The Junction Eagle (Junction, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, March 16, 1923 Page: 3 of 8
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Friday, Ifarch 1C, IMS.
THI JUNCTION EAGLE
PACK THUS.
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BROOKS' DAIRY FARM
Pure Sweet Milk Delivered.
Will Appreciated
r Your Patronage
v Phone 64 S L
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J. C. BEDD1NGFIELD,
Auditing
General Accounting
Systems Installed, Financial
and Profit and Loss
Statements Prepared
Income Tax Service.
Phone 18.
From Our Exchanges.
BOUNTY ON WOLVES
RAISED TO $20 BY CLUB.
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JETTON DAIRY
Pure, Wholesome Sweet
Milk, 12 */2c per Quart
Delivered.
§ §
Want a few more custom-
ers for night or delivered
in time for breakfast in
the morning.
Pure bred English White $
Leghorn eggs for sale
Phone Boyd Jetton.
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Own a Home
JOE H. RAMSEY,
Building Contractor
Painting and Papering
Junction, Texas.
..........................
T WEAVER II. BAKER
County Judge
*, Kimble County, Texas
j —LAWYER—
Ti' Junction, Texas
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HORACE E. WILSON
Lawyer.
Will Practice in all State
and U. S. Courts
Real Estate and Vendor
Lein Notes Bought and Sold
Office West Side Court
House Square
FRANK L. WILSON
\bstractor. Notary Public
Writes Contracts, Deeds,
Mortgages, Releases, Etc.
Loans and Fire Insurance.
Office West Side Court
House Square
M. K. HLAChiil RN
Lawyer
Mu-. A? i,. II 4«d A
m i rm utT ui an i>uiu'
and Federal Courts
Abstract of Titles of
Kimble County.
I STEVENSON A KNKTSCI1
Lawyers.
• Junction. Texas.
At a meeting of the McCul-
lough County Wolf Club the past
week, it was decided to raise the
bounty on wolves from $10 to
$20, this special offer to hold
good for the next sixty days.
It was stated that the grow-
ing scarcity of the animals and
the difficulty encountered in trap
ping them led to the special offer
and it is believed that this will
cause them to be pretty well
cleaned up during the next sixty
days.—Brady Sentinel.
--*-
KOTHMANN TO FT. WORTH
WITH CATTLE FOR SHOW.
as “Associate in Art,” or “As-
sociate in Science," as the case
may be.—Stephenville Tribune.
BRADY CELEBRATION
POSTPONED TILL APRIL
Elgin O. Kothmann, Hereford
breeder and owner of the Pre-
mier ranch, is in attendance at
the stock show being held in Ft.
Worth this week, and has four
of his fine Herefords there on
exhibition. Mr. Kothmann had
the cattle shipped last week and
his herdsman, Draper Green, ac-
companied them. Elgin states
his cattle are not in the very
best of condition for show pur-
poses, but the animals he has on
exhibition are representative
ones taken from his splendid
herd of registered Herefords
and they represent the most pop
ular blood lines of the breed.
Mr. Kothmann has been a
breeder of registered Herefords
for a number of years and his
fine cattle have become so well
advertised that he enjoys a good
demand for his young bulls, and
il is believed the animals he has
taken to Ft. Worth will find a
ready sale if he desires to sell
them at this time.—Mason Co.
N e ws.
. ——.........•—
ABILENE TO BCILD
BIG COTTON MILL.
Announcement is made here
that construction work on a new;
modern fireproof cotton oil mill
located in the southeast portion!
of the city, will start just as
soon as material can be gut he red
together.
A deed citing a consideration
of $4,000 transferring Lot One,
Block 100, which is a tract of
land 5110 feet square, just west
I of the Abilene and Southern
{ work shops, and on the Abilene
, and Southern railway tracks,
from the Kauffman Oil Mill Com
i any, KautVnmn, Texas, to
j Wooten and Simmons, of ( hu-k-
asha, Oklahoma, has been tiled
w it h t he county clerk.
Messrs. Wooten and Simmons
are large oil mill operators, own-
The Brady Sentinel carried
the announcement last week to
the effect that their big celebra-
tion, “In the Days of ’49,” would
be postponed until San Jacinto
Day, April 21st. This big event
was to have been held at Brady
on Independence Day, but the
bad weather and muddy roads
necessitated the postponement.
The editor of this paper had
planned to attend this celebra-
tion and many others from this
county would have doubtless at-
tended, but for the rains.
The event had been widely
advertised and promised to be' [jj>
a great day and will doubtless j <•>
be an even bigger celebration in ?
April.
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HODGES HOTEL
MRS. R. J. MOTLEY, Proprietress.
A HOME-LIKE HOTEL FOR LOCAL PEOPLE
AND THE TRAVELING PUBLIC.
RATES $2.25 PER DAY.
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PHILIP LUTHRINGER
Roosevelt, Texas,
WINDMILL ERECTING AND REPAIRING
Now is the time to have your Mills Fixed up for the
Coming Spring. Avoid u Rush and Trouble later on
by Phoning me for your work, at Roosevelt.
Prices Reasonable. Work Done Promptly, I
■ A The Genuine £
Hiv er last
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HARDLY BELIEVABLE:-
that we can sell you Dress Materials that the hottest
summer sunshine or the hardest scrubbing* will not fade.
Don’t fail to see our new showing of the Everlast Suit-
ing, in the latest colors aurora, brown, middy blue,
gold, ponge, lavender, dark pink, and green.
If it fades, we will give you another dress pattern
free. We agree to do this because the manufacturers
guarantee, absolutely, that it is:
Fast to Soap and Boiling; Fast to Sun and Weather;
Fast to Perspiration and Uric Acid; Fast to Everything
it encounters as a dress, blouse or suiting fabric.
You can’t fully appreciate it until you have tried it,
because it doesn’t seem possible, but our guarantee1 pro-
tects you.
Let us show you the many shades and patterns.
Phillip Joseph
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mg nulls in numerous plat
loxns and Oklahoma, inch
Sw*m iwater. Hamilton,
Dallas and other places, |
twenty mills. They also
terested in numerous gin
out Oklahoma and Texa
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JUNCTION, ----- TEXAS.
♦♦♦ ♦♦♦ ♦♦♦ ♦♦♦ ♦♦♦ ♦♦♦ ♦♦♦ ♦;*
1 The STAR Car 1
pl
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ich have »H*en a<
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vv ill
U* eoustmeted o
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itiei
vte
ami
brick, and tlit* nets
hi
HIM
Ml
will
be built Id stei
fr
am*
The
machinery will a
* lit
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e me
ist modern and efli
C|l
ent
t V|
ie of
oil mill maehinerv
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w.
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of the firm lives ii
I
N. C. PATTERSON
JEWELER.
1 1
Repairing a Specialty.
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Chickashu. Oklahoma, v
M. Simmons is living in
wal«r and I<m4s rftrr th
interest thruout Texas,
vestment, when eomplet
approximate $2no,mai
gelo Standard.
THE NEW T\HI>rrtlN
COl.I.EliE DIPLOMA.
|kan J. Thomas Davis of the
1 arl»ton College was m Dallas
last week-end on coUrjiv t>u i*
ne-a. On hts return home, he
Mopped over in Arlington to dis-
cuss with I lean William.» of the
tiruldia \ ational t ollege, the
new form of diploma that will
la* presented this June hv (• nitih
and Tarleton. Vou n av le in*
terestesl to know, if you do not
already know, that (•rutdi* and
Tarleton are fanning to prearnt
to their graduates, diplomas
alike in form. The new diplo*,
ma. however, confers the B. S.
degree, as doen the A k M. C«d* |
lege diploma, but very probabbr
will confer a title of honor, such
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Perry, H. Grady. The Junction Eagle (Junction, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, March 16, 1923, newspaper, March 16, 1923; Junction, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth890615/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .