The Champion (Center, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 17, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 28, 1920 Page: 3 of 8
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Smaller Cars-and the World’s
Most Popular Tires
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$450
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TOL T. SMITH, Sole Agent, Center, Texas
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view. Send cash with
No tires bearing the Goodyear name,not even
the famous Goodyear Cords which equip the
world’s highest-priced cars, embody a higher
relative value than do Goodyear Tires in
the 30,“k3-, 30x3l/2*, and 31x4-inch sizes.
Go to this Service Station Dealer for these
tires, and for Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes.
He has them.
terms as the Court may order
and direct. The said guardian-
ceremony short and
taph simple:
MAN.”—Sioux City
Punch.
and
debt
never
All that this company’s experience and
methods have accomplished in these tires is
available to you now at the nearest Goodyear
Service Station.
of Hicks survey a r o brs. n 88! tainted money and the rustle of
cxxvi a xxmxcxrtx e 2- a r o brs. n 61 w 5.6 vrs;! uuhuiy d? ’ ‘ ’
lease for oil and gas upon such thence e with said Hick’s line i faults of
you are interested in a real car
te demonstrate the Nash to you.
U)est and prettiest car on the
K for the money.—Guy Willis, of the Wesley Hill h
not
was a
man, and from the day she
vey situated in Shelby county,
Texas, and described as fol-
lows, to-wit: All that certain
tract or parcel of land lying
and being situated in Shelby
County, Texas, and being a part
part of the Wesley Hill h r sur-
corn-
coixi-
are
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Good/ea. Heavy Tourist Tubes are thick, strong tubes that
reinforce casings properly. Why risk a good casing with a
cheap tube? Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes cost little more
than tubes of less merit. 30x3!/2 size in water-
proof bag ...
one pound and
cents one dollar.
Help me to live so that I can
lie down at night with a clear
conscience, without a gun un-
der my pillow and unhaunted
by the faces of those to whom
I have brought pain.
Grant that I may earn my
meal ticket on the square and
that in earning it I may not
stick the gaff where it does not
belong.
Deafen me to the jingles of
c-’ix 3’A Goodyear Double-Cure
Fabric, All-Weather Tread
30 x 3% Good' •■ar Tingle-Cure
Fabric, Anti-Skid T read-----------
In these tires owners of Ford, Chevrolet,
Dort, Maxwell and other cars taking the
above sizes are afforded a measure of per-
formance and service such as only the
world’s largest tire factory devoted to these
sizes can supply.
ing in said County Court of
Shelby county, Texas, and the
said Tisha Fults and O. B. Fults
have been appointed perma-
nent guardians of said minors
Gertie Matkins, Vertie Matkin,
and Edna Matkins, by the said
County Court of said Shelby
County, Texas. The lands upon
which said lease is asked to be
made by said guardians is a 1-3
undivided interest of said
wards in the following real es-
tate belonging to the estate of
said wards, and is described as
follows, to-wit:
Beng 1-3 undivided interest
in and to 200 acres of land a
r survey,
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MEMORIAL HOSPITAL* FOR EX- [
SOLDIERS.
Austin, Texas, April 12.—Ground
has been broken at Kerrville today
for the Texas World War Memorial
Hospital which is to be built, with
funds raised by the Benevolent War
Risk Society, for the care and treat-
ment of Texas World War Veterans
who have become victims of tubercu-
losis.
The first unit, which will cost ap-
proximately $150,000 and accommo-
date about 100 patients, will consist
of two large wards of 32 beds each
and twenty bungalows of two beds
each, besides an administration build-
ing, a subsistance plant, a water and
sewage disposal system, a power
plant for furnishing heat and electric
light to all buildings, an ice factory,
and a laundry. The subsistance,
power, water, sewerage disposal, and
ice plants will be built large enough
to meet the requirements of addition-
al units which will be added to the
institution from time to time until
the maximum capacity of 300 pa-
tients is reached.
“News of the commencement of
■f this sanitatorium will be welcomed by
■ the hundreds of Texas ex-soldiers who
|Kare suffering from tuberculosis, for
■nany of whom, early treatment is a
■atter of life or death,” said Dr. W.
■ Goddard, State Health Officer and
Ke President of the Benevolent
■r Risk Society. “However,” he
■tinned, “the people of Texas must
Bf think that their work is done.
work is wrell begun, which, ac-
| ^cording to the old adage, is half done,
■ but Texas must not quit on the home
■ stretch. Less than half the money
■ needed for the completion of this
I -sanitorium has been raised. We must
I ‘ have the remainder as soon as pos-
r sible.
Fifteen hundred dollars will build
a bungalow which will take care of
two patients. This is a very small
amount to invest in saving the lives
of two of our returned heroes, and
3ve are making a special appeal to in-
dividuals and organizations through-
out the State to contribute money
for the building of these bungalows.
Any individual, lodge, fraternal or-
ganization, woman’s club, church
■society, business house, National
Guard unit, American Legion Post,
or other similar organization which
is willing to raise enough money to
build a bungalow will be accorded
the privilege of dedicating the same
& in some fitiing and appropriate man-
ner.”
According t oDr. Goddard, more
than a dozen individuals and organi-
zations in the State have undertaken
the raising of funds for bungalows to
be built and dedicated in their names
■and several, of them have already
raised and paid in the necessary fif-
teen hundred dollars. The first
bungalow to be built with funds sub-
scribed in this way will be dedicated
by the members of the 131st Field
Artillery (36th Division) to their
comrades who died in France. Sub-
scriptions to the general fund, and
correspondence relative to the rais-
ing of funds for the bungalows
should be directed to Dr. C. W. God-
dard, Active Vice President, Benevo-
lent War Risk Society, Capital Build-
ing, Austin, Texas.
has been Through the dark clouds but'°the
containing 200 acres of land.
As stated above the interest
of said minors, Gertie Matkin,
Vertie Matkin, and Edna Mat-
kin, in said 200 acres of land
is a 1-3 undivided interest
which is desired to be leased.
Which said application will
be heard by the County Judge
thereof, at the Court House in
the town of Center, in Shelby
County, Texas, on the 7th day
of May, A. D. 1920.
TISHA FULTS,
O. B. FULTS,
Guardians 0^ the Estate of Ger-
tie Matkiij, Vertie Matkin,
and Edna Matkin, Minors.
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• S’-WeBs
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SWEET POTATO PLANTS: Field
grown Nancy Hall and Porto Ricans
at $3.00 per thousand F. 0. B. Long-' Till then, dear ones, on Jesus
: our sorrow and care,
our home keep pressing
No. 902. In re: Guardianship
of the Estate of Gertie Mat-
kin, Vertie Matkin and Edna
Matkin, minors.
! In the County Court of Shelby
County, Texas.
To Whom It May Concern:
Notice is hereby given that conveyed to A. G. Kellog, As-
we Tisha Fults and O. B. Fults, signee of Wesley Hill, and be-
guardians of the estate of Ger- ginning at the original begin-
tie Matkins, Vertie Matkin and ning corner of the said Hill
Edna Matkins, minors, have survey, a stake a pine brs. n.
.this day filed our application 67 e 9.5 vrs. a p. o brs. s 57 w.
in the office of the County
Clerk of Shelby county, Texas,
in the above numbered and en-
titled cause, asking for an or-
der of the County Judge of
cleaned Shelby county, Texas, authoriz-
ing us as the guardians of the
estate of said minors, to make,
execute and deliver a mineral
There is but one source of
comfort when you have lost a
darling little brother like I and
that is in the Blessed Redeem-
make an hour, sixteen ounces I er>. c9tn ,anc^ s^are our
one hundred i £rief and bring from behind
the dark clouds the sun; and
make it shine our path way
again.
“Como unto me all ye that
labor axid are heavy laden and
I will give you rest.”
“Take my yoke upon you and
learn of me for my yoke is easy
and my burden light.”
“Weep not as those that have
no hope.”
“If I go and prepare a place
for thee I will come again and
receive you unto myself that
where I am you may be also.’*
“I will not leave you
fortless, but will send the
forter unto you.” These
precious promises. We are not
abld to understand or to look
A Man’s Mother.
Your mother’s life has
Been easy. Your father
■boor ]
■married him she stood by his
Kside, fighting as a woman must
F fight. She worked, not the
eight or ten hour day of the
union, but the twenty-four hour
day of the poor wife and moth-
er. She cooked and ci ‘
and scrubbed and patched and
nursed from dawn until bed
time, and in the night was up
and down getting drinks for the
thirsty lips, covering restless
little sleepers, listening for
croup coughs. She had time to ship of said minors is now pend-
listen to your stories of boyish
fun and frolic and triumph
She had time to say the things
that spurred your ambition on.
She never forgot to cook the
little dishes you liked. She
did without the dress she need-
ed that you might not be
ashamed of your clothed bei
fore your Jfellows. Remember
this now while there is yet
k time, while she is yet living, to
Kpay back to her in love
■tenderness some of the
■rou owe her. You can
■ay it all.—Exchange.
12.5 vrs; thence w at 1200 vrs.
running with the n bdy. line of
R. N. Moore survey a stake
from which a Sand Jack n 74 w
4.2 vrs. a pine 3 inches in dia.
brs. n 24| w 1.6 vrs; thence n
at 940 vrs. stake on s bdry. line I
Cx. xxi^.lu uxxx a, x v mxo. 11 j vamveu. muiicjr «xnu me lusiac ox
e 2- a r o brs. n 61 w 5.6 vrs; I unholy skirts. Blind me to the
~ other fellows, but
1200 vrs. to Hicks s e cor. on e! reveal to me mine own.
bdry. line of the Wesley Hill I Guide me so that each night
survey, 2 pines are witness ’ when I look across the dinner
pvrma • rhArinn 0 i-rr-ii-U 14-^^ !
-rj-.,. -v - ----- wiiu,
bJF1Iiriing’ a blessing to me, I will have
! j nothing to conceal? Keep me
young enough to laugh with
my children.
And when comes the
smell
of flowers and tread of soft
steps, and the crunching
wheels out in front, make the
the epi-
“Here Fes a
(Iowa)
Attest: Chester Holt, Coun- In Memory of James^Thomas,
ty Court, Shelby County, Texas.
Business Man’s Prayer.
Teach men that sixty minutes I
hundred i £rief and bring from behind
time will come when we will
know. Then we can say, the
Lord knoweth best.
Weep not dear ones for Little James,
Whose home is in the sky;
Who will never again know pain
And never more shall die.
Some day we will meet him,
In that bright world above;
And then again we’ll greet him
The precious one whom we love.
How soon that time shall come
No mortal on earth can tell
Then we will say, Dear Father
Thou doeth all things well.
order. Book! We’ll cast
orders now that you may get plants Toward
when wanted.—S. M. Bryan, Long- • Till we are welcomed there.
view, Texas. 14-28c 1 , —N. O. THOMAS, JR.
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The Champion (Center, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 17, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 28, 1920, newspaper, April 28, 1920; Center, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1326807/m1/3/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fannie Brown Booth Memorial Library.