The Seminole Sentinel (Seminole, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 19, 1931 Page: 4 of 4
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Remember We Give
PROriT SHARING COUPONS
We Appreciate Your Business
PHONE No. 15 Richards SEMINOLE
Chase Sanborns Coffee
'A Store That Satisfies*
Star Brand Shoes
USE =
Magnolia Petroleum Co.
= PRODUCTS
Bedford Roach, Resident Agent
Seagraves, Texas
This Week
h Arthur Brisbane
We decide to postpone the hulldi. ,
of airplanes, submarines, airplane car-
riers and cruisers with airplane plat-
forms for feur of arguments resulting
in a special session.
Haywood’s
BARBER SHOP
M
A first class place, where
your patronage is
appreciated
m
0 F HAYWOOD, Prop
Dr. L. D. Richards
PHYSICIAN AND
SURGEON
CALLS ANSWERED
PROMPTLY
-•ft*
Seminole.
Texas
The’French, logical, determined, al-
lowing nothing to Interfere with na
tlonal defense, proceed to build a
aeries of armored cruisers of 28,000
tons each to offset the marvelously
efficient German cruisers, culled "min
lature battleships.”
And France will continue building
submarines. Site knows that airplanes
and submarines represent, iu the high
est degree, the power to punish other
nations, and that the nation with
power to punish Is the one that will
not be provoked or attacked.
If anybody attacked this nation
through the air, it could only burst
Into tears. It isn’t prepared to resent
or punish anything.
In Britain a car called the "Rorall,"
with two sets of wheels, has been suc-
cessfully tried on British railroad
tracks and highways. On the tracks
it rolls on regular steel wheels. Ar-
rived at the end of its rail journey,
rubber-tired wheels are lowered below
the level of the steel wheels, which
are inside of the wheels with pneu-
matic rubber tires.
And tUe coach motor bus or truck
is ready to leave the rails and finish
its journey on the highway.
If otir railroads used such vehicles,
motor trucks and busses could not
successfully compete with railroads be-
tween large cities as they do now.
And the value of the railroads’
rights of way would he at least double
Cleaning, Pressing, Alterations
and Mending
We Will Please You
SEAGRAVES TAILORS
O. F. Haywood Local Agent
Equip Your Car With
GOODYEAR
TIRES
We Have in Stock
Pathfinder. All Weather
and Double Eagle
Gulf Service Station
Morris Stark, Prop.
Phone 100
Crime develops the jackals. When
a killer had finished his man and left
him lyfhg dead In an alley, In the rear
of (587 South State street, Chicago, two
young men, twenty and twenty-two
years old, following the murderer at
a distance, stripped the corpse of Its
clothing as their share.
Detective Harold Fogarty got, them
and the clothing, including the shoes.
A photograph shows one of the youths
laughing as the clothing Is held be
fore them.
Dr. Horneil Hart of Bryn Muwr col-
lege, where many young women accu-
mulate knowledge back of their high
brows, tells parents that eurl.v mar-
riages are usually failures.
Those married before tw enty are ten
times more apt to land in the divorce
court than others. Trial marriages
fail because they are experimental and
secret.
They fall also, although Doctor
Hart doesn’t mention it, because the
muu in such a marriage lacks respect
and affection for the woman.
Gaines County Abstract Company
Prompt, Efficient Service
One of the best equipped Abstract Planti
lin Texas, covering all lands and town
lots in Gaines County.
Notary Public in office.
4.1, lilitr, Manager
Seminole, lexis
When a lion goes hunting, Jackals
follow. When he has eaten his fill
they eat.
When the big brblge'over the Hud-
son Is completed New York city will
have Its first above-ground connection
with the rest of the American conti-
nent, and New York newspapers can-
not agree on a name for the bridge.
“Washington Memorial bridge,” Is tha
official name thus far.
Mr. Mason of the Post wants to call
It “Palisades bridge" and Mr. Patter-
son, who has a newspaper, wants to
call It the “Hudson bridge." A wise
compromise might call It the “Edlsoh
bridge."
Edison brought light across the Hud-
son, from New Jersey to Manhattan,
and spread It all over the world.
This writer back in the night of
time saw him putting lights In "Harry
Hill’s," where John L. Snlllvan fought
It would please a good many Ameri-
cans to honor Edison, the greatest man
this country has developed since Lin-
coln, and to do It while he Is aliva
to know about it.
Stalin of Russia, who ought to know,
does not ngiee with American finan-
ciers who predict disastrous failure for
Russia’s “five-year pirn.”
Ho says the plan will be completed
certainly inside of four years, perhaps
In three.
Its\ 1411 bv Kina Features Syndicate. lac.)
Notice of Sheriffs Sale
The Sta‘e of Texas,
County of Gaines.
Notice is hereby given that by vir-
tue of a certain order of sale issued
out of the District Court of Gaines
County, Texas, on the 7th day of
February, A. D. 1931, by Carroll
Cobh, clerk of said court, on a judg-
ment for the sum of J892.16 and costs
of suit, which judgment was rendered
in favor of the Blythe County Line
Independent School District in a cer-
tain cause Numbered 831 and styled
P. F. Murray vs. Blythe County Line
Independent School District, and
placed in my hand* for service, I,
Frank Kuykendall as Sheriff of
Gaines County, Texas, did on the 10th
day of February A. D. 1931, levy on*
certain real estate situated in Gaines
County, Texas, and described as fol-
lows, to-wit:
Survey No. 6, Abstract No. 1127,
Block C-34, containing 640 acres;
Survey No. 6, Abstract No 1124,
Block C-34, containing 640 acres;
Survey No. 7, Abstract No. 1119,
Block C-34, containing 640 acres:
The Southwest one-fourth (sw 1-4) of I
Survey No. 8, Abstract No. 1116, |
Bleck C-34. and containing 160 acres
of land.
And levied upon as the property of
i
O. M. HERRING
Attorney-at-Law
General Practice In all the Courts
Seagraves : Texas
Texas,
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P. F Murray, and that on the first
Tuesday in March, A. D. 1931, the
same being the 3rd day of March, at
the court house door of Gaines Coun-
ty, in the town of Seminole, Texas,
between the hours of 10 o’clock
and 4 o’clock p. m., by virtue of
levy and said order of sale I »il,
aaid above described real estav
public vendue, foreash, to the highest
bidder as the property of P. F. Mur-
ray.
And in compliance with law l give
this notice by publication in the Eng-
lish language once a week for three
consecutive weeks immediately pre-
ceding said day of sale in the Semi-
nole Sentinel, a newspaper published
in Gaines County, Te<as.
Wttness my hand this the 10th day
of February, A. D. 1931.
Frank Kuykendall, Sheriff,
Gaines County, Texas.
?
Texas Utilities
Company
LIGHT and POWER
We Appreciate Our Privilege To
Serve You.
na
MM
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Stone, Harry N. The Seminole Sentinel (Seminole, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 19, 1931, newspaper, February 19, 1931; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth576682/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Gaines County Library.