The Fairfield Recorder. (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, April 13, 1906 Page: 8 of 8
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CONDENSED STORIES.
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Neat Stationery
Tribute to I(oku.
A Claim Hunter Who Prouabt To»A.| Jh'a oulog^ of (iov. Hogg, two
h«»d to Terms. * weoks agos among fjther things,
The wcmis.n with the vfaim’ has I John M. puncan sffid:
2
Speaks Well for any, Man’s
,t Business. .
The RECORDER’S Job D^artment has recent-
ly been supplemented wit)£pevfc modem type
f\uvs. Wo are now prepared to execute near
wo! k quickly. We carry ' *. .
THE BEST LINES OF PAPERS
; already begun tq hauht the aorridor
in ■ front of ih£ office ‘.of Speaker
Caniiqn and TluuKMulioii, chairman
«0f the committee oiY wax*
'She is comparatively young and
very fa*r to look upon, hut that doe*
not constitute her guarantee oiAwJc-
ce#s. She .has aoniething ’better-—
namely, persistence.1 It is persists
enc.e that w in auy effort to get
the government t-ojurv just dehtB.
Si)« literally hsuiits the corridors
and follows the Speaker arid thp
ql'airman. Somebody told her ubout
t . | f -ffA ri u-t-"
111 Ruled Letter; Note and Bill Heads, Statements,
Typewriter Papers, Envelopes. Visiting Ca'fds and
Invitations. , .
The Fatrfield Recorder
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"agzr.
THE .STATE OF TEXAS,
u <. To the Sheriff or any Constable of Free-
stone County, Greeting:
r You are'hereby commanded to sum-
mon the. heinr of Elizabeth'A. Shelton
and the heirs of ——.--r. Shelton, the
husband of said Eli>,'aT>'etHrY “nffMton;
the heirs, of Susan Virginia-Kirkland
and the heirH of "W> > H. Kirkland,
;..... whose -names are unknown to appear
.. . at the next regular-tern} o '; ho. . District
Court of Freestone county, to be held
at the courthouse thereof in the city of
Fairfield, on the 1st Monday of Sept. A.
D. 11(08, being the :Srd day rtf Sept. A.
D. 1000, then and there to answer a pe-
tition tiled in said Court on the fath
v day of January, A. D. 1000, in a canse
numbered 85119, wherein'F.’M. Carter
and S. V.Carter are plaintiffs and.the
nnknown heirs of Elizabeth A. Shelton
and the unknown heirs of -.-.
Shelton, the husband of—rvrrri—Elisabeth
A, Shelton; the unknown heirs of Susan
=5%- ''Virginia Kirkjand and the heirs.of W.
H. Kirkland, are defendants, thecause
,of action’being alleged as follows, in
Substance, to wit; ....
.j—j....« .- -Chat phtiutiffs are the owners in fee
Local Option Procla-
mation.
March 28th, 1906. TheVounty
Commissioners Court having
opened the polls and canvassed
the returns and counted the
• > mm —................
vote of the lpcal option election
held in Justice precinct No 2 of
Freestone County, Texas, on the
17th day of March 1906 to de-
termine whether or not the sale
of intoxicating liquors shkll be
said ’Justice pre-
prohibited in
Tunct, as bounded and described
I
simple arid in possession of a certain t!()0
acres of land in Freestone county^ ^Tex-
as, same being a part of the John
Bradley league, etc., that defendants
are settingup a claim to said land ad-
versely to plaintiffs, as heirs of the said
Shelton et vir, and the heirs of
Kikland et vir, that their pretended
claim cast a cloud on the plantiffs ti-
tle to said land to the damage to plain-
tiffs in the sum iff $1300.00; . plaintiffs
plead the-statute of limitation .as. pre-
scribed by tatute fof ‘three, five and
ten years arid for judgment quieting
their title, or citation, costs, etc.
You are further- commanded to serve
this citation by publishing the same
once each week for eight successive j
wccl.,......,....»,. - —.... .....,,. ■^ ,,,:,,,,:
of in a newspaper- published in your “’ J““
county.
Herein fail not, but have yon before
said Court, the said first day of the next
term hereof, this writ, with yorirre
'uii'ri thereon, Showing how you have
executed the name.
Witness L. C.Vv/Koan, Cler
the District Court, Ttf^gstone Co. Tex.
I......! Given mij^mv^land and
; seal ; the seal owMMpmirt, at of-
fice in FairfiVld, Tex., this
he 7th day of Feb. A. D. 1906.
It. C. KiHGaN, Clerk
District Court, Freestone County, Tex.
Wanted^-Gentleman or lady
with good refarPnee, to travel
„ by rail ot‘ with rig, for a firm of
$250,000 capital. Salary $1072
per year and expenses; salary
paid weekly-mud expenses ad-
vanced. Address, with stamp*
Jos. A. Alexander, Fairfield,
Texas.
A l.ucky Postmistress
is Mrs. Alexander, of Cary, Me.
who has found Dr. King’s New
Life Pi 111 s to be the best reme-
dy she ever tried for keeping
the stomach, liver and bowells in
pefifeef fjpder. .You'D agree with
her if you try these painless pu-
rifiers that infuse new life. Guar-
anteed by all druggists. Price
in the order for said election,
and it appearing to the court
that said election was held in
accordance With fhe'Taw SH’cFthe.
previous Order of this court and
that legal notices of said elec;
tion were posted in five differ-
ent places in said precinct for
more than 12 days prior to said
election and that, the result of
said election was in favor of
prohibiting, said vote being for
prohibition 120 votes, and
against prohibition 68 votes,
j.nd that the majority for prohi-
bition was 52 votes it is consid-
1/* n w H • *
-U l*uu Ui UCi Cu j
the court that the sale of intox-
icating honors shall be abso-
lutely pro/imted witHin the lim-
its of^jaidf Justice’s Precinct No.
2 of FNtf<tpne county, Texas,
a subdivision of
lly described in
said election in
on page 70 of min-
ofcmlssioners’ Court of
until said time as
the qualified voters therein may
at a legal < lection held for that
purpose, by a majority vote, de-
cide otherwise. This order is
not intended to prohibit the sale
of wines for sacramental pur-
poses nor alcoholic stimulants
as medicine in cases of actual
sickness when such stimulants
are sold under the regulations
prescribed in Art. S385 of the
revised statutes of Texas of
1895. |
J. R. Bell, Co. Judge.
At the close of his second
term as Governor he yolun-
tardy retired* to private life
aud devoted himself . to the
practice of law‘for the mainte-
nance of himself and family, he
having left office practically
without a dollar anti slightly in
debt. Thence until the dsjy of
his death he could have had any
ofhee withm the gift of the peo-
ple of this great State upon the
mere intimation that.,he would
accept it but he steadfastly re-
fused .to consider any proposi
tion of that nature, upon the
ground that after devoting so
large a part of his life to the
service of the people he owed it
to himself and to his children to
endeavor to provide for his ad
vancing age and for their prop-
el equipment for« the battle of
life, bm, he yet held himself, as
UiltflllMHilW
CUSTOM
For Infknts and Children.
AVi't’c table Preparation for As
•imHatint} iteFoodaitdRegula I
iutli Bte bfoinuctui and Bowel3
ting Bie bRmwchs and Bowels of
Promotes BigesiionCheerf\il-
ness and Rest<Conlains raeiitner
()}miiii.Morphiii ‘ nor Mineral.
llOT MARC OTIC.
/*w ofauxt-sMi’MiPiraaat
Han/Jiin Srntl'
Mbt.Smuui •
^mtr W ,
TXj—r
w» rUrrm.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of /ftAl
¥
t »
»•.. -1
mi
he repui tefl'y declared, n - ffiLn-’
^ be
said
the orddr
Vol. N0./4
htes of
said co
BHE OALLKP ON HIM UVXliV DAY. '
apotiier widow who made tlie»great
Thomas B. liced capitulate and pay
a bill of more than $8,000 for to-
bacco furnished by her grandfather
to the soldiers of 1812.
Mahon was afraid of Reed—that-
is, he was afraid to report the bill
.lest Reed explode his wrath against
him for presuming to report on a
bill so old us that, Offe day Reed
sent for Mahon and quizzed him
about the matter. Mation protend-
ed to have never heard of it.
“Great Scott, Mahon! Do you
mean to tell the you never heard of
it? Why, I’ve never heard of any-
thiftg eise this session. She has
been at my house every day for two
months. Every time I ..have gone
out she has asked me about it.”
VI iiy uiun L you 1jm*i>c iierdiuowu
out?” suggested Mahon. Reed
threw up his hands and asked if that
was the way Mahon dealt With wom-
en who were really ladies. Mahon
guessed not, but he was really hap-
py when Reed ordered him to re-
port the biirforthwith. “And if
Joe Cannon says a word against
this bill,” added Reed, “I’ll choice
him.”—New York Times.
nth nrafi,” ready to respond to
the call of the people to serve
them in. the r inks, and he did,
indeed,"aftej he went out of
office originate 1.ud publish cer-
tain proposed aniendm^s to
the Constitution -of the JState
looking _to further limifing the
powers and privileges of corperi"
rations and prohibiting tire Is-
suance of railway passes to pub-
lic officials, and at his own ex-
pense he made a canvass of the
State in support of the propos-
ed measures, speaking upon
them at various places, securing
their embodiment in tUd plat-
foini’ rrr*TTie Succeeding Demo-
cratic convention after one of
Apeifecl Remedy forConsiipa
Ron, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish-
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Facsimile Signature of
NEW YORK.
iXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
f^T
Sfllr
TNI OfflTAUN IOMMNV. MEW VOflk
^ " HP'
CHESTER
25c.
_*"
CASTOillA.
Bear* w _/) The Kind Y«u Haw Always Bought
Bignatum
/) 1 ns Mmi mu nave mwi
Sir H.nry’. Interview.
The advance man with Sir Henry
Irving on one of his tours was in
despair at the actor's resolution not
to be interviewed while on the road.
Sir Henry had been misquoted in
some important interview. Strenu-
ous persuasion finally won him,
however, to consent to answer writ-
ten questions if handed in through
his business manager. This scheme
worked well for awhile, although it
was somewhat burdensome. One
day the business manager neglected
to rend the list of questions handed
in by an offdnded interviewer who
preferred his “material” at first
hand. Sir Henry read:
“Which is the worst enemy of the
stage, the critic or the actor ?”
“What relation has the nebular
hypothesis to the halo of spot light
that surrounds the head of the
stsr?” i*T
Will buy PRODUCE
Poultry, Eggs, Butter, Beeswax, Hides, Etc.
We Keep
Groceries and Cold Drinks
Also small quantity of lumber
“Do you think ‘Hamlet’ would
take well if done in musical com-
edy ?”
Sir Hcpry shook his head sadly,
and the “written questions” scheme
came to a sudden end.—New York
Press.
herb is thb
Ruling Pa.tion.
Representative James of Kon-
ptucky gives a strong illustration of
j “the ruling passion strong in
death” in one of his favorite yarns.
“An old Kentuckian was sick,
and his neighbors and family felt*"
that his demise was only a question
of a few hours or days. As the
meat was running, low, a steer was
butchered, and when his son came
into the sickroonf the old man ask-
ed:
‘What have you been doing,
John ?’
“‘Killing the steer,* was the re-
ply.
“‘What did you do with the
hide?’ asked the old man faintly.
‘Put it in the barn. Going to
sell it by and by.'
“ 'Oh* John
“ “Yes, pap ’ - .
‘Drag the hide around the yard
a couple of tunes and it. will weigh
ier ’ ”—Phiiadeiphi* Ledger.
AUTOMATIC LIFT
DROP HEAn
SLAVING M; inc yMr*
ahead of all otl .»In points
of superiority d sterling
Worth. If we were pal wire what
we ask for this macks we could
not build a better ore. And our
price is right
TBADF
Book sn FIREJUWS—FfmI
loor.mun o* Dor ta» kw
, aX-ieviBsia n»
Manriac-
Hntrnti
Ouiutwihr
Illinois Sewing Machine Co., Chicago
the most remarkable contests in
that body which ever charcter-
ized his career, full of remarka-
ble incidents. Though then a
private citizen, he was as ever
alert to discover the insiicitrous
designs of power and wealth up-
on the rights and privileges of
the people and quick to sound
the alarm and expose them.
Fritta-T oppress: cr.. ehicana, da.
ceit, unscrupulous power and
mendacity learned to fear and
cower before him as one " in
whom truth, courage, honesty
and justice were incarnate.
Gov. Hogg was not a genius
within the ordinary acceptation
of that term. He had few of I
what are called the brilliant
qualities. He was neither a
profound scholar nor a finished
orator, but he was endowed by
nature with a keenness of pene- *
tration, a quickness of percep-
tion, a prevision, a seemingly
intuitive knowledge of men and
things, a correctness of judg-
ment, a courage, a steadfast-
ness of purpose and a directness
and clearness of expression-by
which he achieved heights of
success and renown which have
been denied to men of more
genius, while he was exempt
from those frailties which so
often accompany and impede
superior talent and learning. He
was, and he never ceased to be,
a man of the people and for the
people. They unreservedly
loved and trusted him, and he
them. In a long career of con-
tinuows battling for their pro
tection and for their’ rights*—
grievous, heart breaking, mind
and body consuming conflicts
he never faltered once and he
never deceived or mislead them.
He had a fixed and abiding
confidence in the final triumph
of truth and justice, and in the
intelligence and virtue of the
masstts. He did not study the
moods and tempterof the people
like the coumiuu politician with
view to accommodating his
acts and opinions to tbeuf;'*but
like a statesman, lie gave deep
consideration (,0 every question
involving the liberty and happi
ness of the citizen, and went to
the public upon every proposi-
tion implicitly relying upon his
ability to bring it.to see apd
support the right as he saw it,
whether in the outset it agreed
with him or not. ,
1 >*!
s»
’er
mm
and “ Repeater ” I
FOWDfiR SHELLS!
it
jest com'
and wadding,
inspected ■*. \Us+
n>*; ; jZtmr ,, ’ EttlCfiS of JiOwt.c: , ahoi uuu wfcjasng,
Hr iiXl ioaded by n.^phines which give invariable H
°-rc responsible for tb.i superi-rity i
ft':-. A-; .j m Winchester Leader" aM “Pen—'**" S
SEASSSeSSH ,Ji Winchester
"• Fust cry Lc;c‘*
* fTrr.r'rclnjjr. T*
There is no ^utsawbrk in loc
Reliability, /eRcity, pattern a.-
tion arm, determined by scientific
and practical experiments. Do
theyn ? If not, why not ? '
THE SHELLS THE CHAMPIONS SHOOT
'w
. *•*' ** " ' <t
Always Remember the Full Name
I axative f\romo Quinine
Cures a Cold in One Day, Grip in Two,
& ■ on Box. 25c.
■
frmnrAamtt
KILLthpc COUGH
AND CURE THE LUNGS 1
FOF1SUMPTION
0UGH3 and
iOLDS
Price
BCe L$L0
Frea Trial.
Surest ami (knickeat Cure for all !
■tmiuAx ana huxfO IU0TJ1' l
LES, or MONEY BACK
mmMMtmammmrnmmm j*.- :-;-v 3^:.ij®
■
\%7R WANT ©vdrro
VV n-flW* H»e ton-------— . _—
P(«iol» nnd Shrit|fen«^ We itoerelWfl »»*♦•
idled a itiiwlil* *4WT'*f* lUnatmted
r not only all a»i«^ Hi I VF-NS araa«,bMt com*
■ •** 1 - -*-“4— *-**-----*4--*mak«Milk
Snl^ Vao"*»*
... -M. fta.VWMWKf**. kl." IwlMMUll
Wanted.
rm>r<'rt<:ulativ() to handlo the
• uKlnjr. e*wkl«. am mi
r dfe-aeme, am., line w* mtH
Cuue«. «ut* Ia tm *,«. *««««.
suR* and. car*
.fiista
Han*routed ™r CEBYSII RIFES fUtMlMt
Sent IKfci, piwt|Mi(i, U‘ jroM *#*. fee If
ASK YlJlJ* UCALIiU FOR THS «TITEMS.
4. 8TZVXH8 ARMS ARD TOOL OOW
0 v. o. »o« 40^4. 0
Local
mIc of our new Uiirivalwl 8e-
nm of Charts and Surveys shovrfhf
| every state and foreign country; retia-.
I We historical and 'Oeaniptive matter
{beautifully illustrated. We aatiotoata
sale larffo enough to net our represmUiv-'
.... - -— (n ev«ry county. ....
If# :
; fives from fHQO to #900 in every county.
Addre* Bond, McNally *• Co., <itoa*
to. 111.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Kirgan, Lee. The Fairfield Recorder. (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, April 13, 1906, newspaper, April 13, 1906; Fairfield, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1109387/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fairfield Library.