The Clifton Record (Clifton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, March 17, 1922 Page: 2 of 8
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I
HAD NOT SEEN
A WtLL DAY Hi
TWEE TEARS
Dallas Resident Had Baca Liv-
ing on Liquid Diet for Months
Before She Got Tanlac.
Dyspepsia and Other Troubles
Quickly Overcome and Health
Now Splendid-Looks Tin
Years Younger.
-r>..
THRIFT
“When my wife began taking Tania* i
she had been living on liquid food for !
long time, but now she eats any- :
thing she wants and everything seems I
to agree with her,” said J. G. Randall J
2408 Cedar Springs, Dallas, Texas.
"1 don’t believe she knew a well j
day for three years and I was very '
much worried about her as 1 could
just see that she was dwindling down i
in weight and losing strength every I
day. She complained a good deal, too, j
of her heart fluttering and we thought
she had heart trouble of a serious
character, but we now know that it
was entirely from her stomach.
“Tanlac was exactly what she need-
ed. She says she feels fine now and
certainly she looks better and younger
by ten years.”
Tanlac is sold in Clifton by Carpen-
ter Bras., and by leading druggists in
every town. (adv.)
a
One way to accomplish thrift is
most for your money possible when you
a purchase of any kind.
In buying Magnolia Quality Gasoline and
Dependable Lubricating Oils, you n
end.
Tires Tubes, Etc.
Free Air and Water
JOE K~ -FRANK J
McSpadden & Bradstreet
BIDS WANTED
The Commissioners Court of Bos-
j ing next Friday with a barbecue at-
tached. The dinner Tuesday was all
that could be wished, but it was de-
cided to have a barbecue this time,
j Work on the bridge near John Dahl's are hearing so much about nowadays?
will be finished in a few days and then' It seems to me that It is being diverted
a bridge put in on the branch at C. C. from the uses it was originally in-
YOVNG MAN. HOW WILL YOU
USB YOU* MONEY AND TIME?
It is just as important to be able to
take care of your money after you get
it as it ia to be able to get it. We
had a great time while it lasted. We
made more money in 1919 and 1920
than ever before in our lives. We
spent it with the recklessness that
always follows “easy money." We
(By Joe Sappington)
What about this twilight sleep
que County will until 10 a. m. Monday
! March 13, 1922, receive sealed bids
for worjf necessary to construction,; »l]y going into debt for them, and
and far j*»*t(said construction j paid prices entirely beyond reason,
including !*#pemnj 0f excavation) of j We loaded ourselves with things we
approximately 750 linear feet of ce-) couldn’t use, and debts we couldn’t
ment curb. 12x8x6 inch, and approxi- ] pay. During 1921, we struggled to
mately 7M) feet of cement gutter an- j get out of our bad situation. We
BOY SCOUTS
About fifty boys h
salves with the local
Messrs. Robt. L.
Rea and Alf. Price
as the local Troop
committee last wee
the National
the following officers:
Rev. Clarence A.
Scout Masters,
Hanson's, and a very had crook will | tended for and if unchecked may enter ’ nexed t0 e#id curb, 18x6 ineh re.in-1 fought hard, and the fight is over and
bought things we didn’t need gener- and Fred Nelson.
amination will be
night at 7:30 at the City
boys are urged to be
The Clifton Record
Newa now $2.50 per ys
turned yesterday from a trip to Frank be eliminated. When this is completed ( into the social fabric of this entire
Kell and other point* 1 we will have three of the worst places country. I notice from the press that
The little ten month* old Imhy of in nur roads made good. j it is hieing tried out on prisoners sc-
Mr. and Mr*. Will Cranfill of Tolar .Mrs. K. G. Cranhll and daughter, cused of crime, as It is claimed by
died on the 2nd from whooping cough. Miss Esther, from near Help, visited physicians that one under its somnam-
Tuemiay’s road working failed to relatives and friends in the Gap last bulistic influence is incapable of tell-
finish the Gap lane, however some j week, and Miss Thelma Perry went; mg a lie, no matter how inveterate a
over 300 yards was put in fine shape home with them for a few days visit, j Jjar one may be. Of course I have no
Friday, being the 25th birthday of desire to protect criminals and am
j Alfred Nelson, several of his relatives l not raising these objections on their
arid friends treated him to a surprise account; hut what 1 fear is its too
dinner where he is temporarily batch-1 K,.n,.ra] application among the laity,
ing on his father’s place in the Live Tht, mM8t farming thing of all, if we
Oak community. are correctly informed, is the ease
Price Cox was down from Fairy1 arul simplicity with which it can be
Friday and bought himself a mighty I administered. Think what a deadly
fat cow. weapon it would be in the hands of
| Mr. and Mrs. Barry Goar and-child- „ne’s enemy—or his wife? While I’m
have
forced by ore-half and three-fourths | the end is in sight.
Every gTeat auth-
we are
BflDDBaDDDBDDB
BO
fl
says that
getting back to normal. As the Eur-
inch steel: also approximately 140 ority on business
linear feet of cement sidewalk 4 feet
wide and 6 inches thick; mixture for opean Nations are getting along in
walk, curb and gutter to be l:2Vj:5; ! the process of readjustment they have j
topping for curb, walk and gutter to
Indigestion
Mapy persons, otherwise
vigorous and healthy, are
bothered occasionally with
Indigestion. The effects of a
disordered stomach on the
system are dangerous, and
prompt treatment of Indiges-
tion Is important. “The only
medicine 1 have needed has
been something to aid diges-
tion and clean the liver,"
writes Mr. Fred Ashby, a
McKinney, Texas, farmer.
“My medicine Is
B
D
a
a
o
a
o
have three-fourths inch mixture 1:2
mortar. Specifications on file with
the County Judge. Separate bids re-
t quested for construction and for ma-
, terial. Said curb, gutter and walk
; to be constructed on the Court House
! lawn at Meridian, Texas. The court
| reserves the right to reject any or all
• bids.
51-2tc. W. A. YORK, County Judge.
B
B
D
B
B
B
Thedford’s
BLACK-DRAUGHT
for Indigestion and stomach
trouble of any kind. I have
never found anything that
touches the spot, like Black-
Draught. I take it In broken
doses after meals. For a long
time I tried pills, which grip-
ed and didn’t give the good
results. BlackDraught liver
medicine Is easy to take, easy
to keep, Inexpensive.”
Oet a packago from your
druggist today—Ask for and
Insist upon Thedford’a—the
only genuine.
Get it today.
B
0
D
D
D
B
D
D
D
B
D
O
8
I ren and Owen McAdams have re
I turned from the oil fields.
Louis Hill, Martin Liertelsoft and
Willard Murphree are enjoying the
| comforts of home once more.
Relatives here received word last
week from Mr. and Mrs. Rady Pendle-
ton of Loraine that their ten days old
I baby was dead.
1 The play rendered by the school
in the Four Co. Hall was enjoyed
by all who heard it.
Mr. am) Mrs. Walter Tindall and
Mrs. W. C. Pendleton and two least
1 children, Grady and" TtbToTbyrwssnt up
I to Hamilton Sunday evening. Walter
was a petit juror for the week but the
■ jury was excused.
! The County Democratic Executive
| Committee met in Meridian last Sat-
urday and elected R. S. (Bob) Robert-
! son to fill out the unexpired term of
! Frank Gandy, deceased. They also
| passed appropriate resolutions on the
| death of our respected chairman with
the request that the Meridian Tribune
not guilty of any grave crime, or at
STOP THAT ITCHING
you suffer from any form
least any crime that would send me ' „kin disease such as Itch,
of
Eczema,
to the penitentiary for any long term
of years, still 1 would not care to
undergo any prolonged cathechism
without the proper safeguards within
easy reach.
Just suppose the wife of my bosom
should become proficient in the use
of this subtle drug and should admin-
ister it to me while 1 was wrupt in
slumber and then begin her inter-
rogations of many''1 years standing,
and I should make truthful answers
to said interrogations, what standing
would 1 have with her afterwards?
None, positively none.
By nature I’m a kind man and have
always tried to follow the Golden Rule,
and have no desire to humiliate or
give pain to a fellow being, and if 1
had it in my power to put my worst
! enemy in a position where U* would
I be compelled to tell the truth, 1 would
^ not do it. For instance, take the case
of Bill Hodges, a friend of mine and
Tetter, Ringworm, Crackhands, Sore
Feet, Dandruff, Old Sores or Sores on
to buy our products and to pay what
they owe us. Capital in this country
is seeking investment, and when mon-
ey is at work, prosperity follows, be-
cause money at work means industrial
activity and industrial activity means
large buying power on the part of
working people. Beyond question,
prosperity is with us, and wise people
both young and old will get ready for
it. New oil fields are being developed
every day right in our midst. Build-
ing is going on everywhere. Charters
are being issued for large corpora-
tions. The tomato, berry, fruit and
other crops will be money in a short
time. Every young man and woman
publish the same. , , , .
’ Mrs. L. C. Perry and little Miss < «'ne of the biggest liars that ever went
Anga Jaunice of the Goar community
unhung; now why should I want to
visited several days last week in the
home of her father-in-law, A. H. Perry '
and family.
Commissioner Raley watched the |
roud workers Tuesday.
! humiliate him by doping
making him confess to his
him and
lies? In
children, or any other skin disease,! ought to know that the big opportun-
we will sell you a jar of Blue Star ities in prosperous times go to those
Remedy on a guarantee that if not j who are best trained to serve them,
satisfied we will refund your money. [ Business training makes the differ-
tfc. Price & Stuart.1 ence between small earning power and
.--[ large earning power.
No. 549 We are entering a period in which
Official Statement of the Financial a thorough business education is more
Condition of the j necessaTy than ever. You must have
at Clifton, s5"o"f Te».?at the close | 5^e sP-ial ability >ou can off,‘r that
of business on the 10th day of March * ™«ble you to put it over. \ou
1922, published in the Clifton Record, must also get your training as soon
a newspaper printed and published at
Clifton, Texas, on the 17th day of
March, 1922. .
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts, per-
personal or collateral $157,003.67
YOUR PROPERTY
Is worth more today than it was a year ago—it
would cost you a lot more to build it—if the
Fire Demon got it—so w* *r not increase your
Insurance? Some are adding a third, others
more. Is it the wise thing—th esafe thing—to
do? It takes only a little accident to turn the
biggest house into a pile of ashes.
H. W. HERING
Office—First Guaranty State Bank Building
Clifton, Texas
EAGLE “MIKADO”
MOB
Par Sala at jroar Daalar
encilNo.174
M l K A r V
Mad* la fir* grad—
»'■ ‘'
EACH MIKADO
EAGLE PENCIL COMPANY, NEW YORK
the first place Bill’s lies never harmed
| any one and all his daring escapades
] took place in Kentucky before he
j moved to Texas. N’o one ever be-
| lieved he was a member of the McCoy-
' Hatfield crowd and had been shot
! through and through more times than
j he ha’d fingers and toes, as he was in
, the habit of asserting every time he
! got drunk. ' As 1 said back about six
j inches up this column, I believe in
! doing unto others as 1 would he done
by others, and what assurance have
J I that Bill wouldn’t turn the tables
; and get my goat by employing the
same methods on me that I had used
on him? He might ask me to relate
that dreadful encounter I had that
night at a dance on Cave Creek in
which I whipped three desperate char-
acters and then kicked them through
a barbed wire fence.
This twilight sleep stuff may be
all right if held in proper bouhffs, but
it could be carried to extremes.
Loans, real estate None
Overdrafts ......... None |
Liberty and Victory Bonds
deposited 26,950.00
Bonds and Stocks 200.00
Banking House » 6,000.00 [
Other Real Estate 1,000.00;
Furniture and Fixtures 4,000.00
Due from other Banks and
Bankers, and cash on
hand 26,183.16 \
Interest in the Depositors’
Guaranty Fund 4,375.84
Assessment in Depositors’
Guaranty Fund 6,850.00
Acceptances and Bills of
Exchange—Grain 2,740.96
Stock in Federal Reserve
Bank, Dallas, Texas 1.800.00
Stock in Federal Interna-
tional Banking Company 810.00
LAUNDRYr
Have made arrangements with J. A.
Brewei^to handle and be agent for the
American Steam Laudry at Temple.
All work guaranteed and your laundry
will be appreciated and looked after
by owner personally.
American Laundry, Temple, Texas,
50-4tc.
H. Shanklin, Prop.
Total ' $238,513.63
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock paid in.......$ 40,000.00
Surplus Fund ........................ 20,000.00
Undivided Profits, net 3,588.78
Individual Deposits, sub-
ject to check ............. 127,952.70
Cashier’s Checks ............... 35.27
Bills Payable and Redis-
counts ............................... 19,848.05
Bonds deposited ................. 26,950.00
Reserved for taxes............. 138.83
as possible and in a thorough and
practical manner.
The Tyler Commercial College, Ty-
ler, Texas, the largest and most pro-
gressive commercial school in the
country, located in the most healthful
part of the state, being the highest
point between the Red river and the
Gulf, is ready at all times to give you
a thorough business education. You
can’t afford not to investigate our
courses of General Business, General
Banking, General Railroad, Bookkeep-
ing, Business Finance, Shorthand, Cot-
ton Classing, Telegraphy and Wire- j
less Telegraphy and Telephony. The j
only school in the South giving six ’
complete business courses. Fill in j
and mail coupon for large free cat-)
alogue.
. j .
Name
Address
Total...............$238,513.63
STATE OF TEXAS.
County of Bosque:
We, R. R, Waldrop, as president
and 0. A. Bronstad, as cashier of said
bank, each of us, do solemnly swear
that the above statement is true to
the best of our knowledge and belief.
R. R. Waldrop, President.
O. A. Bronstad, Cashier.
CORRECT—ATTEST
E. E. Prescher
C. Tyssen
H. A. Nelson
Directors.
Subscribed and sworn to before me
this 14th day of March, A. D. 1922.
C. G. Bronstad, Notary Public,
(L. S.) Bosque County, Texas.
CITY TAILORS
The only dry cleaning plant in Bell
county, doing nothing but fancy clean-
ing, on evening and fancy dressing,
also fancy dyeing. We cater to out-
of-town work, pay parcel post one
way, and appreciate your business. ’
City Tailors, H. Shanklin, Prop.
49/5tc Temple, Texas.
WHAT do you
* * consider a fair
price for a good suit?
Name the figure and
let us show how much,
quality it will boy in
a suit “Tailored to
Measure by Bom.**
The Bom fine meets
the demand for lower
prices without sacri-
ficing anything in
quality; large sales
volume makes this
possible.
Come in while
woolen stocks are
complete and see the
really fine doths we
offer, tailored as you
like, at your preferred
price.
JOHNE. SVERSON *
'im;
.1
WHAT’S BETTER THAN GOOD BEAD?
Fresh Bread at the City Bakery every day—
also Parker House Rolls, Buns, Pies and fVl-
For Good Things to Eat, Come la
THE CITY BAKERY
E. A. JACKSON, Prop.
k
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Baldridge, Robert L. The Clifton Record (Clifton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, March 17, 1922, newspaper, March 17, 1922; Clifton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth775655/m1/2/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nellie Pederson Civic Library.