The Champion (Center, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 4, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 25, 1922 Page: 6 of 8
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THE CHAMPION—PAGE SIX—JANUARY 25, 1922
TEXAS
and
1.
boundary
H. Simpson’s N.
vey;
Neuritis Victim
Phone 226.
pine and
sweet gum ' the Court House door of said Sh<
hardly knows danger
The 57
bayou; thence S. 10 E. along his line
horse, Wagstaff’s old home place; thence S. i with Walter Goodson’s N.
J ; with the big hill road with the Jim ' vrs., to a stake on the E
25-2p.
ville, Tex.
Arnold place and
satisfy
Cured me®
HEALTH BEGINS
Shelbyville
Free Nerves — Health — Vigor — (Vil
pany, Shreveport, La.
Auditor Sees Clear Profit of One Mil-
lion Dollars During Present
Year.
weather
made a
$4,746,807.81
372,564.49
; 120,260.95
205,941.31
503,011.62
7,021.81
500,000.00
232,652.21
THURSDAY’S HEALTH TALK NO. 39.
--BY ZILAR BROS.--------
Austin, Texas, Jan. 19.—Dr. Robt.
E. Vinson, president of the Universi-
ty of Texas, in an address to the Aus-
tin Chamber of Commerce tonight,
declared .that it really is impossible
to conduct a growing and successful
institution under the restrictions pla-
ced by the so-called Pope amendment
2.
3.
4.
acre
vrs.
1 J. N. SMITH, ]
Sheriff Shelby County, Texas]
Given under my hand and seal of
office on this the 11th day of January
A. D. 1922. D. R. TAYLOR,
County Judge, Shelby County, Texas.
18125-29.
I
5.
6.
7.
i......... -
PRISON FINANCES LOOK MORE
PROMISING.
I
I
I
Legislative Restrictions Hamper Pro-
gress, President Declares.
oak and ash marked
channel of Tenaha
Huntsville, Tex., Jan. 17.—Audi-
tor of the state prison syystem, Chas.
H. Arnold, is in Huntsville at work
upon the annual financial report of
the prison system.
Mr. Arnold gave the following in-
checked is that the heat in the
This degeneration of
instance affects the arm,
Neuritis should be checked
1
for it is under this condition that the j
disease most readily flourishes. Like- r
wise the young lady who falls under
3
\ &
marked x and S; thenpe S. 46 W. 815
vrs to said A. L. Webb’s S. E. corner .
in Center and Shelbyville road, near- Ramsey,
. line of BIotk
continuing with No. 5, 395-8-10 vrs., to the S. W. cor
Ife nerve.
for
; arm.
points clearly to the need of chiropractic
a string of
a new and
. ’-f These |
people already operate eight stores,
a pine 14 inches mark-
. I vrs.
; to the N. W. corner of P. H. Bell’s
I 100 acre block, pine and red oak
marked X and S; thence S. 34 1-2 W.
(DOCTORS OF CHIROPRACTIC)
Over Payne & Payne’s Store.
Office hours: 2 to 5 o’clock p. m.
When your health begins de-
pends on When you phone 22 for
appointment.
Consultation Is without Charge.
the assets as all available cash is now
in process of disbursement.
“The total acreage to be plantedz
during 1922 amounts to 52,300
acres, of which about 35,000 acres
will be cotton, 5,000 acres in cane
and the balance in grain and other
products.
“We have all necessary equipment
such as: Farm machinery, tools, gins,
mills, mules and horses (all paid for)
to handle the 1922 crop; besides this,
we have sufficient sugar and syrup
on hand for the entire year, besides
feedstuff and grain.
“At the present time we have our
farms in splendid shape, all plowed >
and darined, and the outlook for the 1
coming year should yield us crops
reasonably worth $1,500,000.
! “Our expense in producing this
1 corner
neuritis and is caused by pressure p
tiie brain.
The danger of neuritis if not quic^J;
nerve finally atrophies or destroys tl
the nerve tissue, if the neuritis
amounts to a loss of power in that
at once. Its very nature 1
spinal adjustments.
nor
necessary expansion of university
tivities year by year.”
“But let me hasten to add that this
in itself, while serious and detrimen-
tal to the proper development of the .
university, does not present an im-j
possible situation,” said Dr. Vinson, j
“The great difficulty does not lie in
the terrace lines in fine order.
this worth the boys time?
The department is at your service.
The neuritis victim hardly knows the danger
of this disease. Uusually the pain is so per-
sistent day and night that any measure of re-
lief is welcome and no thought of future dan-
ger is possible.
Neuritis, like neuralgia, may be caused by a
local displacement of spinal vertebra, and
thus affect only a part of the body. If
nerves are affected in a number of places at
the same tims, it is what is called multiple
the spinal cord at the base of
| ville road to the N. W. corner of the two small white oaks; thence with the
' J. M. Justice place leaving said Jus-
1 tice’s now Swaney place in P'"'1"”
District No. 78; thence easterly di-;
rection on straight line ' • - ■
-I Lout’s place of beginning, 1
ed to be held in said Shelbyville and
Boles School Districts of Shelby
County, Texas, on the 18th day of
February, A. D. 1922, to determine
whether or not the law prohibiting
hogs, sheep and goats running at
large in said Shelbyville and Boles
School Districts shall be repealed in
the said Shelbyville and Boles School
Districts of Shelby County, Texas.
No person shall vote at said elec-
tion unless he be a freeholder and
qualified voter of said Shelbyville
and Boles School Districts of Shelbj^
County, Texas, and the constituti^B
and laws of the state of Texas.
The said election shall be by ballotn
and the voters entitled to vote in)
said election, desiring to prevent hogs**
sheep and goats from running at
Did You Ever Have The Flunk?
(By Lloyd Cook, in Rainbow News,
Rusk College paper, May, 1921. Pub-
lished by request.)
Well, if you have never had it you
are lucky. The flunk is a dreadful
Miss Era Miles, daughter of John
Miles and wife, residing in the New
Hope community, died at an early
hour Sunday morning at the family
home. The remains were buried at
the New Hope cemetery Monday.
The young lady was about 14 years
of age and had been ill since last
spring. She was confined in the
sanitarium here for a long while and
everything that was possible was done
for her. Her death was not unex-
pected, but was necessarily a great
No. 4.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
This is my formal announcement
for Justice of the Peace, Precinct
No. 4, Shelby County, Texas.
I was appointed by the Commis-
sioners Court in December, 1920, to
fill out the unexpired term of Mr. M.
V. Williams. I have served the peo-
ple of this precinct to the best of my
ability, and if you see fit to elect me
I promise you now that I will endeav-
or to do my best towards the enforce-
ment of the law in the future as I
have in the past. Thanking you for
any favors you may show me, I am,
Sincerely yours,
E. H. MAY.
SHERIFF’S SALE.
(Real Estate.)
By virtue of an order of sale issu-
ed out of the Honorable District
Court of Shelby County, on the 19th
day of December, A. D. 1921, in the
case of Hugh Jones versus Noah W.
„, No. 5813, and to me, as
Sheriff, directed and delivered, I
have levied upon, this 27th day /xf
December,. A. D. 1921, and will&foe-
tween the hours of 10 o’clock 4 "V'L
and 4 o’clock P. M., on the^^Ld^
Tuesday in February, A. D. 19,22®
NEURITIS IS GONE
“For months I suffered with neuritis of
the neck, shoulder and arms. After
three weeks of osteopathy during which
I got ninety-seven treatments, I decid-
ed to try chiropractic. In two weeks
the pain had gone, and I have had other
chiropractic adjustments since but no
return of the neuritis.—Lillion Harne,
Chiropractic Research Bureau, sworn
statement No. 1293L.
| The department is at your service.
It was established for the interest of
, the community. At any time we
can be of service to you let us know
! We will do our best. This means
* took the boys out to a place owned by
A. J. Wood and terrace ! part of the
farm. The boys were given instruc-
tions as to the use of the farm level
and the method of staking off the
terraces and giving them the proper
fall after the instructors had set sev-
eral stakes, the boys were given
charge and, under supervision, ran
Was
Total $5,972,376.46
Liabilities:
Accts, payable $
Land notes payable. . .
Oother notes payable. .
Net worth (capital and
surplus) 5,255,501.72
Vocational Agricultural Work By
School Boys.
To those who are interested in bet-
ter farming and the bettering of
farm conditions:
The department of vocational ag-
riculture is just getting into full
swing in the Center High School.
The main purpose in the vocational
agriculture is to stimulate in the boys
an interest toward farming in the
true sense. A thorough knowledge
of the conditions that are encounter-
ed on the farm and the most scientific
and economical way in combating
these conditions with the best results.
These problems are taken up by
making first hand study and inves-
tigation of these problems, and ac-
tually working some of them out in
field study and practice, rather than
just studying what the book says
about it. The practical side is st” *ss-
ed in all the work.
The following is a condensed out.
the L line which is to be used this year:
A study of the principal farm
with J. T. Duncan’s W. B. line 391
8-10 vrs , a stake, red oak, post osi
I all marked x; thend
- - XT. j; 7 I
, to a stake on the E. B. line J
, Lister’s; thence S. to Bud Metcalf’s the Ira McDaniel survey, pine aij
Total $5,972,376.46
“Our resources amount to $5,972,-
376.46, and our gross liabilities to
$716,874.74, of which $503,011.62
are land notes not yet due. In cal-
culating the above rfesoprees we have
not included the item of $673,453.25
which includes the Texas State Rail-
road, but have confined our figures
to the farms, farm .equipment and
prison.
“I show no cash on hand among 1 shock to the members of the family.
A study of forage plants.
Orcharding.
Truck growing and the home
garden.
Soils and fertilizers.
Small fruit.
Terracing.
These subjects will be given detail
study from the most practical stand-
point and involving the ilea of sea-
sonal sequence.
When we use the words, from first
, we mean to learn by di-
Take for instance the lesson
On January 17, the
vocational class under the supervision
ed needs due to increased enrollment of F. L. Moffett, teacher of vocation-
the demands for the natural and al agriculture, and the county agent,
ac-
1590 vrs. to P. H. Bell’s extreme W. proceed to sell at public auction td
corner; thence up channel of said highest bidder, for cash in hand, al!
creek S. 54 W. 522 vrs. point S. 4 E.1 the right, title and interest which thq
point S. 72 E. 113 vrs., point said Ncah W. Ramsey had, on the 2nd
, cr a]
any time thereafter, of, in and to the
following described property, to wit j
Situated in Shelby County, Texas!
about 17 miles east from the town oi
Center, a portion of the Hiram Kirk.1
Patrick survey and being 50 acres oj
land out of said Hiram Kirkpatriel
survey, described as follows: |
Beginning at the S. E. corner ol
-- - -- ‘ ) oak anl
pine marked x; post oak N. 25 E. |
Zilar Bros.
and the second one was opened here
in 1915. Their headquarters are at
Lufkin, where they have two stoves,,
and other places are: Center, Nacjg-
above (first above) given, and that doches, San Augustine, Carthage,
which has heretofore been added to Longview and Jacksonville.
One of the managers is quote J as
saying that his company is plamping I
the spending of a large sum offtion- I
ey this year for advertising. Ok J"
have always believed in the of I
printers ink and every plac^^hat I
they have opened a stere they have I
made it go to a profitable extern. I
---------Z--I I
I have on hand load of good young I
mules for sale cheap. Also have a
few L^udinghause wagons for sale at
reduced price.—E. FITE, San Au- I
]gustine, Texas. 25 to 8c. I
in . ■ J
Notice of Stock Law Election.
Whereas, on the 9th day of Janu-
ary, A. D. 1922, ths Commissioners
Court in and for Shelby County,
Texas, in regular session convened
record the following order to-wit:
On this the 9th day of January,
D. 1922, before the ccmmissioners
court in and for Shelby County, Tex-
as, in regular session, came on to be
seen, heard and considered, the peti-
tion of G. B. Carter, and more than
fifty other freeholders and qualified
tax paying voters residing ir. the Shel-
byville and Boles scho >1 districts of
Shelby County ,Texas, praying this
court to order an election to be held
in said Shelbyville and Boles school
districts, hereinafter described by
metes and bounds, to be held on the o
'11th day of February, A. D. 1922, large in said Shelbyville and Boles
to determine whether or not the law School Districts of Shelby County/
prohibiting hogs, sheep and goats Texas, shall place upon their ballots-
running at large in said hereinafter ' the words “FOR THE STOCK I^AW’”
described Shelbyville and Boles and those voters entitled to vote at^
School Districts, shall be repealed;1 said election in favor of allowing*
said Shelbyville and Boles School dis-1 such animals to
tricts being described by metes and place upon
bounds as follows, to-wit: | " ‘ ‘
Beginning at a point in Shelbyville ’
and East Hamilton road, in front of
A. B. Lout’s residence, at cross roads,
thence N. 5130 vrs. in east edge of
Brinson field in Myrick’s ferry and
Shelbyville road, bearing a haw tree
marked x on S. side of said road;
said Boles School District as shown i
by the field notes last above copied.
It appearing to the court that said
Shelbyville and Boles School Dis-
tricts of Shelby County, Texas, is a
subdivision of Shelby County and
that more than fifty qualified free- i
holders and qualified tax paying vo- j
ters of said Shelbyville and Boles
School Districts, have signed said pe-
tition and that said p< tition is in reg-
ular form and was filed in this court
on January 7th, A. D. 1922.
It is therefore considered, ordered
and decreed by' said commissioners
court of Shelby County, Texas, that
said petition be and the same is in all
respects and things granted as prayed
for and an election is here now order-
publication of this notice in BbP
Champion, a weekly newspaper
lished at Center, in Shelby County,
• Texas, and within the limits of Shel-
by County, Texas, there being no
weekly papers published in said Shel-
School Districts,
i 25 W. 100 vrs. corner;
is survived by an infant and numer-' thence S. 56 inches, 23 inches 392 vrs., marked W. G. G. G.; thence
ous relatives in the Shelbyville-com-; vrs._on ^Sam ’'ith T’
I 1408 vrs. at a pile of rocks at James and dogwood
1 XTT cl Si "W o 1 for (
; vrs. on Sam Porter’s line Corner;
thence S. 56 degrees 23 inches E.
at 2 o’clock,
observance of sanitary laws or an-, frQm an operation.
cestry. The disease is more gener- I
ally prevalent among college students
than any other class of people. It was necessary. Following the sec-
is usually caused by over indulgence, ond operation she did not do wen and
in windjamming, time-killing, and ' the third operation became necessary,
pleasure-seeking. The young man shfi did not survive> she
who gives of his affections too freely
to some fair college damsel is sure to
fall a victim to this horrible disease,1
STRAYED.—My big grey 1
weight about 1100 pounds. Reward
the spell of some gallant young col- f°r recovery. E. C. Strong, Shelby- wjbh the settlement road, leading to red oak marked x; thence N. with II
lege sport s wooing will surely be m-
' fected. ?
The symptoms of flunk are: ha- j
tred of one’s teacher, lack of stu-
diousness, aversion to examinations,
a light feeling within the head caused
by its emptiness of knowledge, a
painful sensation whenever a thought
attempts to pass through the mind.
■ and a tendency to blame everybody
but one’s' self for one’s astounding
ignorance.
The person who is affected by this
consuming disease suffers the most I
excrutiating pains, accompanied by
the worst of mental depression, which i
often leads to disastrous results, J
blues, discouragement and discontin-
uance of college work, leading to a
miserable failure in life.
The surest cure for this most un-
desirable of all diseases is eight hours
of vigorous mind training followed by
a warm instruction bath, and assisted
by the following prescription to be
taken freely: Ten grams of concen-
trated attention, one gram of diluted
love, ten grams of unadulterated per-
suance of knowledge, five grams each
of wind jamming and pleasure seek-
ing antidotes, and ten grams each of
temperate habits and ignorance ha-
tred. Take one tabl'espoonful dis-
solved in a glass of psychological in-
tellectual training, at a dose. A:
insurance against a relapse take an
inoculation of concentrated ambition
diluted vith self respect.
If directions are carefully follow-
ed, a permanent cure is guaranteed.
Doctor Inspiration,
Specialist in all College Diseases.
formation relative to financial con-
ditions :
“In reference to articles recently
published in our Texas papers regard-
ing the prison system being broke,
persons not being familiar with the
system would be misled as to the true
conditions, and I wish to correct any'
impression that this article has made crop will be less than the expenses of
by giving the exact status of the sys- the two preceding years, as we are
tern. i fully equipped and have quite a lot of
“On account of the coast storms supplies on hand, all paid for; and in
last June and weather conditions taking the above figures into consid-
thereafter, we made a very short eration, we are expecting to make a
crop during 1921, which caused us clear profit of $1,000,000, above all
to use up our cash resources and now expenses in 1922.”
it is necessary for us to make arrange- j -----------------
ments for funds enough to take care por Justice of The Peace, Precinct
of our running expenses until the
harvest of this year’s crop.
“The actual conditions and figures
are as follows:
Resources: '
Lands, buildings and im«-
provements I
Live stock
Machy. and equipment
Operating inventories
(estimated)
Mis. Assets
W/®
wmfihe
QIqcK
l&ackward
POUS OL L’yULU.CvLy LOLI1?
shall be opened at said polling places.
I designate R. H. Carroll as mana-
x; thence up the 1 ger of .said election at Shelbyville,
- Creek S. 85 1-4 and G. B. Carter as manager at
W. 580 vrs. to Thomas English’s N. Hurst Town and such managers may
E. corner; thence up the channel of appoint their own clerks.
Tenaha S. 35 3-4 W. 2950 vrs. to: C’----- —
mouth of Prairie Creek; thence up
the old channel of Prairie Creek N.
82 1-4 W. 2000 vrs. to a corner made
by Ben Powell for E. B. Watson on
said Creek, bearing two ironwoods
marked x; thence ,S. 46 W. 640 vrs.
to a corner made for A. L. Webb,
bearing two sweet gums marked x;
thence S. 56 E. 169 vrs. to Webb’s N.
| everybody that is interested in good E. corner bearings two sweet gums
farming and the bettering of farm ’“J ” J
conditions.
Not only hope for better farming jy jn front of his residence; thence
conditions in Shelby county, but let’s S. 58 1-2 E. with said road 340
, help make better conditions.
F. L. MOFFETT,
Teacher of Vocational Agriculture. 2qi vrs. to S. W. corner of said 10
block; thence N. 70 5-8 W. 105 being the 7th day of said month,
— corner pine and sweet gum ' the Court House door of said She®
Brim, residing at marked X and S; thence S. 60 W. ! County, in the town of Center, Tex
w, I 1590 vrs. to P. H. Bell’s extreme W. 1 ■nroneeB tn sell st nnhlic anetion t<
People who believe that there
is no remedy for kidney and
bladder diseases are invited to
read the following unsolicited
testimonial:
I suffered for mere than 20 years
with kidney and bladder trouble.
I Had three hemorrhages. The phy-
sician said 1 must be operated on
icr'stone in the kidney, but thank
the Lord x found HOBO medicine
and it cured me
I ksow there is hardly anyone
who has suffered as I did. I have
seen the time when death would
have been a relief to me. Now I
c_njcy life and am recommending
xfOBO Kidney and Bladder Remedy
to many who arc afflicted with kid-
ney trouble,
ZgRS. G. W. LEE, -
Laurel, Miss.
No natter hpw severe ycur kidney or
Madder trouble may be. HOBx> can give
you prompt and blessed relief.
Don’t keep on suffering! Buy a bottle
fcf HOBO and begin taking it according
to directions. HOBO contains no alcohol,
no habit-forming drugs—you can take it
as freely as you wish without bad after-
effect s.
Ask your druggist for HOBO now.
Price $1.20 per bottle.
Made by HOB0 Medicine Mfg. Com.
Thealth follows)
CHIROPRACTIC CORRECTS
PRESSURE ON SPINAL
NERVES IN DISEASES OF
THE FOLLOWING ORGANS:
zHEA0
//EYES
v ^/y//EARS
L. £j<V/N0SE
’ THROAT
VL—--ARMS
HEART
F5K LUNGS
KjV LIVER
STOMACH
pancreas
n SPLEEN
\\ K'ONEYS
\ BOWELS
r WxK appendix
BLADDER
Spinal Column* LOWE I? LIMBS
THE LOWER NERVE
UNDER THE MAGNIFY-
ING GLASS IS PINCHED
BY A MISALIGNED JOINT.
PINCHED NERVESCAHHOT
TRANSMIT HEALTHFUL
IMPULSES. CHiRDPRAC-'
TIC ADJUSTING RE-
MOVES THE PRESSURE.
THE UPPER HERVE IS
FREE AS NATURE INTENDS. J
Mrs. Rhoda Holt by way of the old McDaniel’s and E. B.
' Arnold place and c?r_tm"ing hTo. 5, ?Q5 c 1 n
said settlement road to the Shelby- ' ner of Block No. 4, bears a pine and
______ ______na.ll Wlllbt: Uclis.fi , LUUUUC vrcvil uciO
• ’ ’ - s. B. line of Block No. 4, 713 vrk,
Rather to the place of beginning. (
□vc-lIj JI-• Said property being levied on >as
to A. B. : the nropertv of Noah W. Ramsey1 to
„ I satisfy a judgment amounting to
And also to include a certain tract $1,72'5.00 in favor of Hugh^Bhes,
or parcel of land which has been and costs of suit.
heretofore added to Boles School Dis-1 Given under my hand this 27t.i
trict, by order of the Commissioners day of December 1921, A. D. 1921.
Court duly made and entered by SS 4-11-18 J- N.^SMI^TH,
which order the line between Boles i
School District and Rather School I
District has been changed that be-
ginning at the N. W. corner of J. M.
Justice’s place now Swanzy place and
running in a southerly direction to
J. A. Todd’s corner of his old home-
stead; thence with said line to Doc
Adams’s S. B. line; thence with said
line to >the new Christian church on
the Shelbyville and Patroon road,
near Rather graveyard; thence in a
northerly direction to the N. corner
of J. W. Beck’s bottom farm; thence
in a straight line to A. B. Lout’s place
I the place of beginning including all
the territory in the field bottom notes
i to the educational appropriation bill
as pased by the last legislature.
“I have said that the university is
, like a hobbled horse, able indeed to
move along in some sort of fashion,
but presenting a sorry spectacle in
the light of what he might do were he
only free,” said Dr. Vinson in refer-
ring to the legislative restrictions
which he asserts hampers the progress
of the university. “Whether
university needed or deserved such
restrictions is, of course, another J crops,
question and one of which opinion
might differ. Just now I am con-
cerned only with the statement that
in my judgment it can not be success-
fully administered in such fashion.”
Dr. Vinson called attention to this
year’s registration of a little over
10,000 students compared with about
8,000 last year. The students this
year are in actual residence in the
university from a total of 215 out of
the 250 counties in the state. The
total appropriations for the univer-; hand study,
sity this year are $68,000 short of - —
what they were last year, and “not in terracing,
taking into consideration the enlarg- —
the amount of money appropriated,
but in the restrictions and conditions
which the legislature in its wisdom
saw fit to impose upon the regents
in the uses which they might make
of it.”
As a result of these restrictions,
Dr. Vinson said that the morale of
the university staff as a whole has
been lowered, sixteen resignations
having been tendered since the pass-
age of the bill, and “we need not be
surprised if many more are offered
before the end of the year.”
favor of allowing
run at large shall
i their ballots the words'
“AGAINST THE STOCK LAW.”
On or before the 10th day after J
the date of said election as hereinbe-
fore stated, the persons holding such,
elections shall make due returns on.
all votes cast at their respective vot-
ing places for and against said elec-
tion to the County Judge of Shelby
ui.arK.eu. x uii o. Blue ui oaiu. xuau, p , m
thence nearly west with said road to I C01?Tn y’ ,, exaJ-
noint in same on B H Brinson’s W I Now’ therefore, I, D. R. Taylor,
boundarv Iffie bearing red oik on S ■ County JudSe of Shelfcy County’ Tex'
side of road marked I; thence N. 20 ,as’ by virtue of the law vested in me
W. 100 vrs. to B. H. Simpson’s middle ' and required of me, do hereby and
W. corner, sweet gum 12 inches these presents, give notice by the
N. 15 E. 3 1-2 vrs. marked x; thence
N. with B. H. Simpson’s W. boundary
line 925 vrs. to point where said line
crosses Bell and Moon Creek; thence
N. 44 E. 1700 vrs. the creek being
the line to corner in said creek on B. j
H. Simpson’s N. boundary line;; -
thence W. with B. H. Simpson’s N. j that on February 18, A D 1922 the
---- 2. aforesaid election will be held within
ui'fi N. 77. corner and at the limits of Shelbyville and Boles
the S. W. corner of J. E. i School Districts of Shelby County,
UNIVERSITY IN NEED
OF FUNDS.
PERRY BROS., OPEN NEW STO:
AT TYLER.
From the Redland Herald, Nacog-
doches, it is noted that Perry Brds.,
owners and operators of
variety stores, will open
large variety store at Tyler.
■y Uncle Ben Says:
\ “The healthy
\^ian keeps mov-
ing. Newy; sick
fellers are like
stagnant water,
full of poisons.”
: Texas. Said election shall be held
at Shelbyville in said Shelbyville
line;: byville and Boles
xt that nr> Fphrnarv
boundary line at 11900 vrs. past B.
H. Simpson’s N. _W. corner :
1998 vrs. tl._ Z. .------- __ _
Nicholson’s 100 9-10 acre block, a
subdivision of the Samuel Todd sur- , m '
vey; thence N. 22 W. along a subdi- ochool District, and at Hurst Town m
vision line of the Sam Todd survey , the said Boles School District, and the
2352 vrs. corner in Tenaha Creek, be- polls of February 18th, A. D. 1922,
ing the N. W. corner of block 4 and 1 J —*■ 11 —
N. E. corner of block 5 bearing a pine :
ing the N. W. corner of block 4 and
Mrs. Rebecca 1
Shelbyville, and a sister to Fred Wil-
lis of that place, died at a sanitarium
uxu xiuxak. XB « uxv«ux«x'at Nacogdoches Friday night. The 57 Vrs. point S. 72 E. 113 vrs., point said Ncah W. Ramsey had, on tl
disease which seizes upon its unfor- • remains were brought to Shelbyville S. 28 W. 52 vrs., point S. 83 1-2 W. ! day of November A. D. 1921,
tunate Srictims irrespective of their and i,uriai was had Sunday afternoon '310 vrs. to Arch English’s N. W. cor- any time thereafter, of, in and
social standing, physical condition,' . ? oMo(.k Mrs Brim suffered'ner on the S- bank ?aid ,T.enaha following described property,
.at 2 o clock. Mrs. nnm suiiereu kayou; thence S. 10 E. along his line <
She was opera-1 1900 vrs corner about 30 vrs. N.
' ted on several years ago for appendi-1 of the Shelbyville and Nacogdoches
icitis and recently another operation road, bearing a jy™ mart.
----- —«««—Following the sec-! X; thence S. 62 1-2 E, 110 vrs. to
- E. end of Porter Bridge on said road;
thence S. 2-56, 23 and E. at 800 vrs. |
in C. A. Brady’s pasture; Block No. 4, a stake, post
from which she did not survive. She thence S. 25 w inn 'rrc m-rnpr- v- nnc-f- naV NT
Sam
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The Champion (Center, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 4, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 25, 1922, newspaper, January 25, 1922; Center, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1321415/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fannie Brown Booth Memorial Library.