Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 116, Ed. 1 Friday, December 30, 1910 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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yd
TARIFF.
New
<
Uleer*.
By EDWARD L. SCARRON
DOMESTIC SPOTS HIGHER
J
Dec 30?—Today4« quo-
V ETERIN A RIAN 8.
V
supporting som<> other
for
OSTEOPATHS.
VISIBLE
READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS
MTVATfONS WANTED—FEMALE.
CITATION BY PUBLICATION.
POULTRY AND MEATS.
1
locksmiths.
oek MAGILL A SHEPARD.
MARKET QCO1ATIONR
$5
FEED AS’D WOOD.
DRAYMEN.
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW.
80c per 100 lbs.
DENTISTS.
J. W. FRALIN, DENTIST SOUTt?
the earth.
TAILORING AND REPAIRS.
FuR RENT.
LIVERY AND FEED STABLES.
C .
THF AMERICAN MAGAZINE.
per
STOVE REPAIRING.
■fl
bulk
PHYSICIANS.
RENTAL AGENTS.
oi
Of-
LAND FOR TRADE.
4c
MlMTtLI.'NlCOt »
BUSS AND TRANSFER.
z
13c;
■ «eroa • times 8<*e—ClMaine<
CURES QUICKLY.
A
weUAt.
the
SEWING MACHINES.
and
,«o
CONCRETE WALKS.
8
d removed an
J.
1 '
--
Thia paper is building your
>f said
on
■*
Ann
fl
MM*
-
*
M.
—
FEED.
Speaking of the
Divorce Evil
* V? 1
V.Z "
BARBER A McCORMICK. FRESH
meats and poultry delivered. Phones
>•, McKinney street.
FOR WOOD. FEED, POUI TRT
or -<<< phone 8- J. McGinnis Ea-t
McKinney street. Prompt delivery.
Lyles at
Texas
We make keys to fit any
we repair umbrellas, sowing
chines at Bicycle store.
lock;
ma-
New
131c
FORT W ORTH TURNS RIVER
WATER INTO THE MAINS.
packing, etc.:, we will mall you a
large trial package.: The Cuticlay
Co., Chicago, Ill.
It is sold and highly recommend- J
ed in Denton by O. M. Curtis.
; of Mtia-
,s not ten
on
all
DR ADA KINCAID. OFFICE 43
West Highland street. Both phonon
ll«tfc
ALL KINDS <
ek work phon
!RS A CHANDLER WANT
■ real estate businea*.
10 3 tfc
Sam
Denton,
ll«p.
FOR RENT—DENTON MACHINE
ahop, East Hickory street, formerly
occupied by Mr. Storrie. A. LOGAN.
lliOe
FOR RENT—NICELY FURNISH-
ed room o Weet Oak street Apply
Beyett Brea. 120c
*5 REWARD—I WILL PAY IS
for every wolf killed within five
miles of my place. A. D. TURNER.
84tfc
FOR RENT—THREE UNFURN-
iahed rooms. New phone 354-ReJ.
120c
Trying to succeed in business
without advertising la like the
case of the man who, trying to
cutexpenses, divorced his wife
and alone attempted to keep
house and raise his children.
It cost him more money for
doctor bills and funeral ex-
penses in s year than he gave
his wife in a lifetime.
Copyright. Hie, by American Prsss
Association.
lbs
retail
Vol. 18, Abst. Nr
by metes and F-
wit: Beginning
news-
buf
newspaper
i Judicial
HELLO.
Fresh «roo
isitlon and good
fence. 107, care
, I08tfc
Whol»
P®'
the
B.
.. J
advertising
. It is not
this paper
food, hard.
pe
$1.6:
Clark, or info
>very of sama
WANTED—GERMAN COOK AND
housekeeper wants
homo; *5 weet. Re
Reran!
VKAen advertising is
divorced, business suc-
cess becomes failure.
DENTON,
Cations:
Liverpool—
Jan.-Feb.. .
.
—
FIRST c;
JTNCH A SLATON.
*es. butter and eggs sa-
fe phones Idecp
—. ■■ - :.....
1’unltrv
HENS, per lb. <c.
FRYERS, medium, 7 to 9c per lb.
small 11c, large 7 to 9c.
OLD ROOSTERh, 16c.
GUINEAS, per dos, *1.50
DUCKS n*r Jot |3
TURKEYS, per lb. wholesale
retail 15c.
be a
therein,
any
Livestock.
HOGS, per pound, gross—- ght 6 1-4
to 6 l-2c. heavies 6 3-4 to 7 l-4c
GOWS, per lb. 2 8-4 to 3 l-2e
W| REPAIR LOCKS AND SEW-
ng machines, make keys to fit any
tfc
Kcsema, Carbancles, B°IU,
S°re«, Cancerous Lumps, Rash
Pimples and all Skin Diseases
Quickly Cured by an Aston-
ishing Marvel of Nature.
WAY WENT
THE PIMPLES
COTTON, lint 14c basis; in seed
to *5.25; none offered.
COTTON SEED per ton *22 to *26
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK.
FORT WORTH, Dec 30.—Today s
receipts:
Cattle .700, calves 100; hogs
000.
Steers-Steady; tops *5.60.
Cows—Hirher; tops *4.40.
Calves—Steady; tops *5.50
Hogs- Steady; tops *8.23-
B WWssO -wi
yas mely i
FWs Ssop steera
’ *ays't will be unable to supply the
residence section for several days.
- --
J. W. FRALIN, DENTIST SOUTH
| aide square. Middle of Block upstairs
a ton Texas tfc
I
XtlNG *49 WHEN IN NEED OF
frocerlee and especially charcoal
FORD CRAWFORD *4* Old.
I
off cue. committee because of
votes on lumber duties. The same
r
FORT WORTH, Dec. 30,—The en-
tire south s de of main resMlonce
section of th't city wss ent off from
water supply today, following a
break in a thirty-six inch main this
morning. River water was turned In-
to all the mains. The department
Chr
■ d being
of land
that Representative Beall of the Dal-
las district fs to be a candidate
aafnat Randell. S nator Dailey had
offered aid to Representative Pou of
North Carolina, who ia slated to go
f
Theo. Laux, 4 Delaware
Chicago, says: “My hands,
legs and feet were raw with
ma; in 15 minutes all pain
I am or was a telegraph operator.
I bud >Hrin tuurrieu tong enough to be
the father ot a small boy and know i
what It is to have coal bills, doctors' i
bills, clothing bills, grocery bills—in
deed, All kinds of bills—coining In and
a small salary with which to pay
them. My wife proved a financial
gem or I don’t know how we should
have made ends meet. 1 turned it all
over to her, and she brought the ends
together as well as she could. 1 felt
that a nest egg should be started, but
every time we tried to start one some
of our small family was taken ill and
a doctor must be called in and paid or
extra clothing must t>e purchased or
some one of the many extra necessities
must be provided, and it didn't look as
With « 5-|M>int Gain in New York
and 1-16 Gain in New Orleans-
Liverpool Futures Higher. Hpots
Down——Other Markets.
' '
i *5
13
GOOD CORDWOOD. *3.50 PEH
cord. Anglin, Old phone 246-4R
l*lp
ANYBODY WANTING SCAVEN-
ger work done call No 307, either
paone. tfc
R/--
■ I',
DR. ELI BUYHER, VETERINARY
surgeon. Office at Murphy's Livery
d able. Both phones 1*2.
Residence, Old phone 429.
it heals and cures the worst and
ugliest sore, ulcer, carbuncle or any
skin eruption.
Ytou can get a large can of Cut-
iclay st any drug store for 50 cents
or will be mailed upon receipt of
price. T* ' ‘
what the wonderful Cuticlay , and unknown
---—- <—. —r—» --- — -■ Lia'uro, wca
six cents in stamps to pay cost of1 ®d husband
MAYS A WILSON, CIVIL PRAC-
tl e iB all courts. Chas. Maya, H. R
Wilson. Office In court house. 8ftfe
i>allag. Office: Brock's
Phones 42 (new) 306 (old);
idence 2**-Blue (new).
L
/
THE RED BARN—WORKMAN A
Luster, proprietors—Nice stylish sin-
gle or double rigs at all tlmea. Ring
as tor all kinds of feed delivered.
Both phones 35. tfc
ALWAYS ON TIME—NEVER
miss a call. Denton Transfer Co.
Both phones. 9tfc
<1
J
1
I
I I
I
I
I
I
I
I
: divested out of thorn and
nsrt navmcnt for said land executed
hfs vendor's lien note for *500 due
Throe great original derartmen»a
have been created by The American
Maratm' — ''Interesting People,”
"The Interpreter’s House” and "The
Plgrm's Scrip.” Any particular
number ot the m.igax'ne may con-
tain a wonderful ficuon story, or a
beautiful picture, or a great article
that will interest you moro than
these departments, j
a
—
EFFORT*. TO BAL
ION OF '
I
...
■ "1
I ><
I
ennvov-nrex ,ilt|y exeeoted and deity- ot eaM tr»rt of 1«
other mil furtheBj
-Hv-lfic to which I
TTe^e’n fail not.
M ej»‘d coort. at
rvi-»r term, this
i Copp and Susan K. Copp w>«re duly
appointed and qualified executor*,
who by order of the court duly made
and entered ,f record, sold said 22*
acres of land to Benjamin Graham
for the purpose of satisfying said in-
debtedness as shown by deed dated
January 28, 1893, of record in Book
47, page 210, Denton County oeed
Records, that before his death the
said Edw'Jn Copp, joined by b'a wife
DO YOU NEED HELPT ALL
kinds of dray work and household
goods moving done. Phone us
BROWNLOW A STRICKLAND,
New Phone 134, old phone 45. Of-
fice first door east Exchsnge N*-
716fr>( Bank. ______
SPORTING GOODS.
ipuuir-
if ap-
pointed, theso three would hold the
balance of power and could dictate
terms on the oming tariff rev afon.
The fact that a conaiderable ma-
BUY TENNIS GOODS. FOOTBALL
goods, locks and trunk keys at the
Bicych Store- W A. TALIAFER-
RO z Novll
CAS
* - 30c
< 40c
residence property >nd > <,000 in
money for farming lands hi Dentou
otmfv U J C
WITHERS A CHANDLER LAND CO.
W. E. BOTTS, VETERNAR1AN—
>f Southwestern Veterinary college
wagonyard
.12.; real
_______ if that nest egg would ever be started
j or if It were started that it would be
continued.
Then another child, a girl, came
along, and what before was ai» even
thing between salary and nece -itle-s
began to be a gradual running b» hind.
One day a gentleman came into the
telegraph office where I worked aud
sat down at a desk to write a mes
sage. lie seemed to be doing mofe
thinking than writing. After sitting
there an hour or more he got up aud
went out. In another hour he came
back, wrote out a message and handed
it In to me. ,
“I should use a cipher for that,” be
said, “but I haven't one. You’ll have
to send it in plain English, as 1 have
written It. There's no time to com-
municate by mall.”
I counted the words, told him the
cost, which he paid me, and took his
departure.
I mw that the message was an im-
portant one, considered in a financial
sense. It was the announcement to
parties in New York that the sender
had completed the amalgamation of a
number of companies Into one trust,
provided hia action wore ratified by
the New York parties. In order to
close the deal be must explain what
was proposed and get their authority
to do so. It occurred to me that an
operator In a financial center might
sell out his secret for a big price and
make a lot of money out of it. It did
not occur to me to take advantage of
my position to make money, for the
reason that 1 have always been op-
posed to making money dislionestly.
But I saw no necessity for sending the
message in such form that it could be
used by any except the parties for
whom It was intended. We operators
are used to various devices for keeping
such telegrams from the public, and I
knew a very simple method of sending
the message whereby only those for
whom it was intended couM benefit by
it. I sent it by this method.
In the afternoon the gentleman came
in and asked if I had sent bls tele
gram.
“Yes,” I said, “I have, but not Just
the way you wrote It."
“How did you send itT" he asked
bristling.
“I didn't think of suggesting a safe
way till you had gone out. So I acted
without yonr authorisation.’'
“Welir'
“I sent the first, the third, the fifth
word, and so on to the end. by our
company and gave the second, the
fourth, the sixth, and so on by an
other company. Of course neither of
the two dispatches alone means auy
thing. Then I sent a third telegram
telling the parties how to read the two
former ones. There is a cost of Gti
cents for the third message."
He stood grilling at me for a few mo-
ments till he got the scheme through
his bead, then pulled 00 cents out of
his pocket and pave it to me.
“Much obliged," he said. "1 wonder
I didn't think of that myself."
He was going out when he turned
and said: ‘‘Give me your name. I
reckon 1 owe you a box of cigars for
that."
1 wrote my name on a telegraph
blank and handed it to him, rejoicing
in the pr spect of getting a box of ci-
gars. if he rememberer! the matter. I
love cigars, but couldn't afford to
smoke anything but a pipe and poor
tobacco at that
This was along in September. 1
pulled away on my pli»e for a couple
of mouths, hoping each day would
bring the box of cigar?. But they
didn't come. Indeed, they never came.
Things looked rather blue for Christ-
mas that year. The children were get-
ting old enough to expect gifts, and I
wished I could give something to my
wife as some return for doing all the
work in lieu of a servant. One morn-
ing 1 received an envelope stomped
“The Consolidated Copper and Lead
Company." I opened it and found a
certificate for a hundred shores of the
stock of the said company mode out
in my name.
I couldn't understand what it meant
or Where it came from. I Inquired
what the stock of that company was
selling at and found the last quotation
to be 70. This made the shares worth
>7.000. I wrote the company for an
explanation, and the only explanation
I got was that the stock stood In my
name on the books of the company.
Thos I thought of the cipher tele-
gram and the box of cigars I never
got.
I’ve had some Christmas comfort today as I did when I gave a public
idncejtben. but nothing like that which
gave inc the nest egg I had so long
pined for.
J. W. SKILES A SONS, TRANS-
fer and Cab Co. Phones old 34,
new 11. Barn on West Hickory St.
if th re
published
then In
Nevertheless, ir has become known th'' new House have pledged tflieir
, support to Chemp Clark's ideas
makes it certain tnat the effort win
not succeed. .
80 ACRES QF LAND WORTH >2 -
600 in Oklahoma, will trade for *2,-
000 worth of land in Denton county.
WITHERS A CHANDLER. 103tfc
Thruw Away ntl those Greasy Oint-
ments, Neves, Lotions and
• Worthless Htuff.. Try Na_
tuie and tie Cured.
FOR RENT—5 ROOM HOUSE,
close In. on West Hickory
phone 229
Washington Correspondence
. York Times
Prophets ot evil are getting little
satfsfection out of the trend of the
harmony program among the House
democrats which is to culminate Jan.
19 n trie e lection of a ways and
means comm'ttee to go to work at I
once on tariff legislation. There are
now 147 democrats pledged to the.
plan for making the new ways and:
means committee the commltte*
committees which will arrange |
committee appointments for the ma-
jority in the next House.
Efforts have made their appear-,
well-
Don’t Have to Wait for Weeks.
Denton Illustrations.
Waiting 18 discouraging.
Prompt action pleases everybody.
A burden on the back Is a heavy
weight.
Hard to bear day after day.
Lifting weight, removing
burden.
Brings appreciating responses.
famous departments form a great at-| "a'l. nole *a,<l
traction in the periodical.
ere always ther~—filled to the brim
w th Ideas, emotions, and nspira- j
tions. There Is a curious flavor in
tC'em—singularly new. pleasing and
genuine.
On the whole The American Mag-
aaine ia winning gr at favor because
of Fs sound tone of real optlm’sm—
not a lly, flat and fake opt mism;
bvt that optimism which is founds
on the solid truth that you ought to
do your Job well wherever you are,
andi that if yon do do your 1 »b well
you will bet some «ort of a r' wnrd
for ft her-* on earth—not n jceaaarily
money (which most of us foolishly
use as only yardstick of su c-aa).
but perhaps an inner I
fapt on wh'ch, if your
tough, may be transferred nnd ex-
hibited in a gentle face-—sonmthinx
doeent to look at, and not c umhtei
to scare all the affect'oa oat of those
Who come ,nto daily contact with
BRING YOUR POULTRY AND
•gga to S J. McGinnis, MeKlnnry
for highest cash price*.
LE CHEAP OR TRADE
Ik cow, good as new *100
gan. See or write
Marble sard,
THREE IN ONE—LAUNDRY
work, tailoring, messenger service.
Agent for Sherman Steam Laundry.
Cleaning, repairing, pressing and
dyeing women's and men's clothes.
Messenger service, packages or wtu
delivered to any part of the city. C.
R. HAMILTON, 37 West Hickory
Street. Rlpy building. Both phones
31. 99tfc
WHEN YOU WANT GOOD COAL
delivered at your house or offie-.
pb«ne Plnckley A Tester, Kincaid
oald Wagon yard. West Oak street.
an<e to start a back fir,» against
Champ Clark and upset the
prepared p»rogram for the -caucus.
The first object ve of th s opposition
is to control the ways and means
committee by having enough con-
s rvitive democrats on it to exercise
tfte balance of power and so prevent
radical action either In the matter of
the committee appointments or re-
vision of the tat iff. uwo.w aiiu wn-n r
Thi Texas delegation recently de-' cans on the committee, and,
c'ded to support Mr. Randell for ap-
pointment to the committee, and
twelve votes were pledged to him.
This left four who might be found .
candidate. Jorlty of the democratic members of
DR. J. 8. CRAWFORD, OSTEO
patbie Physician. Established six
years la Hana block. Phone oonnac
CtOM.
STOVE REPAIRING, BEST
work at right prices. Call Barker at
MrGiuats' Wagon Ynrd, both phones.
I12p
FRANK WILK1N8CN, MEAT
xarkot. Oar dally alm (is to furnish
rou with fresh, tender meats. Let
i« have your order
Feedstofts.
CORN, shelled per bu. by car, *0c;
less thin car lots 65c; ear 50c.
WHEAT, per bu., *i 00.
COTTON SEED MEAL retail
ton *28 at car; *160 to
per 100 lbs.
COTTON SEED HULLS, per ton a<
car *10.50; >11.50 at barn; 75 to
80c per 100 Ibe.
CORN CHOPS, per 100 lbs .
sale *1.20; retail 5c «o 10c
ioo ibe hi goer
BRAN per ,00 lbs wholesale *1.30;
retail 5 to 10c higher.
y<RftkEN r'EED t»er 100
waoleaa:< *1.25 to *1.35;
l*c higher.
BALED SHUCKS, per ton. IS.
PKAiKiE HAY. per toa wboi«-aat«
*15.50; retail per bale 60 to 65<
ton >16.50
JOHNSON GRASS HAY, wboiesai.
per ton, IIC.00; retail per bale
55 to <0c; per ton >17.
BALED STRAW, per ton >5 to *6
OATS./Who! -sale per bu 38 to 40c.
retail 45 to 50c.
HOUSES AND FURNISHED
rooms for rent, by A. R. McGlntie.
North, south, east and west, in the
efty of Denton. Office one door north
postoffice.
D^eember 1. 1876, wh’ch wai paid
in full -it the maturity thereof, but
no written release thereof was, ob-
tatnei nnd recorded in D°nton coun-
ty; that J. T Mnrohv afterwards ac-
quire! sa'd Isnd and ex ented n
Deed of Trust to T. M. Blount, trus-
1 tee. of reerr-1 tn Pook A. Pace 3R8,
to secure Charles Horton in the nay-
nd "yet those' I"'"1 f,r ’ for **ue Anri) 1,
----- — *1 in
They! "nd th' same deed of trust
'thereby released, but no written re-
leeeo thereof was placed of record;
that a'l the heirs r>f the a*id Chari'S
Hoi-ton and hta wife Arvilla Horton,
bo’ne the same person ») Arv|1la
Ho-ton. hr deed* dnlv executed and
delivered conv vod their ‘nie-est |n
1 sn’d lap-* as -Hd all the heirs nf thp
I said Charles Horton and ot h’s w’fe
Suren Horton and that bv means , ou’Sted in h’s
reed Fdwin Conn, who i« the
pe-ron »a F<4 Conn •*'■* * W
and whose wife Pusan K <
thz. o»«»r tn fee •’■mptn
and that, the said Edwin
pw hto wife Si’gan K. C
»»h dav ot March. 1366. by
Treat reroMea ’u nipk D Page
eonv'v-t said lend tb’j. F. O. I
vrood ’Treadee. to reT
ran Fri-eho
mvv’ient of
hr th- v
th’a UU 1
lea-
I
be-
tween Denton and Mingo TueaJay
about 12 o’clock. Liberal reward for
return to J. N. Clark, or information
leading to recovery of sama. 120c
FOR SALE—SECOND HAND AR-
TICLES. , ’ • „ .
('V
Singer sewing machine, best ma-
chine made at W. A. Taliaferro's
FOR SALE—NO 10
Rsm'ngton, almost as good as new;
been used shout ten months. Tais
office.
LL M.UtKhTN SHOW A CLOME
OF THE 1MIWNWARD TREND
OF’ PANT FHW DAYH.
DR C LIPSCOMB 8R . HAS
moved bis office to the Allieoj Phar-
macy on the Weet Side. S21M
- I’rodncr-
■HJ1TEK. per lb . couutn whole-
sale 15 to 17 l-2c cash or trade; de
livered to private re».dentes
hotel* a-jd boardlag houses at it
to 30c; creamery, per lb 30c.
EGGS; wholesale per doz. 20c cash;
25 c nts trade, retail 25 to 30c;
market well stocked.
SWEET POTATOES, per bu., whole-
sale >1.40. fetal! per pk. 40c.
COLORADO POTATOES, whole-
St..e >100; retail >1.15; retai>
per peck 30c.
It Certainly is Wonderful What Cut-
ielay Will Do.
There cornea from Mexico a most
remarkable dry powder called Cuti-
clay. It 1* a pure and natural sub-
stance mined In the deep earth.
Dr. G. F. Shwa, a well known
physician in Chihuahua, Mex., cur-
ed a pustular eczema with four ap-
plications. He had surprising suc-
cess with it on a case of erysipelas
Mr. W. Dale, president of Chi-
huahua Investment Co., had an in-
flamed nose for years. Tw0 appli-
cations of Cuticlay cured it com-
pletely. S. Aronsteln, of El Paso,
Tex., cured ringworms which his son
had on his head. Jacob Pofan. 38
Teall place, Chicago, almost instant-
ly cured eczema and a bad case Of
pimples on the face from which he
had suffered a for a long time. AH
who try Cuticlay are simply aston-
ished at the result.
No matter what it is, eczema,
boils, wounds, ulcers, salt rheum,
any skin disease, any eruption of the
face, hands, scalp or body. Cuticlay
cures it quick; relief Is Instant.
place,
arms,
ecz--
. was
gone; In two days I was cured.”
These case® ar5 Impressive. The
actual sores disappear and you know
there Is something remarkable
about Cuticlay. T‘ '
The powder is pure—i
Susan K. Copp, conveyed said land to
B. Gidcum, who in part payment
therefor executed his certain six
promissory vendor’s lien notes for
the sum of >500, each due respect-
ively October I, 1889 to October 1,
1894, inclusive, to secure which the
said B. Gidcum executed a deed of
trust on said land to W. L. McCor-
mick trustee, of record in Book G,
page 328, Denton county Deeds of
Tru-t Records; and that the Favorite
Carriage Co , a corporation, levied
an execution on said land and the
Deere-Mansur & Co., a corporation,
caused to be levied an attachment
thereon and that on the first day of
April, 1 8!. I, said B. Gibcum conveyed
said Ian | to defendant Parlin & Oren-
dorff Co., wher by the said Parlin A
Orendorff Co. assumed payment of
the last four of said notes for $500
each executed by the said B. Gidcum
to the said Copp as aforesaid and the
said last mentioned deed was intend-
'd as a de?d of trust. It having been
agreed by both grantor and grantee
therein that the said land should be
wonveyed to the sakl Gidcum upon
his reimbursing said Parlin & Oren-
dorff Co. for the amount so paid out
by it said notes; that all
said notes execut'd hy the said
Gidcum to the said Edwin Copp as
aforesaid the sums of money men-
tioned in said execution in favor of
said Favorit Carriage Co. and in said
attachment of the said Deere-Mansur
A Co. as well as th»- sums of money
due the said Parlin & Orendorff Co.
have all been paid, but that the said
Fens were not properly -released; that
if the plaintiff should be mistaken aa
to the paym nt of said sums of mon-
ey mentioned ir said liens then he
avers thatth> ale under said deed of
trust exeewt 1 io the said J. K. O.
Sherwoo ’ ustre, to the said Ben-
jamin G c -am vested all title to land
free f> 'i said liens in said Benjamin
Grrl. .; that the said C. P. Scripture
In ' Tt payment for said land exe-
o»’t -1 to the said Benjamin Graham
• e note for $700 and one not? for
5200 secured by a vendor's lien on
said 226 acr^s of land and the lien
securing each of said notes have been
released as to plaintiff's land, but no
prop r release tnereof is of record in
Denton county; that tho sa'd Parlin
A Orendorff Co. executed a release
of the attachment lien of record in
Vol. 1, page 82. Attachment Records
of Denton county, but the same was
not. sign- d by the proper officer of
sail company although said judg-
ment has been paid and satisfied in
full; that Wiliam B. Stokes acquired
a locative Interest in sa'd survey
v'hich was by instruments duly exe-
cute 1 and acknowledged acquired by
Clnr’es Ptokc«, but that such convey-
ance are lost or destroyed and cer-
t f e l conies thereof can not be ob-
tainel, but that thereby all the tn-
terest of the sa'd William B. Stokes
n and two eaid land was divested
out of him; that Lillian C. Edwards
conveved by deed dated Dee. 17,
1 870, one hundred acres of said J. C.
Tack svrvev, and some was other
land than that of plaintiff, but said
deed is ind finite; that defendants
a e asserting some sort of a claim to
Pla' it'ff’s said land and that by reas-
on thereof and of said defeieta, irreg-
u’a’ities, m'stekes and omissions in
plaintiff’s said cha n of title as well
as on account of said apparent Hens
.'hove ment'on d, a cloud is cast, upon
his t’tle to aatd land and he is there-
by hindered and delayed in making
a sale thereof and the market value
of same depreciated In the sum of
$2000. ,
Wherefore plaintiff sues, pray*
that citation may Issue in the manner
requ’red by lew and that unon a fin-
al trial hereof ho have Judgment coe-
recting all of said Jrregu’arltFs. de-
fects, mistakes and omissions; that
it be held that he has a continuous
and unbroken chain of t tie'to saw
land from tho patentee to trmsen;
that all said apparent Hens on saM
land shown o' record be cancelled
and that all ,h"' right, title. Interest
and claim of the defendants and eseb
of them in ♦<> |
vested out of them thum
ang vested in plaint ff
clon'’^ cast unon p.atet****"
peeson of sal 1 irrnenlail
jn’»t"k e and omiesions
smr'qrent liens thereon
retrevad and that
V E. MeCABE, PHY8IC1A 'ND
surgeon. Midwifery a specialty. 1
treat diseases peculiar to woman.
P ■ Diseases of rectum and cancel Of-
Sf Ac, over Garrison drut ’’o’*
«1d» squara. Both phones Denton.
Texs*
'H-
statement in their favor in Feb-
ruary, 1905, and gladly reiterate all
I then said. Doan’s .Kidney Pills
have always proven beneficial when
1 have needed a tonic. I willing!v
give my name in a second endorse-
ment of this remedy.”
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-, ilburn Co., Buffa-
lo, New York, sois agents for the
United States.
Remember the name—Doan’s—
and take So other. 6
That Combination rate of 4e a
xord for the CLASSIFIED—a week
tn the Dally fo.6 a wee- in the
Weekly—offers you Just what yo»
Denton people tell of it.
Tall of relief that*8 quick
sure.
Here is a case of it:
L. T. Foflkes, 39 E. Mulberry
St., Denton. Texas, says: “I think
as highly of Doan’s Kidney Pills
BALED SHUCKS, BRAN CHOP.-i,
an, corn cbopa, wood in th« com,
»ve wood or heater wood delivered
you. Pnons us your wants
e salt our shucks a< they are
led; they are better; eoUon seed
He and meal.. Arkansas MILL.
G, HESTER, Prop
oroerrfe*
< .XMIR, per lOu lbs. ttr-t aud
ond grade, wholesale, $2.65 io
>2.90; retell 10c higher on 100.
CORN MEAL. 35-lb. sacx wbolesst-
60s; retail 6 5to 70c. Half sack* ,
wholesale 31e; retail 35c.
S. 1 t lb. wnolesale i^c. re
tai] 4c.
HARD WHEAT FLOUR.
*2 75 to *2.90.
GRAHAM FLOUR, per 100 Iba . re
call *3.50; 12 1-2 lb seeks 50c
LARD country wooler-te per It
13c: kettle rendered 10-Ib. cans,
*1,65; 5-lb. buckets 85c;
per lb. l«c.
BACON, retail, drv •■‘aft extras,
lb. 14c; smoked sides per lb
16c; wrapped bell’s per lb. 20c
to 24c; breakfast bacon lb. 26 tc
33c; hams wholesale 19 to 21c; re
tail per 1b. 19 to 22c.
Open Close Yest.
. . .7.87-5-6 7.89 7.88
March-April... 7.89-7-8 7.91 7.90
ityots steady, 3 points lower;
middling 8.074; sales 10,000 bales.
New York— Open Close Yest.
January 14.57-5-6 14.69-70 14.62-3
MUrch 14.87-5M 14.88-9 M.91-2
May...... ---- 15.16-7 ----
Spots quiet, 5 points up; middling
15c; sales 4700 bale*.
New Orleans— Open Close Yest.
January 14.77-8-9 14.93-4 -4.84-5
March.. 15.07-8 15.17-8 15.11
Spots steady, 1-16 higher; mid-
dling 14 15-16c; sales 650 bales.
Galveston Spots— Today Yest.
Middling..: 15 15
Tone firm; sales 200 bales.
Note—No market tomorrow.
The genera! excellence of The
American Magaz ne s what app als
to the reader. Experts in the busi-
ness say that no periodica] now pub- i
1 shed is attracting more attention,
or winn ng more enthusiastic Ap-
proval, than The American Maga-
zine It is a publication which ex-
hibits unusual energy, liveliness,
candor, courage, and humor. No
one who reads it can ever forget Ils
d stlnctive qnal ties. It is as much
of a “character” es exists anywh re
—and a most intelligent and delight-
ful “character,” too.
One of the great achievements of
The American Magazine Is its con-
tribution to national journ’’l'sm
through Its important and authori-
ty ve f.'cf-articifs. now running, by
Ida M. Tarbell, Ray Stannard Baker,
A. J. Nock and other writers, al! of
whom are the ables’ experts in the
country In th fr sne< ial fields.
Another remarkable c-aracterlstfc
of The American Magazine Is the
quality of its f'etion, plus the sto-y
Quality that's to be found in many
of Its articles. By this is meant
the fact that this particular perio’-
fcal requires that many of its most
Important art el a be to'd in story
form. Tn this manner the pages of
the whole magazine fa riy teem with
downright human interest. T‘e
facts are gathered and present d
with the most scrupulous attention
to trn’h, but in the presentation the
art of story-telling is summoned,
and the result is the fin st quality of
journal s™ that ex’s’s—that which
both informs exactly and enter’s ns
wonderfully. Not many Journalists
of this rare double abll'ty are strol-
ling up and down the world, yet sev.
era! of m are in the exc’uslve em-
plov of The American Magazine.
;’N“\
izi—'iai
. r Jan_________________
(CSvrnSM MaikT W » U.»
The State of Texas.
To the Sheriff or any Constable of
Denton County. Greeting:
You are hereby commanded to sum
mon tho unknown heirs of Mary J.
Ba:n«?s, deceased, and of her deceased
husband Wm. W. Barnes; unknown
heirs of Lillian C. Edwards, deceas-
ed; unknown heirs of Cynthia iS.
Jeter, deceased, and of her deceased
husband H. M. Jeter, deceased, un-
known heirs of William B. Stokes,
decease'!; unknown heirs of F. S.
Chapman, deceased; unknown heirs
of Charles Horton, deceased, and of
his deceased wife, Arvilla Horton,
and unknown heirs of jis deceased
wife, Susan Horton; unknown heirs
of Edwin Copp, deceas d, and his de-
ceased wife. Susan Copp, by making
publication if this citation once in
each week for 8 succuf ive weeks prev
ious to the return day hereof, in
some newspaper published in your
county
i paper
... . 4 If not, ...
. i® no* imagtna- ■ pubinbed in the Sixteenth
• °n’ j- - pojr,er Pnre—noth-, (Strict; but if there be no newspaper
Ing added, nothing taken from it— pufcl'shed In said Judicial District,
tsslng put up Just as It Is taken from ■ th,.n fn a newspaper published in the
the earth. Get a 50-cent can of nearest district to said Sixteenth Ju-
Cutlclay today at any druggist and dicial district, to appear at the next
P*® :°nc»*. Y ou will be overjoyed ; regular term of the District Court of
o find how quickly It relieves al' nen’on county, to be holden at th >
sensation of soreness and you will ■ Court House thereof, in Denton on
7? “Ot,SP how qulcklv the 6th Monday after the 2nd Mon-
.» . . . - day in January, 19il, the same being
the 20th day of February, 1911, then
and ther- to answer s petition filed
in said court on the 22nd day of De-
cember, 1910, in a suit, numbered on
, | the docket of said court No. 5283,
Wish flr^ de,pon' i wherein C. J. Meinecke is plaintiff
Z ~ ..u heirs of Mary J.
will do for you, upon the receipt of Barnes, deceased, and of her deceas-
" __ I Wm. W. Barnes; un-
known heirs of Lillian C. Edwards,
deceased; unknown heirs of Cynthia
• E. Jeter, deceased, and of her deceas-
. ed husband, H. M. Jeter, deceased;
unknown heirs of William B. Stokes,
deceased; unknown heirs of F. S.
i Chapman, deceased; unknown heirs
of Charles Horton, deceased, and ot
! bls deceased wife, Arvilla Horton,
and unknown heirs of his deceased
wife. Susan Horton: unknown heirs
of Edwin Copp, deceased, and of his
deceased w'fe, Susan K. Copp, and
Benjamin Graham, the Favorite Car-
riage Co., a corporation, Deere-Man-
sur A Uo., a corporation, Parlin A
Orenfforff Co., a corporation, are ’<
fendants, and said petition alle*-’ <
that the plaintiff fs the owner b e
simple of all that c rtain tr-" or
parcel of land, situated !n ' onnty
of Denton, state of Tex"'
part of 1-3 of a Leag>-
granted and patented tc ' s. C. Jack,
Anril 26th. 1871, bv > nt No. 581,
659, and described
Ms as follows, to-
he southwest cor-
ner of the sa d C. Jack survey:
thence north 1326 varas to the south-
west corner of G. A. Mooney’s tract;
thence east with the south boundary
list of same. 162 2-3 varas, a cor-
ner: thenre south 1326 varas, corner
on south boundary Hne of said sur-
vey; thence west 962 2-3 varas to the
place of bctrfnn’ng, contain ng 226
acres of land, and be’nst the same
Tan-’ convey <1 to him bv Margaret A.
L’ndely et at, to which reference !s
here made: that he plends the stat-
utes of ve nnd ten years limitation:
thv sa'd J. C. Jack survey was pat-
ented to the heirs of J. C. Jack and
that aR h's heits by deeds duly exe-
cuted and delivered, conveyed said
226 acres of mnd to H. Murphy but
that tn some of sa.;d d e’s the certif-
icates of acknowle<lgemcnt thereto
are defective, but in truth and In fact
the same were dnlv acknowledged by
said grantors and thereby all the
Interest of the said J. C. Jack was
“ _ - - i
them and that the said Hs Murphy in
REAL ESTATE.
/Alh-rtfiRS
pat* of yo’Ur
— ■■
W* have a client that will ex-
change *10,000 wortn of Denton City
lluence* ire at work for Represen-
tative- Brantley of Georgia and Rep-
rtaentative Broustard of LobI^mK^
otb rs who vote! with the reHMjRQmi
cans on the tariff There will be
twelve democrats and sev, n republi-
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Edwards, W. C. Record and Chronicle. (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 116, Ed. 1 Friday, December 30, 1910, newspaper, December 30, 1910; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1227889/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.