The Caldwell News and The Burleson County Ledger (Caldwell, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 7, 1940 Page: 6 of 8
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The Caldwell Neva, Tiranía?, March 7,1N0
CITATION BY PUBLICATION
THE STATE OF TEXAS
line of railway to placo of begin-
ning, containing 673.87 aereo, more
or lees; subject to ouch right, title
To the Sheriff or any Constable of. «>d interest that the G. C. A 8. F.
Burleson County-Greeting: Railway Company holds in and to
[the railroad right-of-way extending
You Arc Hereby Commanded to through said land, containing 19.09
•ummon John Holliday, if living,1 crfs; and subject to such rights as
and if he is d ad. his unknown heir* 'J® Pub,i<- * •>' .haye in and to the
. . Midway Road right-of-way extend-
and legal representativej, and the . ^ thr0llJfh said land, containing
unknown heirs and legal represent- 4 3® acres, and being a part of the
atives of the said unknown heirs of | |amj described in Patent from The
John Holliday, deceased, and any state of Texas to John Holliday,
and all psrsons whose names and dated Decemb?r 5th, 1844, and
identity are unknown to plaintiff. recorded in Vol. 57, Page 451, Deed
claiming title to or an interest in Records of Burleson County, Texas,
the real property hereinafter de- anj part of the land described in
Rcribtd, by making publication of ^ee(j from Martha Jackson to J. R.
this Citation once in each week for, Hartgraves and B. F. Jackson,
four consecutive weeks previous touted April 25, 1887, and recorded
the raturn day hereof, in some ¡n Vol. 3, page 61, Deed Records
newspaper published in your Coun-1 0f Burleson County, Texas; and
ty, if there be a newspaper pub-; 0f the land described in deed
Usbed therein, but if not, then in fr0m Annie L. Hartgraves, et al
the nearest County where a news- j ¡_0 Security Trust Company, dated
paper is published, to appear^ at jujy 39^ 1936, and recorded in Vol.
the next regular term of the Dis-
trict Court of Burleson County,, to
lie holden at the Court House
thereof, in Caldwell. Texas, on the
End Monday in May, A. D. 1940,
the same being the 13th day of
78, Page 373, Deed Records of
Burleson County, Texas.
That on said date to-wit: The
1st day of January, 1940, Plaintiff
was also in possession of such
premises, and afterwards on said
May, A. D. 1940, then and there i ja¿e Defendants unlawfully entered
Ifr .v'j
to anrwer a petition filed in said
Court on the 5th day of February,
A. D. 1940, in a suit, number ?d on
the docket of said Court No. 14,094,
wherein Security Trust Company,
a corporation, Galveston, Texas i
plaintiff, ar.d John Holliday, if liv-
ing, and if he is dead, hi? unknown
heirs and legal representatives, and
the unknown heirs and legal repre-
sentatives of the .«aid unknown
heirs of John Holliday, deceased,
and any and all persons whose
names and identity a"e unknown to
plaintiff, claiming title to or an
Interest in the real property here-
inafter described, are dofendnnts,
and a brief statement of plaint^'s
cause of action, being a> follows:
That on or about the 1st drxy of
January, A. D. 1940, Plaintiff wes
lawfully ceized and possessed in fee
simple of all of the following de-
scribed property lying and being
situated in the County of Burleson
and State of Texas, and more
particularly described as follows,
to-wit:
All that certain tract and parcel
of land situated in the County of
Burleson and State of Texas, lo-
cated on the G. C. & S. F. Railway
about three miles northwest of the
town of Caldwell, Texas, and being
573.37 acres of land out of the
original 640 acre tract patented to
John Holliday, by patent recorded
In Vol. 67, page 451, Deed Records
of Burleson County, Texas, which
673.87 acre tract is more particu-
larly described as follows:
Begip-at a point where the centeT
line of the G. C. A S. F. Railway
internets the line between the John
Holliday Tract and the Allen Phil-
lips South line; Thence S. 60 W. at
75 ft. cross West right-of-way line
of said railway at 465 ft. pass an
Interior corner of the Holliday 640
acre tract at 583 ft., a rock for
corner set by Bowers in 1923 for
the N. E. corner of a 9.2 acre tract
Bowers acquired from Hartgraves
as 11 acres; Thence S. 40 E. 667
tt to the North boundary of the
Midway Road to Bowers South
East corner at 714 ft. a corner in
the center of Midway Road; thence
along the center line of the Midway
Road aa follows: N. 79 deg 20 W
880 ft.; S. 86 W. 200 ft.; N. 89 deg
EO W. 800 ft.; N. 69 W. 566 ft; N.
74 W. 687 ft.; N. 61 W. 482 ft.,
to corner in the J. B. McKeen South
line from which a P. O. marked H
brs. 8. 20 W. 16 ft.; thence S. 60
W. 107 ft., along the McKeen
South line to the S. W. corner of
the McKeen survey; thence S. 27
deg 26" E. 4674 ft. to S. E. corner
of A. 8. Mays survey in East fence
Une of a lane from which corner a
cluster of 4 trees marked X brs.
N. 60 E. 72 ft.; thence S. 82 E.
more or less paralleling the East
fence line of said land 2998 ft.;
llience S. 23 deg 50 E. (the said
lane departs to the left at a bear-
ing of 8. 88 E.) along a fence
which marks the dividing line be-
tween a field on the right side and
timber on the left comer at 1483
ft.; thence S. 30 E. with timber on
the right and an unused field on
the left, 791 ft. to a P. O. marked
H for corner (this is also where
fences at right angles to each
other corner); thence N. 62 E. 1667
ft. to the N. E. corner of G. B.
Erath survey, a P. O. marked X
brs. N. 19 W. 30 ft.; thence N. 19
W. along a well marked line and
the remains of a fence with the
Waat line of a survey made for
NaiMing 4683 ft. to Neibling's N.
W. corner; thence N. 71 E. along
a wall marked line and the remains
old fence, at 759 ft. cross
right-of-way line of the G. C.
8. F. Railway at 871 ft. crose
line of railroad at 875 ft. a
At the East end of the rail-
!tou tie; thence N. 19 W.
• well marked line but no
and Along the west line of J.
Hartgraves tract at 2408 ft. cross
the flavtk fence line of the Midway
M«d at 8438 ft. cross canter line of
mM road at 4889 ft. a corner in
Iba S. line of Allen Ph:llip's tract
«a corner
from which a P. O.
X bra. 8. 42 W. 12 ft. (this
la M ft. 8. 60 W. from a tank
I theaee 8. 60 W. along a
Jtae aad remains of an old
110T ft. crosa the East
line of G. C. A 8. F.
at I2Í7 ft. cr:j« center
upon and dispossessed it of such
premises, and withheld from it the
possession thereof to its damage
in the sum of $3000.00.
Plaintiff alleges that it and under
whom it claims and whose title it
holds have had and hold peaceable,
continuous and adverse possession,
under title from and under the
State of Texas, of the lands and
tenements herein before described
for more than three years next
after Defendants cause of action or
defence accrued, and Plaintiff here
specially pleads the Statute of
Limitation of three years of the
State of Texas, in bar of Defend-
ant's recovery and claiming title
(0 said property by virtue of the
Three Year Statute of Limitation
of the State of Texas, which plain-
tiff here specially pleads and relies
upon.
Plaintiff further alleges that it
and under whom it claims and
whose title it holds have had
peaceable, continuous and adverse
possession of the lands and tene-
ments hereinbefore described, un-
der deeds duly registered, and have
cultivated, used and enjoyed the
same, and paying all taxes as same
'recame due thereon, for a period
of more than five years next after
defendants cause of action, or de-
fense accrued, and plaintiff here
specially pleads the Statute of
Limitation of Five years of the
State of Texas, in bar of defend-
ants recovery and claiming title to
said property of the Five year
«tatué of limitation of the State of
Texas, which plaintiff here special-
ly plead* and relies on.
Plaintiff further alleges that it
and under whom it claims and
whose title it holds have had and
held actual, continuous, peaceable
and adverse possession of the land
and premises hereinabove described,
cultivating, using and enjoying said
land and premises, and claiming
the same adversely to all others
for a period of more than ten
years prior to the filing of this
suit, and for more than ten years
prior to January 1, 1940, and for
more than ten years next after de-
fendants cause of action or defense
accrued, and plaintiff here specially
pleads the Statue of Limitation of
Ten years of the State of Texas,
tn bar of defendants recovery and
claiming title to said property, by
virtue of the Ten year Statute of
Limitation of the State of Texas,
which plaintiff here specially pleads
and relies upon.
Plaintiff further alleges that by
reason of the facts alleged in Para-
graphs III, IV and V of this peti-
tion, that plaintiff Í3 and was prior
to the institution of this suit, the
lawful owner and possessor of the
premises sued for herein.
Wherefore, plaintiff prays that
the defendants be cited to appear
herein and that upon a final hear-
ing plaintiff have judgment for the
title and possession of the above
described premises and for its
damages; and for a Writ and-or
Writs of Possession, aa many and
as often as may be necessary to
place it in possession of said
premises and property, and for all
such other and further relief, both
legal and equitable, to which it may
be entitled.
Herein Fail Not but have before
said Court, at its next regular
term, this writ with your return
thereon, showing how you have
executed the same.
Given under my hand and seal of
said Court, at office in Caldwell,
Te xas, on this 5th day of February,
A. D. 1940.
F. A. ELLIS, Clerk, District
Court, Burleson County,
Tenas. (2-15-4ts)
o
Geologists estimate there is
enough oil as yet undiscovered un-
der Texas soil to supply the Texas
oil industry for 100 years or more,
provided operating costs and tax
rates do not curtail development.
The preaence of oil in Texas waa
first reported in 1643 by survivors
of the De Soto expedition.
■■ "■ a
la America and Europe, as the
macaroni wheat, making a gritty,
coarse flour called semolina, too
heavy for baking purposes.
CITATION BY PUBLICATION
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To the Sheriff or any Constable of
Burleson County—Greeting:
You Are Hereby Commanded tc
summon Walter Campbell, Mrs. E.
J. Clanton, Mrs. S. E. H y land, and
Rhoads Fisher, each, if living; and
the unknown heirs of each of those
whom are dead, if any, and the
heirs, assigns and-or the legal
representatives, of each of the
above named, whose names and ad-
dresses or places of residence, are
unknown; and any other person 01
persons claiming any interest in 01
to the hereinafter described real
estate, all of whose residences and
names are unknown; by making
publication of this Citation once in
each week for four consecutive
weeks previous to the return day
hereof, in some newspaper pub-
lished in your County, if there be
a newspaper published therein, but
if not, then in the nearest County
where a newspaper is published, to
appear at the next regular term of
the District Court of Burleson
County, to be holden at the Court
House thereof, in Caldwell, on the
2nd Monday in May, A.D. 1940, the
same being the 13th day of May, A.
D. 1940, then and there to answer,
a petition filed in said Court on the
26th day of January A.D. 1940,
in a suit numbered on the docket of
said Court No. 14,093, wherein Mrs.
Carrice E. McGowen, and husband,
Ben T. McGowen, and W. D
Stephens, all of Bell County, Texas,
are plaintiffs, and Walter Campbell,
Mrs. E. J. Clanton, Mrs. S. E. Hy-
and and Rhoads Fisher, each, if
living, and the unknown heirs oí
any of them who are dead; and the
heirs, assigns and-or the legal
representatives of any of them
who are dead, whose names and
addresses or places of residence are
unknown; and any other person or
persons claiming any interest in or
to the following described real es-
tate whose names and residences
are unknown, are defendants and
a brief statement of plaintiff's cause
of action, being as follows: Plain-
tiff's cause of action as set forth in
said petition being a suit in tres-
pass to try title, for damages, and
to remove cloud from the title to
320 acres of land, Abstract No. 93,
patented to Walter Campbell on
January 13, 1841, recorded in Vol.
53, page 415, Deed Records of
Burleson County, Texas, with metes
and bounds as follows:
Beginning at the south-east
corner of the James Shaw survey;
Thence N. 71 E. 950 vrs. Thence
S. 19 E. 1900 vrs. Thence S. 71 W.
950 vrs. the south-east corner of a
survey in the name of William Old-
ham; Thence N. 19 W. 1900 vrs. to
the place of beginning, and contain-
ing 320 acres of land, which land
is situated about 15 miles N.W. of
Caldwell, Texas.
Plaintiffs allege that they were
lawfully seized and were the own-
ers in fee simple and in possession
of said land, and that on or about
Jan. 1, 1940, the defendants un-
lawfully entered upon and dis-
possessed plaintiffs from said land,
and now unlawfully withhold such
possession to plaintiffs damages in
the sum of $3000.00; that the rent
of said property is $100.00 per year
Plaintiffs invoke the three, five,
ten, and twenty-five years Statutes
of Limitation as a muniment of
title; they pray for judgment for
the title and possession of said land,
for damages, for removal of cloud
on the title, and for general and
special relief; all as will more fully
appear from plaintiffs petition on
file in said cause.
Herein Fail Not but have before
•aid Court, at its next regular
term, this writ with your return
thereon, showing how you have ex-
ecuted the same.
Given under my hand and seal of
aid Court, at office in Burleson
County, Texas, on this 26th day of
January, A. D. 1940.
F. A. ELLIS, Clerk, District
Court, Burleson County,
Texas. (2-l-6ts-c)
0
Want-Ads get results
o
NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND
CREDITORS
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
County of Burleson.
To those indebted to, or holding
claims against- the estates of Joe
Becvar Sr. and Mrs. Bessie Bee-
var, deceased:
The undersigned having been
duly appointed administrator of
the estdtea of Joe Becvar Sr. and
Mrs. Bessie Becvar, deceased, late
of Burleson County, Texas, by
Hays Bowers, Judge of the County
Court of said County on the 12th
day of February, A. D. 1940, here-
by notifies all persons indebted
to either estate to come forward
and make settlement, and those
having claims against said estates
to present them to him within the
time prescribed by law at his resi-
dence, Chrieeman, Texas, Route 1,
in Burleson County, Texas, where
he receives his mail.
This the 12th day of February,
A. D. 1940.
JOE BECVAR JR., Adminis-
trator. (2-15-4ts-p)
Read The News Fot
Local Happenings
Kathleen Norris Says:
Wives Who Constantly Complain
Become Pests
(B*U Syndicate—WNU Servlct.l
DON'T BE A PEST
When there is trouble within the
family circle it isn't always the hits-
hand's fault, according to Kathleen
iXorris.
Friend husband may have his
faults, to he sure. Hut after all-
he's only human. .1nd a human
without faults, just wouldn't be a
human.
Sometimes it's the little wife who
mu*t make a few changes in her
manner of living.
Check-up and find out where the
trouble is. Don't just keep blaming
it on someone else.
"If hen you have a husband who sleeps until the very last moment*he said,
"and rushes through breakfast, nothing you can say affects him."
By KATHLEEN NORMS
ALMOST any woman would be
very much happier if someone
else was just a little different.
Usually it is several someones else
who make the trouble.
He mother-inlaw, her children's
teacher, her kitchen assistant, her
friends at the club all fail her in
various small ways. She spends a
good deal of time wishing they
would see things as she docs.
As for the husband and the chil-
dren; well, their faults keep her
nervous and fretful. She spends
countless hours in trying to make
herself beautiful, but she forgets the
worried little frown that is perma-
nently between her eyes. She wants
to be considered a woman of cul-
ture, a woman other women envy,
admire and sccretly copy, but she
never thinks of the tones of her
rasping, critical, dissatisfied voice.
In a New York bus the other day
I sat next to a well-dressed woman
of perhaps 35 or ^ little less; she
had met a friend and she was tell-
ing the friend all about matters at
home.
"My dear, when you have a hus-
band who sleeps until the very last
moment," she began, "and then
rushes through breakfast, nothing
you can say afTects him! I scold
until even the boys are taking
George's part, but what good docs
it do? He simply goes on scram-
bling through the paper. The chil-
dren stop eating, of course, and
then their breakfasts are cold. Per-
haps some women can get their
children to concentrate on eating
when they're at the table; I never
can. Who are they with this morn-
ing? Oh. his mother. 1 never leave
them with Carry, she has a beau and
her one idea is to keep her hair
curled and one ear on the tele-
phone. Not that she ever gets a
message of mine straight.
"George's mother is a darling and
the children adore her. But she is
a real farmer's wife, and she drops
all her 'g's' an<f says she's goin' to
lay down, and the children pick up
her expressions, of course. She
spoils them, too, Junior always cries
to go back with grandma when she
goes.
A Stupid Day Ahead.
"Where am I going? Well, I've
got the stupidest day ahead of me
that you can imagine. In the first
place I'm taking that hat back. I
left the tag In, but you know how
they are about changing a hat. Then
I'm going to the Lost and Found bu-
reau, I'm still convinced I left that
purse at the glove counter. After-
ward the dentist; my filling came
out. I do think they could put in
fillings that would stick, and I'm
going to tell him so. Then Larry's
shoes, he goes through a pair about
every six weeks, and then I pick up
George. He was to have the car
fixed and he didn't—trust George!—
so we have to go out to the club
with the Greenwoods; and even if
■he was my bridesmaid, that giggle
of Harriet's simply gets me down. I
ought to have had my hair done, I'm
a sight—"
We had reached her corner; I
heard no more. But I had heard
enough to know that living with this
woman, despite her pleasant appear-
ance, and her evident devotion to
home, husband and children, would
be heavy going. She wanted every-
one to change, apparently It never
occurred to her that she herself is
the one who should change.
She never really has faced the
fact that her husband, being a hu-
man being, has minor faults. He is
late; he is hurried; he is negligent.
If he wasn't these things h<> might
be a martinet who fretted her to
death about details and hammered
All happiness. Joy and contcnlmont
out of the lives of his children.
She doesn't know that all elderly
women, unless they arc social auto-
mata, get a trifle slipshod in gram-
mar as well as in house shoes, and
that spoiling grandchildren is one
of the legitimate rewards of a moth-
er's life.
8he Is the Real Pest.
She won't concede that a "gen-
eral" servant, a young creature who
washes dishes and sweeps floors and
answers the door and the telephone,
has a right to be pretty and to en-
courage a sweetheart, and that if
this girl was the mental force that
her employer evidently expects her
to be she wouldn't be working in
anyone's kitchen.
The little flaws of dentist, sales-
woman, old friend, the loss of a
purse, the delay in repairing a car,
the sturdy wear a small boy gives
his shoes—all these and a thousand
other matters she ex derates into
serious troubles; her snril! complain-
ing voice makes so much of them
that io the end she herself becomes
much more of a pest than any of
these annoyances, or all of them
put together.
Seeing her go off on her compla-
cent, competent way; pretty and
brisk and with a head full of plans
and a purse full of money, 1 won-
dered what sort of drilling through
marble it would take to convince her
that she herself is the person to
change; that a little common sense
and self-control on her part would
make the difference between dark
and dawn to husband, mother-in-
law, house-maid, sons and friends.
What an amazing surprise for them
if suddenly Jean became an altered
woman! If lenience and good nature
took the place of that eternal criti-
cism and Impatience. If the nerv-
ous comments stopped, and an ami-
able tendency to live and let live
took their place. If Jean began sim-
ply to make allowances for Carry's
young vanities and giddiness, for
Junior's stamping little feet, for
George's absent-mindedness, for
grandma's indulgences to the adored
grandsons.
Husbands Won't Change.
For husbands will continue to gulp
breakfast to the end of time. Den-
tists will sometimes insert fillings
that don't stay in. Friends will gig-
gle, or develop some other trying
trait. Maids will decline to become
deeply and passionately absorbed in
the welfare of the family that is pay*
ing them $35 a month, to the exclu-
sion of all other interests. Purses
and rings and tickets will get lost;
repairs on the car will take longer
than the garage man originally sus-
pected.
Why not take all these things as
the inevitable little roughnesses of
living in the complicated and im-
perfect world of today? The aston-
ishing thing is that matters aren't
infinitely worse. It's only the very
fortunate women of the world who
can afford to carp at these trifles.
For the more real and the more
desperate our troubles grow, the
more silent and heroic we women
bccome.
LIBERTY
By HOMBR DUEWALL
Many friends from here attended
the funeral ritea of Mr. Clint D.
Lewis Sunday evening. Mr. Lewis
was a friend of everybody. Wo
hated to see him go. He did all he
could for Caldwell and Burleson
county.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Nichols of
Bryan visitc-d in the home of Mr.
News Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Valigura Jr.
on the birth of a son, Larry James.
February 28.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Blazek on
the birth of a daughter March 5.
Johnnie Struwc of Shreveport.
Louisiana, visited Dr. and Mrs. T
L. Goodnight and Tomee Monday
night.
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Moore and
Mrs. Monroe Berndt left Monday
to spend several days in Dallas.
Mrs. Pete Mikeska was a Hous-
ton visitor Sunday.
CONTRACTORS* NOTICE OF
TEXAS HIGHWAY CON-
STRUCTION
Sealed proposals for constructing
10.855 miles of Asphalt Stabilized
Hast* and Base Preservative from
•ast end vYgua Creek bridge to
west city limits of Caldwell and
loop through Caldwell on Highway
No. S-21, covered by F. A. P. fiHt-B
<2) & (' (2) in Burl son County,
will be received at the State High-
way Department, Austin, Texas,
until 9:00 a.m., March 19, 1940,
and then publicly opened and read.
The pr vailing wage rates listed
I ".'low shall apply as minimum wage
rates on this project.
Type of laborer. Workman, or
Mechanic: Skilled Labor, Inter-
mediate Grade l>abor„ Unskilled
Labor. Prevailing minimum per
diem wage (based on an eight (8)
hour working day): Skilled labor,
$8.00; intermediate grade laUir,
84.00; unskilled labor, $3.20. Pre-
vailing minimum hourly wage rate:
Skilled labor, $1.00; intermediate
grade lalwr, $0.50; unskilled labor,
$0.40.
Legal holiday work shall be paid
for at the regular governing rates
Rates for work performed in excess
>f th- maximum hour* per week as
stipulated in the "Fair Labor
Standards Act of 1938," approved
June 25. 1938, (Public No. 718.
75th Congress) «hall be subject to
the applicable provisions of this
Act.
Plan* and specifications available
nt the office of C. C. Todd Jr.,
Resid nt Engineer, Bryan, T« \a ,
and State Highway Department,
Austin. Usual rights reserved. (.'5-
7-2ts-c)
Send The News to a fripnd
and Mrs. Herman Loshr Sunday.
The Liberty War Horaes opened
the baseball season here when they
met Ne wTbaor Wednesday <ve%,
ing. They, also, played New Tabor *
in volley ball. The score in baseball
waa 6 to 3 in favor of Liberty. The
volley ball score was 2 to 0 in favor
of New Tabor.
Mrs. John Polaaek and children
of Cook's Point visitod Mr. and
Mrs. A. G. Hronek Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Herrman
Jr. and family spent Sunday even-
ing with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Herr-
mann Sr. and daughter, Louise.
Erwin Garbs visited Albert
Loehr Sunday evening.
E. L. and Leroy Duewall were
College Station visitors Saturday
night. Ix'roy attended the A. & M.
and T xas University basketball
game.
Notice of City Election
Pursuant to an order of the City
Council of the City of Caldwell,
Burleson County, Texas, an elec-
tion is h reby ordered to be held
at the CITY HALL in said City of*
Caldwell, on the first Tuesday of
April, 1940, the same being the 2nd
day of April, 1940, for the purpose
of eheting a Mayor and three Al-
dermen to serv ■ for a term of two
years.
All qualified voters under the
constitution ami laws of the State
'if Texas who have resided in said
City of Caldwi 11 for a period of-íáx
months prior to the dat? of such
election are entitled to vote at that
election.
Said election will be held and
conducted under the general elec-
tion laws of the State of Texas. y
W. H. Hundley, Preriding Judge,
and T. Kraitcher, Judge, are hereby
appointed to hold said election and
duo return make thereof as re-
quested by law.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF WIT-
NESS MY HAND THIS 13th DAY
OF FEBRUARY. 1940.
C. E. CROMARTIE. Mayor,
City of Caldwell.
Burleson County, Texas.
ATTEST:
E. MORCAN, City Secretary.
(2-29-4U)
K A Z M E I E R
AAAA QUALITY
BABY CHICKS
White l eghorns. Barred Rocks,
and K. I. Red . White Leghorn
Day Old Pullets and Cockerels.
Started Chicks. Brooders.
Custom hatching chicken eggi
and turkeys every Monday.
Ka/.meier Poultry Farm
Bryan, Texas — Phone 183J
"■IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIP'-'
SEE
THE NEW
ELECTRIC RANGES
loRE beautiful than
ever.. More convenience
features . . . More
reasons to switch to
better electric cooking
Up to $20 for your old
stove when you trode-it-in
on o new Electric Range
Moody Duewall spent Sunday in p <
Lexington.
Gulf States
Utilities Co.
*
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Smith, G. A. The Caldwell News and The Burleson County Ledger (Caldwell, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 7, 1940, newspaper, March 7, 1940; Caldwell, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth175396/m1/6/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Harrie P. Woodson Memorial Library.