The Aspermont Star (Aspermont, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 22, 1913 Page: 4 of 6
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The Family Grocery
We carry a choice line of Family
Groceries. Our stocklis right |up
to now. Our pricesjare right and
. our terms STRICTLY CASH.
will appreciate your trade.
FRANK LEMLEY Proprietor
blacksmith - shop
Do all Kinds of First Class Blacksmith Work
Your Horse Shod While You Wait
Have First Class Workman in Shop
At All Times
Matt OSBORN
6oal, Grain and Hay
Come to us to buy your feed. We
always keep a good supply and
will appreciate your patronage
FIELD SEEDS FOR PLANTING
See Us for Coal
Store first door north of Livery Stable
Phone No. 62
McLAURY &
i
We Loan Money
ON LAND
Write Insurance of All Kinds,'Make Abstracts and
do a General Real Estate Business. See us when
in Aspermont. PIERCE & TILLOTSON
¡very, Feed
AND SALES STABLE
B. BINGHAM
Proprietor
Good, Serviceable Teams and Up-to-now Rigs. Special
attention to Transient Trade. Feed Always on Hand.
Aspermont, Texas
CITY BARBER SHOP
SamW. Thomas
Proprietor
All Work First Class
HOT AND COLD
BATHS
Agent Haskell Steam
Laundry. Basket
Leaves Every Mon-
day, Returns Thurs-
day.
West Side Square
The STAR and Semi-
Weekly Farm? News, $1.75
Notice of Constable's Sale.
REAL ESTATE.
Notice is hereby given that by
virtue of an execution issued ou
of the Justice Court, Precinct
No. Stonewall County, State of
Texas, by J. L. Chennault, Jus-
tice of the Peace for said Pre-
cinct, on a judgement rendered
in said Court on the 3rd dav of
March A, D. 1913, and directed
and delivered to me as Constable
of Precinct No. 1, Stonewall
County, Texas, I have levied up-
on and will offer for sale at tbe
Court House door in Stonewall
County, Texas, on the 3rd day
of June A.' D. 1913 same being
the first Tuesday in said month,
between the hours of 10 o'clock
a, m. and 4 o'clock p. m. on said
day, at public auction to the
highest bidder, for cash in hand,
the following described real es-
tate, to-wit:
An undivided One-Fourth in-
terest in and to Lot No. 7 in
Block No. 38 in the original plat
of the town of Aspermout, Tex-
as as shown by the said plat re-
corded in Book "A" Page 640
Deed records of Stonewall Coun-
ty, Texas, also the NW one-four-
tn of Sec. No. Ill, Block D, Cer-
tificate No. 30.2538, H. and T C.
Ry. Co., survey containing 164
acres of land. Said Lot and
Land being levied upon as the
property of the within named
defendant, T.-J. Davis, and will
be sold to satisfy a judgement
rendered in the Justice Couat of
Precinct No. 1, Stonewall Coun-
ty, on the 3rd day of March A.
D. 1913 in faver of Brvant-Link
Co., a Corporation, and against
the said T. J. Davis for the] sum
of Sixty-One and 25 one-hun
dredth dollars, principal, with"
interest at the rate of 10 per cent
per annum from March3rd, 1913
and the further sum of Twenty-
Nine and 25 one-hundredth dol-
lars, costs, and costs accruing by
virtue of said suit.
Witness My Hand this 1st day
of May A. D. 1913.
S. W. Thomas.
Constable of Precinct No. 1,
Stonewall Co., Texas.
Sidney ThomaS.
To those who knew the late
Sidney J. Thomas" the following
account of his last hours on earth
will seem wholly in keeping with
the brave and simple and sweet
characted of this man, The
pathos of it will appeal peculiarly
to his fraters of the press, as to
all others who revere a pellucid
soul ennobled by a clean mind
and a life unspotted and un-
afraid. This extract is from the
news columns of the Austin
Statesman:
ISPeaceful unto death, his last
wish granted that he be permit-
ted to bid farewell t6 the child-
ren he loved so well and whom he
had fathered as their superinten-
dent—the inmates of the State
Inslitution for the Deaf and
Dumb—Sidney J. Thomas, at the
age of 44, died, as reported in the
Statesman of yesterday, shortly
after midnight Wednesdav morn
ing. "What does it matter if I
die a few hours sooner?" h^ ask-
ed the physicians and nurses at
the Austin Sanitarium where he
had been confined since April 30'
when he underwent an operation
for appendicitis. This he said in
urging them to move him to the
institution that he could bic fare-
well to the inmates. "My end is
near, and I would be so grateful
to be spared until I had said good
bye to them. It is my last wish."
It was granted. Earlv Tuesday
afternoon he was removed in an
ambulance to his apartments at
the school for the deaf. The
V '
My Doctor Said
"Try Cardui," writés Mrs. Z. V. Spell, of Hayne, N. C
" I was in a very low state of health, and was not able to
be up and tend to my duties. I did try Cardui, and soon
began, to feel better. I got able to be up and help do my
housework. I continued to take the medicine, and now T
am able to do my housework and to care for my children,
and I feel as though I could never praise Cardui enough
for the benefits I have received."
TAKE TW~
LARDUI WomansTonic
Cardui is successful, because it is made especially for
women, and acts specifically on the womanly constitution.
Cardui does one thing, and does it well. That explains
the great success which it has had, during the past 50 years,
in helping thousands df weak and ailing women back to
health and happiness.
If you are a woman, feel tired, dull, and are nervous,
cross and irritable, it's because you need a tonic. Why not
fry Cardui ? Cardui builds, strengthens, restores, and acts
in every way as a special, tonic remedy for women. Test
ft for yourself. Your druggist sells Cardui. Ask him.
Ufe
.
Write to: Ladies' Advisory Dept., Chattanoos
tor Special Instructiont. andM-page book, "Hone 1
IcKKfcrStoS&SSbl'
children—the inmates—passed
bv his door in one long prooess-
ion. \ To each he spoke in signs
as he or she passed, saying "fare-
well." Soon after, in the pre-
sence of his family, wife and two
children, to whom he spoke a few
words of encouragement, he fell
asleep' A few hours later he
passed into unconsciousness, and
a little later he died.
"A little later he died,'—yes,
but if Heaven is true, if the aspi-
rations of ever}-, manly ambition,
the hope of every human heart,
the promise of «¿very sacred text,
the rejuvenescence of every seed,
the prayers of every parent, the
clairvoyance of the saints and the
eternal beneficience of God are
not mere crumbling fantasies,
$hen there isa realm somewhere,
near or far, in which just men
are made perfect and there is
no death for those who, like Sid-
ney Thomas, bear the roseate
imprimatur of the Lord's ap-
proval.—Dallas News.
Cheaper Money Is Needed.
The April Crop Reporter is-
sued by the Federal Agricuitural
Department gives some interest-
ing "statistics on farm loans
throughout the United States
and Texas takes a high rank
a mongf States in interest rates
The average annual rate paid by
farmers in the United States is
7.75 and in Texas 9.97. The farm
indebtedness in Texas is approx-
ASPERMONT
Telphone Exchangej
J. E. DAVIS, Prop.
/
Better equipped than ever
before to serve the public, j
both with local and long
distance service.
Your Patronage
Solicited.
mately $210,000,000 and the ex-
cess interest paid by Texas farm
ers over the average in tbe Unit-
ed States approximate5 $5,000,000
per annum.
No country has ever been able
to build up its productive indus"
tries on 10 per cent money. The
effect of the highest rate of in-
terest upon agriculture may be
found in the passing of over 2,400
farms per annum from the home
owner to the tenant class.
Miss May Bell Riddel is home
from Hawley where she taught
school this year.
H. Boydston was down from
Brazos Vallev this week.
Henry Townsend wes up from
Brandenburg ^iottday.
1 McCORD REALTY & ABSTRACT f
'♦X
¥
COMPANY
g Loan Money
Make Abstracts
*
*
*
Write Fire Insurance
Do Notary Work %
*
i«
*
See Them
Produce Wanted!
) ; . k\ £g|
We pay the iiignest market price for
Turkeys, Ghickens, Butter andjEggs,
Hides and Skins
CITY MEAT MARKET. F-J 1)AlBY-Prop
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McCarty, Richard H. The Aspermont Star (Aspermont, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 22, 1913, newspaper, May 22, 1913; Aspermont, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth168530/m1/4/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Stonewall County Library.