The Herald. (Carbon, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, March 31, 1905 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Eastland Centennial Memorial Library.
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ATTENTION. LADIES
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We have Ladies floods
Also notions of all kinds and classes
Positively the/most complete stock of Ladies
Underwear ever shown in our town.
Complete line of Ladies Dress Goods to arrive
t h in wee?c, C<>: n e see a n i be pleased
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t»coe»f'uo»»»9eu
W
FINLEY BROTHERS
“The Ladies’ Store.’’
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GRIGGS
■Y u:v Slaving prelty v.'e ithui
and nhe fanners are nearly done
planting corn.
Miss Lillie Bell of Stephens
.Co., is visiting her cousins Miss-
es Lila and Mattie Bell.
Miss Alice Harris of Rising
Star is visiting her parents.
f - e l- I i; at Griggs w is we.)
at .-ended Friday night.
.Cdit* Montgomery and L li
Holbrook of near Rising Star
i site i relati\ ei Friday.
Miss Bertie Holbrook has > en
>d paii ting, and says she is the
j st but it all a mistake.
* .'.a. lie Griggs made a c.-iil n
-Vacant Hill last Svnday.
J,. . . Johnson and family of
■ i ■ pla :e visited their daugfi. r
Jr;. Mi.idie Thornton< f Rommy
Sunday.
Tiie ' iggs school is n • ;gr- su-
ing nicely under the mangement
of Prof. Bam Poe.
Tom Cat.
t ■
» C A
1.
.ill ll-
nig'*t.
'Amu
1 nUlu.nit. (Urui!! sincin!.
• i >■. ill m ’et ot t!,e i'.hj
ir, a !" rulay p.iii. lief ,i'e
■ii,i.lay l i A (n il. I 'i iig) ;".l
ii .uigc.i fur ov eiiing. an/
r >!;veil! !•)!) \V ! I I
n. :a . A: 11 ;.‘5J ran iral ia
t t 'tr.-.'-lH-uo'i' of i ionnnn.
1 'i i».*•• mi 11 in grou.i.l.
.Ml it'' invited to come.
A. Bun and .). A. iJab'aiiin,
Committee.
THE CASH STOKE.
r;
SnaKe Story
J. 0: P. are laying
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3
LOCAL NEWS. 1
cTb. Poe is i 1 Eastland.
Copy for the Herald, change
fa- ads etc., must lie rc-
town ceivcd by six o'clock Wednesday
evening to insure insertion.
Sheri(T ifedford was
f c_q o o c a g o agtuiat aaakaftiuuuo <\>r tarn
V tine rain fell Monday night.!.
1 i i \ i i i ,i*.nii«v i. vi t *• vi i ,i:<> i i i t v. ,
Look over our advertising col-
umns and see who are asking for
“St riv Brand Shoes are Better” j-vour trade.
Dr. I\\e made a business trip! OTrJy by WiHiams Iiroe.
to Cisco Friday evening.
cotton planting
it’s about
time, i ;n’L it?
Miss Aland Gunter visited Go
man Friday and Saturday.
P. (J. Crumley mal e a Lusims
t rip here yesterday.
, ^ — —------------
Rev. I. N. Reeves has been
i making some addition to his re-
id enct: tin’s wjek.
T. J.
Cox of Gorman was inf! .Mi*s. /a' v<‘1- of
town Tuesday.
Miss Ara McDaniel D visiting
at Roscoe. /
\ <^N
visited J. R. Adams and
this week
Miss Maud PoWell,
Curtis
family
FOP SALE
j residence in Carbon for cask o;
jon easy terms. Address Mrs
a student i Chlora Puett, -102 Sycamore fit.
| of Sorahton High School, visited I Abilene, Texas.
t j y
[homefolks near town Saturday ’ \—
. c: I', are laying stone
.in under four of their
'id ,'ge ; between ntre and Mon-
h i. '» hile excavating for-one
j- lI.c atones suppot oh a bridge
mar the rock quarry, thq work-
men run into a den of rattle
ii.ii.ei embracing by actual count
3.1 sdakes, two which had 21
aft lea each. On the account of
due comato^s state in which the
makes were in, they were easy
ii patched. The rock quarry is
n Jed for having a pretty fair
outlay of rattlers, especially the
watch j *>ij 1 just this side at one time
popular for Snakes of all sorts,
>ut the discovery herein laid
u'-e is beyond the dream of the
most reptilian fanatic. How-
*ver it must be so. Dan ’ Roger-
A good six room '.. J ! as about it and we know that
; i: so imbedded so deep in truth
h t it would take sixteen oxen
,i puil it out. —Barstow Journal.
Every farmer should
the “Farmers Department’’ in
the Herald, and we would be j
glad you would write an article!
to go in this department.
We have been doing our best
to have something more attract-
ive for this week. We offer this
week and until sold out, t can of
our baking powders and 1 box of
b! ling for lu . packages soda
and one set of tea spoons for 18c,
1 set of spoons and 1 lb. of high
grade pepper for 28c. We gi e
you the benefit of all the bar-
gains we buy. George White
and A. C. Brown will be the al-
falfa kings now. (We are speak-
ing for hay.) Boys Buster Brown
an f Sailor suits 45c. We saw a
W..A man the otr.er day, s nu I e
mid came to see us before uu. -
ing. ,' prmg goods blight and
new, will get millinery goods ev-
?ry wee c aatii , lie season is over
and will try to have everyt ling
different from any thing we have
heretofore sold.
1/j.Si’, f rayed or stolen; i? you
can’t find the man, go t > the
vVnme store Had yoii will i>e apt
to locate him loading up goods,
>r chafing and having a geo .! ole.
sociable time.
ctrejt and trimmed^ hats are
here. Door locks Die. 10 in. files
18c, 12 in. file.-: 17c. shoe nails.
5 ;>} our spring clothing.
Seven pic. of the best cuLee
for 95c, kit mackerel M, Sou JO it
ch pain this week to mil at 1.13,
splendid woik sh me, i>i 1>MN -.1
w a.-h.tub 50c, 50c size modi . A.
s’.ncl: salt H5c. banner oat- .’Per
Good luck \j tki.i.y p;'W has
foe, g.vi! ficus i.,2.80, belle)
f2.'J0, best $Q. 15, fresh ineal-1 <c.
75 ft. clothes line with :> z.
Hoyts clothes pins for 29c, bast-
ing spoons 9c, heavy stove pipe
10c, good pocket knives 21c.
Hopper 20c, spice 29c, shredcd
cocoa nut Sc, Crane tobacco 2fic,
Honest snuff 20c. eating potatoes
80c, .lava bucket coffee 90c.
fine coffee 7 lb. to the dollar,
big towels 14c, cottolene 95c,
sliced apples 8c, work pants (>5c
to 87c, New York shifts 15c,
brass wash boards JO:, Bell and
Good Luck snuff 17 c, oil clofTi
18c, ladies nice tan low quarter
shoes $1.29, nice stock rnr.l ting
17 Re, 25c for the best, until sold
out 22 lbs beans for $1, 10 lb
sk‘ salt 55c, 50 lb sic salt 85c, 25
If; sk salt 20c, heavy gold ds 85c,
6 I >ig box matcb.cs 22c, m . hike
J1 5c, Gilt Edge shoo polish 20c,
7 l>ars Clariet or Silk, .roap 25c,
ixle grease 4 for 25c, good soda
5c, stove shovel 5c, vaeilene 4c,
talcom powder 5c, apple vinegar
25c, galvanized buckets 18c,
cedar buckets 60c.
Ladies and childrens hats 50c
to $8.50.
Dry salt bacon 8Rc, boys
rough rider suits 61c, number 2
1 imp globes 6c, Jockey smoking
t>bacco 17e.
J. R. FOSTER & CO.
Big Lumber Mil! Burned.
Orange, Texas -A blaze started
in the Orange Lumber Company
mill Sunday morning and within
less Jhan an hour the bulding was
mmsumed, to gather v o ,ut
forty thousand feet of lumber.
Lo33 on mill $80,000, on lumber
$;,50(‘. Insurance of $48,000
was qx lied. 1 he company’s two
big tire pumps and ample hose,
with the assistance of the mill
crow and the volunteer company
s ive all lumber .stock on yard,
,i y sheds, planing ’mili and sizer
The mill was owned by M. T.
Jones Lumber Co. of Houston.
Changes In Life.
E Irnond G. Ross: born in Ohio;
moved to Kansas; printers dev-
il: tramp; editor of a country
n >wpaper: enlisted as private;
rose through lieutenant and cap-
in major: finally became
U. S. senator from Kansas; be-
come editor again; now ho is a
tramp printer in New Mexico;
swiai" just passed a bill giving
him $80. a month pension. Some
lives run in a cyclone, and his has
been one.-El Paso Herald.
TKLKPHONE. TALKS.
r.'.l'Tt J-MR FARMERS ABOUT THE TELE
PHONE AND WHY THE FARMER
SHOULD HATE ONE.
'1 lie telephones in a modern eouvsn-
ii nee for lire town residence^ | Imt a
REALIIFNFIT for the I'ani er.
» to tin town resideh'ev thu telephone
i* Itiximy connect with a uecegsltv,
tmt with the farmer it i» au
A nsoLl'TE N ECESSITY.
The town resiliences appreciate)* the
value of the telephone becauae it save
so initen time, not with standing the
fact that they live nearer the market,
i !.e grocery store, the Doctors office,
but the farmer, who, living - perhaps
miles away from town, needs a tele-
phone a tlioiisonds limes more
Some specsfic teasons tiiven in onr
c.exi tails.
S e iUejter for rates, terms and etc.
CAP. liU N 'I' JO L 10 P II O N F,
E XCIIANfl E
Jim Steelg, of Eastland, made1 . : ,-o-
;iml Sunday. , A fine lot of qnurscry stock,] •
■; \ * 'Rolan. China -shoals and pigs | j
. You ought to read a good farm | froni registered stock, B. P. 1 j
I'd per and you can get one free Rock roosters $1.00. and liar- !
by paying one year in- advance J y.ell cot ton .-.eedDOc per Inislu-l. '
im the Hei-at(l, ] 1400 lbs. dry segd cotton of Har-
• - ™ ' i well makes 500-to 530jbs. lint, i )
FOR SALE 195 acres, 70! \V. II. MeNighJ,. Dublin. Texas. | f
| j tmre.j in cultivation,’ two houses
a business trip here Saturday.
Go to Williams Bros, for nice
fresh groceries.
Mrs. Alice Speer is
in Williams Bros.’
week.
assisting
story th is
Call on
lam teaching inusic in the
Carbon School and kindly solicit
D. G. Hunt, Esq , < f Kaatij good wolf, and orchard,
land, attended Justice court hero:; G. 1). Hall. v
Saturday. . -j. : j the patronage if the people to';
; , . : By request of iipv^.Stathikrn, ; help me to buil)l up an intelest
S. W. Farrow and wife of Hied: Rev. I. N. Reeves 'will'preach
in music, which would add.great-1 '
Those wishing .
id
visited C. M. Farrow and family i at, t he Methodise church Sunday : ] v to the school,
this week, I I a. m. and at night. ] lu take lessons under my iristruc-j j
\ ‘V ] lions Ndl^nd ,see me. |
Bill Allen of- Okra, a former J The recent ram is making the I Mrs. Louise Vajliaut,
resident of Carbon, had business garden and Welds look green and, ---j---
here Saturday. . ifrosn, td-nost insures a gootl croi.} The >ce^nd (tuartely Confer- i
r 191 >5‘ ence for the Carbon and Gorman i |
Profs. Ed-and Lee Powell who - -> j chargd will meet at Carbon the I i
are teaching school at DeLeon Recently thefe has been somej^hJth of Xbril second Sundavi*
visited here Saturday. talk of incorporating Carbon. iTlld sutlir(j‘ay before Bio i'
Iff our opion it would be well for ,Jai,y £he Presiding Elder will H
Prof. A. S. Reese, who has for all, and of course Would be better
TO ODE CUSTOMERS
>•
» i
AiV i'
FRIENDS:
be here and preach Saturday at11
ji a. m., the public cordialy ’
ijivited to be present and hear j
the past few months been teach- for the town in general.
ing near Cisco, is\at home again. \ - - -y-------
-\ Every home should have some! $ro. Baily'preach Saturd/v ‘and
Sebe Basham ahd Miss Flora kind of musical instrument. Hall'.Sunday. C. E. S tat ham, Pastor.
McCollum and Collins Allen and Music Co. of Dublin will sell you | ‘__\
Miss Ruth Basham of Okra spent a piano cheap. .Write them for: '
Sunday in town. prices and terms. B. Y* P. U. Progrrm.
-------v-—;"AS—• ’ ; —r--------------. ; Lesson, Self denial,
The Eastland County Teach- For sale, two good work mares 1 Reading, Luke 9, 57-62.
ers’ Institute, which convened at both 8 years old, weigh algyut.l Leader: Mrs. Jim Puitt
Cisco Friday, was attended by 1100 lbs each, will sell for part I Song, No. 100.
.quite a crowd of teachers from cash and part on time. Call on ; Reading Matt. 16,, 24-28. Miss
Carbon and vicinity. T. L. Conway, Gray, Texas. . Maud Gartner.
--- - - -- -------- < ' Short talk on lesson.
Some cotton .on fiie at A. B. I a the Justice court last Sat- J Matt. 10, 82-38. Have you eon-
Rankin’s residence last Friday urday B.ud Littleton was fined: fest him, Mrs. W. ii. Puett.
caused considerabk' excitement $5 and the cost for violating the ‘ Phil. 3,7-14. Are you a follower
in town for a * • 'pinutes, al- stock law, but the case was ap- < of Chr ist, Wallas Curtis,
though little or no damage was pealed to higher court. A num-1 Make your self a servant unto
done. The oi - ; - 1 Gte fire is her of sipiular cases are .oa dock- all, That I gain some for Christ
unknown. et in the Justice court. 1 cor, 9, 19-24. President.
i
i!
-
We have bought the Burton-Lingo lumber yard
at Carbon, the Foe &. Poe old yard. We are now
ready to accommodate the public in lumber. We
also carry general line of feed stuff, such as corn,
chops, bran, prairie and alfalfa hay, millet, maize
and cane seed, etc. If you need anything in our
line, get our prices before buying. Thanking you
for past favors and wishing for a continuation,
ANDERSON-JACOBS & COMPANY.
C. B. POE, Maia>*;cr
y
Ii
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Curtis, W. T. The Herald. (Carbon, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, March 31, 1905, newspaper, March 31, 1905; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth522076/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Eastland Centennial Memorial Library.