Hereford Reporter (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, September 20, 1901 Page: 7 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Deaf Smith County Library.
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HEREFORD REPORTER, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER ao, 1901
601)6 m 601)6.
Movements of People You Know
and Other Items Picked Up
Here and There.
It rained here last week.
Cattle shipments will commence in
a very few days.
Of course, you couldn't help but
notice our new ads this week.
Seed wheat at one dollar. J. C.
Womble. 27t4p
Austin Bassett spent Sunday with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.' A. S.
Bassett at their ranch ten miles
north of town.
The Reporter office was in re-
ceipt of a very fine water melon on
last Saturday afternoon. It was
greatly enjoyed.
Our lumber merchants report the
lumber trade as booming. One of
our big firms has in an order for
twenty-one cars.
Mrs. Willard Keene, wife of the
genial ipadmaster for this division
of the Pecos Valley lines, went to
Roswell, N. M. Sunday and spent a
few days with friends.
A. L. Service and J. P. Snyder
are doing the inside finishing work
on Rat Jowell's new residence.
They expect to have it ready for oc-
cupancy in about two weeks,
J. T. Nabors has btei in town
several days this week and last, at-
tending to business and laying in
supplies for the winter, He re-
turned to his ranch near Cimaron
Tuesday.
A Fine Ranch Property For Sale.
A fine ranch of 80 acres—situa-
ted within i mile of Court House in
Hereford—adjoining town site; all
fenced; 3 wells, windmill, good
large storage tank; barn for ten
cows, stalls for six horses, grainery,
hen house and other outbuildings;
vineyard of 350 grapevines; 75
acres in cultivation—1$ acres in
garden, fenced with poultry wire,
all irragated. Terms, $25 per acre
—cash. E. H. Fullwood. 30tf
For Fine Work in
ill
louse Painting
•••
SEE
PRIES
THE PAINTER
\
B. T. Hinton on last Frid; y af-
ternoon, purchased 38 acres be-
tween Mrs. S. H. McCraken's home
property and R. J. Kibbe's at $10
per acre/ Withersooon & Gough
held the title.
Geo. L. Muse is slowly recovering
from the recent painful affliction on
his hand. Mr. Muse has suffered
greatly with that hand during the
past three weeks and his many
friends will be gratified to hear of
his convalescence.
The contractors begsn work on
a new 4-room residence for I. N.
Dillard. Thomas & Snyder has the
contract.
rw mswwwwtr
DIMMITTSQUIBS 8
Happenings in the Busy Castro 1
County Seat Briefly Told
h edited by • • an unknown 1
Messrs. Vaughn, Gibson, Golli-
hon and Dixon of this county, all
shipped fat cows to the Kansas City
market the first of this week.
The death of our late President
William McKinley has cast a gloom
over our little community and we
will abide by the Governor's procla-
mation and show our :es;ect to the
dead, thereby.
The young people cf this commun-
ity are going to give a Basket sup-
per at the School house Friday
night, Oct. 4th, the proceeds to be
used toward school house improv-
ments. If any one desires a good
supper at a moderate cost, they
know where to find it.
The big Methodist revival after
a week of grand success, closed last
Sunday night. We do not mean
they had a great many conversions,
but we see it has causee our people
to remember the Golden Rule, more
than ever before, thus bringing us
all closer to Divine Power.
The cold winds that have been
blowing from towards the Nort hPole
for the past week reminds our good
people of what is coming later and
we all appreciate this warning as
everybody is very busy putting up
their crops, etc and will take advan-
tage as soon as possible to lay in
their winter supplies.
J. B. Hardy has been adding a
new room to the American laundry
and incidentally getting his hand
crushed. Last Monday the wind
caught the door, and the door caught
three fingers on his right hand and
the loss of three nails is assured.
This little mishap has incapacitated
him from work nearly all of the
week.
Subscribe for the Reporter.
1! DYER & SONS
retail dealers in
M
Lumber, Shingles, Sash, Doors fj
. and all kinds of
1 BUILDING MATERIAL $
£ We caery the largest and beft supply of Lumber to be J K
¿ found in this section of the country. Give us a trial order ¿
yards at
HEREFORD - TEXAS - PLAINVIEW ¡g
All The News!
Hereford Lumber Co.
Paints, Oils, Glass, Varnishes and
Painters' Supplies
Our Stock of Lumber is Complete
and Second to None in the Panhandle
The Ritchey House
J.T. TYGRET, Manager
Only the Best of Everything
Served on our Tables
RATES REASONABLE
HEREFORD
Well Ventilated Rooms
Good Clean Beds
TEXAS
foreign news
* industrial news
national news
state news
All The News!
You can get both the SEMI-WEEKLY
NEWS (Galveston or Dallas) and the
Hereford Reporter for 12 months for the
low clubbing price of $2.25. You thus get
THREE papers a week (156 a year) which
will give you at a merely nominal
cost, ALL THE NEWS of the week
The opening of the 20th Century will be a
period of unusual interest. Keep posted!
Take the SEMI-WEEKLY NEWS in con-
nection with your local paper and thus get
your information quickly.
SUBSCRIBE NOW!
Send all orders to the Hereford Re-
porter, Hereford, Texas.
Twenty cents for 20 words or leu. This
is the rate for classified advertising in any
one of the following papers: Galveston
Semi-Weekly News, Dallas Semi-Weekly
News, Galveston Daily News, Dallas Morn-
ing News. Send Cash with order.
Subscribe for the Reporter.
PAN-AMERICAN EXPOSITION
At Buffalo, N. Y., from May i to
November i, 1901.
To All Agents :
For the above occasion regular
summer tourist tickets may be sold
daily from this date until further ad-
vice from Hereford, Texas, to Buf-
falo, N. Y., and return at the rate
of $66.90. I4t£'
Late last week B. T Hinton pur-
chased the fine residence property
of Lyman A. Montgomery for $825,
cash. This is one of the choicest
little residence properties in Here-
ford.
Our other books have arrived and
those wanting them please come.
Gough's Drug Store.
The Baptists have about $1,300
made up for a church house and will
begin building at once.
Prepare for the northers by buy-
ing glass at Gough's.
First-class job work is our special-
ty. Let us figure on your work.
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Hereford Reporter (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, September 20, 1901, newspaper, September 20, 1901; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth142263/m1/7/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.