bn of—
VICKS
▼ VapoRub
the northern part of
section 78, O. H. Sc H.
1.
197 acres tn
surveyf block
and as Harxness was not using her
that afternoon Nathaniel had asked
her to pose for half an hour or so
He wanted to finish jy the illustra-
tions In which he wvusrng her be-
> fore beginning work upon the mur-
als
i He had discovered himself to boi
short of colors and had gone ot.ij
tb ■ get them only about a minutg
ahead of Virginia s call
t * "Fat chance I'll tell him she call-
ed." Chill gloated while she waited
Meet your friends at the for * return "And if she
recognized my voice she 11 have
something to think about '
Virginia did .indeed have some-
thing to think about. She under-
stood that Chlri might be in the
irsa was saying. and Virginia |
voice., thought she detected a note of anxi-
I ask Niel Jc ousness in her friend's voice.
"Yes.” the noddbd.
"ThaS's v fine." Clarissa declared
earnestly. "Wear sooielhing at-
tractive”
She did not stay to answer any
questions \ as to why she wanted
Virginia? to "wear something attrac-
tive” for Mrs. Farley, and Virginia
set the remark down as having no I
particular meaning.
But the qoestion was brought to
CAROL r.MBARKS
DOVER. England. May 16 -i/p>
Prince Carol arrived at Dover from
Gods tone at two o'clock this after-
noon and embarked for Da tend on
the Vllle de Liege.
opening of “Te* Toper Tav-
ern” Friday night at eight
o'clock. ' , mm
then spend the evening in seclusion With a laugh and moved away from I
the place that she knew Clarissa
meant for Virginia.
Clarissa motioned Virginia to it !
The dinner was a failure so far |
as rhe conversaUdn was concerned
There was talk, of course, but it
was not spontaneous, not friendly
Only Clarissa appeared to be pleas- |
ed. except when Russell looked at
Virginia too long and too admiring-
ly }T-_
Afterward no one objected when
Virginia said good night and left
them to a game of bridge Russell
would have done so but he cauglft a
glance from Clarissa that silenced V
him.
"Beautiful, isn't she?” Clarissa
murmured, addressing Mrs. Farley
DERRICK’S
50 Cent
Chicken
Suppers
Are Growing in
Popularity Daily
There’* a Reason
'•*1
-r-
Grave Fears for
Dr. Stresemann
Held in Germany
BERLIN. May 16 -()P)-Orave fears
were held today in official circles
and by the family of Dr. Gustav
Stresemann over the illness which
confined him to his bed. As for-
eign secretary Stresemann has led
Germany back to good relations with
her former enemies.
Kidney disorder caused a general
decline in his condition and just,
before midnight the three attend-]
ing physicians were called into con-1
sultation While they issued no j
formal bulletin, a member of the
family said that a possible turn for
the worse would, have to be reckon-
ed with. ' ] , • ^ j.;' I
:::::
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i
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TIm£ We Know Our Stuff
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uc 6oc. Try itf
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ROAD SERVICE
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BATTERY, TIRE & ELECTRIC CO.
107 S. BROADWAY
Manufacturers
PHONE 614
V
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- Distributors .
FAMOUS FISK TIRES
We Also Sell Used and Reconditioned Batteries
Visit Us on Our Opening Day
It Will Be to Your Interest
ii
Dont Miss the Final Days of Our
Consolidation Sale
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Many New Styles Just Put in the Shelves Today.
f h ' . h , • •
Do You Know That
$3.95
. - - V ■'
Is all you need to pay for Genuine Toyah Cloth -
and Khaki Kool
I it*
INDIAN PRINTS
: s J ' |. ■ . ■ •' ' . ' ' |
A* Well as Many Other Beautiful Slippers in Patents, Satins and Beige.
House Slippers
Satin, with Heels.
$2.50 value for .
$1.45
CHIFFON HOSE
All Silt, Mol, Fill '
Fashioned, Regular
$1.95 Value ,
$1.45
Come Early—We Have Your Size I
1
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OBINSOS
Slipper Shop
104 E. LEE
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 182, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 16, 1928, newspaper, May 16, 1928; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1127987/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.