Stephenville Empire-Tribune (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, October 14, 1932 Page: 14 of 15
fifteen pages : ill. ; page 23 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Fall
Good
Per y
Offer
•kinC
Sellin
tan, |
ender
Price,
36-Irn
Wide
at the
36-Inc
Hortm
At, th
86-Inc
Dome*
Specii
wide,
u Raise,
xas cot-
18c
20c
20c
22c
79c
tl DAY, OCTOBER J4, 1932.
- ^ ir.i
STEPHENVILLE EMPIRE-TRIBUNE, 8TEPHENVILLE, 1EXAS
PAGE
3EVKN
--nag
ubscribers Quick To
Take Advantage of Low
Bargain Day Prices
By W. H. HAWKINS
Slowly tat surely the readers of
r "1X*eT a' ® *,ec°8rnilinK the big
Baviiif va/oey of this bargain per-
iod offer and the three-year class
of renewals |B gradually growing
lnrgor. The C. M. as well as the
owners of the publication had ex-
pected practically all the long dis-
tance subs to renew early, on the
pffer of three years for three dol-
w^s. a clear saving of one fifty.
There i«i no doublt in anv of our
minds that all of them will renew
before the offer Is declared off,
Dec. 31. but the ones from a dis-
tance who reach us with their re-
mittances during October will
jrreatlv lighten the load of this of-
fice ftm the other two months, as
lit requires much more time and
lw°r*§_tf) revise the single-wrap
1 tataj^a^are yet hopeful of henr-
from m«ny of them before
ftv. 1. In the meantime we are
lookin'* for largely increased num-
hr-o nf the sob* in Erath and ad-
joining counties to push forward
three years for two dollars.
[NG..I
iro!
reciat
mdisel
Sunt. J. E. Burnett of the city
I schools is first on our list of fhree-
lyonr ronewers this week. He was
Jfeel'ne good over the increased at-
Itendance at all the schools and the
Ifurther fact that all departments
[were starting off the year’s work
in the usual satisfactory way. Mr.
Burnett renorted the organisation
I of a students’ patrol at Junior
Hieh composed of boys, who will
at recess honra take time about
giving slow-down signals to pass-
ing motorists. These patrolmen
will be stationed at the Frisco
crossing and also at the comer of
'J D. Killouwh’s place on West
Wnshin«*to» street each morning
and afternoon before and after
school, as the children of the Ward
school, come and go, and also dur-
ing the noon hour .
U. E. OoHehtlv of Alexander
was one of the immense throng in
1 this county site town last Satur-
afternoon. W* was ai«o a vis-
itor to this office and became a
rcetilor subscriber. He renorted
that M™. GoUehtly instructed him
>A^5e snfciwid get on the list, and
that is what we call good instruc-
tions. Manv columns of the latest
news from sll parts of Erath coun-
tv will thua reach their home ev-
ery month, which we are reason-
ably certain avery member of the
family will find interesting. The
A Grander correspondence alone,
which appears in these columns
prof tv remilarlv, is worth the
price of the neper to Alexander-
sns. so there is no chance for U.
E. to lose out on this deal.
<1. C. Gentry, better known aa
fVVe Gentry ont around Huckabay
and adiaeent neighborhoods, was a
welcome visitor and new subscrib-
KING & KING
Bingham King Don King
Notary Public and Conveyances
ABSTRACTS AND LOAN8
la Court Hnoae
Stephenville, Texas
J. C. TERRELL, M. D.
Limited to Hospital Practice
and Surgery
STEPHENVILLE HOSPITAL
Phone 11
DR8. GORDON 4 GORDON
Office over Service Drag Store
Office Phone 74
Dr. T. M. Gordon Dr. J. B. Gordon
Phone 458 Phone Ml
Stephenville, Texas
Dr. J. S. NUTT
DENTIST—X-BAT
Special AttcaMca Circa Oral Prephylaile
and Treating Pyerrhea
Ogle* cm A. t f- Store
Stephen rlllc, Texaa
OVlee Phone 428 Bee Phene 41*
J. J. MULLOY
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Ogle# Orer terrlee Drag State
Office Phone 28, Rea. Phono B9
OCieeHeeni IsUta llel^a
COX CANDY SHOP
Wants Your Patronage
Home-Made dandle* Pies, Oakes,
Sandwiches and Gold Drinks.
OOMB IN AND IBB US
—
Business
Men’s Assurance Co.
Old Lina, Legal Baaarvs
Life - Accident _ Health
Representative
B. D. CORRIGAN
IbDfctfh^avtU* Every Weak
er here Saturday. He reminds us I per each week, even though she is
as he gets older of his lamented located at Galveston. One of the
father, Henry Gentry, the first first acts performed by her mother,
Va. Memorial
time we over met him, which initi
ated a friendship that had lasted
many years when "Uncle Henry”
was called away. Coke’s grandpar-
ents, the late Mr. and Mrs. Jona-
than Gentry, pioneers in that same
part of the county, bore the repu-
tation through all their years of
being extra fine neighbors, and all
their posterity, so far as we have
ever heard, including Coke, have
been similarly commended by those
who have known them best.
. S. G. Hammett of route two out
of this city, is a farmer who had
rather do without something else
that only costs a dollar or two
than to deprive the family circle
of the county paper, which all of
them enjoy, so he was in Saturday
to renew same. By close co-opera-
tion on the part of all concerned,
the Hammetts have not only suc-
ceeded in paying out their farm,
but rebuilt their dwelling and re-
modeled it and vastly added to the
comfort thereof during some very
trying years. Mr. Hammett was
assisted in that work by his father
from Arkansas, a carpenter of
long experience, who came to visit
them. It was at his dad’s sugges-
tion that instead of trying to re-
pair the dwelling they razed it and
rebuilt, utilizing as much of the
old timber as was advisable. S. G.
says they are all glad novy the old
gentleman was there to so advise.
W. 0. Dear, the well known gro-
cer on West Washington street, is
among the three-year renewals.
Mr. Dear was attracted here from
Glen Rose several years ago, not
long after his wife’s death. Witij
five children to rear and educate,
three of them girls, he faced a
great responsibility, but was de-
termined to meet it as best he
could. Some only speak from hear-
say when referring to Stephenville
as a good school town. Not so with
Mr. Dear. He has had the actual
experience of being a patron of
both the city schools and the col-
lege, and says he wishes he could
express in suitable words how
grateful he feels toward the teach-
ers in these various schools for the
kindly interest manifested at all
times. This writer has heard so
many reports like this along the
years from parents, he has just
about decided the money invested
in capable school teachers is never
wasted to say the least of it. It
roes without saying though, that
those children of Mr. Dear have
followed their dad’s advice and
been studious, as evidenced by the
fine progress they have made.
Miss Hazel Fenner was elected
by her schoolmates in Tarleton
Mrs. John Clark, after the depart-
ure of xAnnie Lee the other day,
was to call at this office and reg-
ister her daughter’s subscription.
Miss Clark wants to be a profes-
sional nurse and has entered the
John Sealy Hospital to train for
that noble service.
a-wl
Lewis Cromwell has been added
to the subscription list by his fath-
er, Dr. C. L. Cromwell, to receive
the paper until next June at Lub-
bock, where he expects to receive
his degree from Texas Tech next
summer. Young Cromwell is a
member of the college band there,
same as he used to be while in the
college here. If the Tech band has
a member equal to Lewis on each
of the fifty instruments used, we’d
like to hear ’em, as the music is
bound to be o.k.
; 1
im
is! 1
car owners whom they might dis-
cover to be without plates. They
assured him such would be their *
policy, and he has heard from oth-
ers that they are living up to it. 1
Bob had heard of some "smart
alecky” conduct on the part of a
few auto cops elsewhere, and did
not propose to co-operate with any
such if he knew it. He has too
much regard for his constituency
I for that, he said, hence the pre-
caution, notwithstanding he real-
ly sized our two cops aa being o.k.
at first meeting with them.
Mrs. O. A. Yeager of Blessing,
Texas, resubscribed for the paper
while in the city this week, after
having been without its weekly
visits a few months. She was Miss
Laura Price of thfs city when she
was wooed and won bu Olie Yeag-
er years ago. Most of their mar-
ried life has been spent at Bas-
ing, where they have reared three
mighty fine daughters, Mary Dean,
Madge and Helen, each of whom
has attended school here where
their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Thos. A. Price reside. Mr. Yeager
has long ranked as a leader among
the business circles of Blessing,
where he is in the lumber busi-
ness.
Here is the beautiful memorial
to her world war dead Which Vir-
ginia will dedicate on October
15. It is a carillon with 66 bells
which will ring out for the first
time in dedication, as General
Pershing, all Virginia world-war
commanders and other distin-
guished guests attend. It is lo-
cated at Richmond, Va.
J .H. Stinnett while in the city
Monday, came around and renewed
his subscription, an annual cus-
tom of his for years back. Mr.
Stinnett is one of a very large
number of good farmers on route
three who never permit their
names to be drooped from the
county paper’s mailing lists. Look-
ing over the lengthy strinar of
names on that route ,the C. M. is
Wondering. if Carrier Garrett has
a solitary patron who is not num-
bered thereon. If the*e is, we sure
would be glad to write ’em a sub-
scription receipt.
W. R. Stevens of this city, an-
other old-timer Erathian who for
manv years resided in the vicinity
of Hog Springs north of town, is
among the renewers of this week.
“Billy,” as most of the men any-
where near his age call him, used
to be alluded to as the only Repub-
lican in this precinct. It i* said
though, that desnite his unflinch-
ing loyalty, to his party, he Has
kept rie-ht on making friends
Brewers Meet
Fred Winn perhaps knows more
of the present large group of new
students at the college than any
one man in the city. His bus line
operating between the public
square and the school at the low
fare of five cents is a veritable
boon not only to hundreds of stu-
dents but to some of the teachers,
and Mr. Winn meets nearly all of
them in the course of a month.
Therefore, while Fred was elevat-
ing his date to the tune of three
years Wednesday, when he made
the remark that no school in all
the land had a finer student body
of young ladies and gentlemen
than Tarleton can show this year
it sounded good enough to quote.
i .
Lee Weathers, Jan. 1, 1936, is
the way his name reads now on
the mailing galley, he having unit-
ed with the three-year club and
being thus advanced from the same
date in 1933, all for a couple of
fiftUCtBARIQN
• • oW/er of ASTER EXECUTIVE*
Supplying * weck cowrcii (aspiration far tee heavy Ouruvncd who will hnd
_every human 8ml paralhted iinhe eapeneccaa »l “The Men Nobody Knows.* ........
A CAREER OPENS UP
IS it not high time for a larger
reverence to be given to that quiet
unassuming Joseph the Father of
Jesus T To Mary, his wife, the
church has assigned a place of eter-
nal glory; and no thoughtful man
can fail to be thankful for it. But
with the glorification of Mary,
there has been almost complete
neglect of Joseph. This is partly
because Mary lived to be known
and remembered by the disciples,
while nobody remembered Joseph-
He was just an untutored peas-
ant, married to a superior woman,
and baffled by the genius of a son
whom he could never understand?
Or was there, underneath hie self-
effacement, a vigor and faith that
molded the boy’s plastic years?
Was he a harmy companion to the
youngsters. Did he carry the young-
est, laughing and crowing on his
shoulders from the shop? To these
questions the narrative gives no
answer. Since this is so—we have
a right to form our own conception
of the* character of this vastly
significant and wholly unknown
man, and to be guided by the one
momentous fact which we do know.
Tt is this. He must have Jieen
one dollar bills. Mr. Weathers is
the pleasant faced gentleman who friendly and patient and fine; he
has so long been in charge of Ma-
jestic Sandwich Shop No. 1. Few,
if any, who read these lines are
unacquainted with him, as most
of them have made purchases
from him. It has been said that
on rush days Lee can keep up a
conversation with three or four
customers at one time and wait on
other patrons right along as they
come in.
After 17 years of inactivity the
Master Brewers’ Association held
a meeting at Detroit, re-electing
Marcus Meagerlein of Chicago
(above), their president. More
than 200 master brewers attend-
ed. and all of the opinion that
they would be brewing again
soon.
_____ Among the Democrats ever stera had stopped there, Judge Haskell
College a few. years ago, in 1928 | be. cam® to this county from Illi- o{ Oklahoma, and James E .Fergu-
to be exact, the most popular girl n°,s a long time ago. We might gon i«exag- Hon. Fritz Lanham,
-- - - add that the other fourteen or our Congressman, has been there
more Republicans of our scousin- several timegi a8 had ai80 the late
tance in this county are mighty g M N Marrs, who was State
good fellows too. --
in school. If anyone feared it
would spoil her they just didn’t
know her! Tfce very next year she
became cashier and bookkeeper for
the Southwest Gas Co., and has
been with the job ever since. She
was there Monday when this scribe
dropped into the gas office. It was
the 10th, last day to pay gas bills,
and she was being kept busy re-
ceiving payment from a line of pa-
Irons. It would have pleased her
former teachers in the commercial
department of Tarleton to have
seen how speedily and accurately
and politely she attends to busi-
ness in a rush like that But what
we want to say is that the first
little lull that came between ar-
riving customers, she took time to
ask us about her dad’s paper and
also to renew it Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Fenner of Eastland are
justly proud of this fine daughter.
Mrs. I. B. Cupp of Dallas, had
been trying housekeeping for some
time without the Empire-Tribune,
a mighty hard thing for an ex-
Erathian to do. While here the
past week-end she remedied the
matter by enrolling again as a
subscriber and the paper will now
make that old burg they call Dal-
las, a more desirable place of resi-
dence. She used to be Sophia Win-
ters, and when only ten or twelve
years of age out here on route
three in thw home of her father,
Emmett Winters, she was fond of
the home paper and several years
in a metropolitan center has not
eradicated that fpndness.
—
J. L. Bills, living out toward Sel-
den from this city, is another new
subscriber. Perhaps every house-
wife in Stephenville knows Mr.
Bills, whose vegetable car has
stopped in front of all their homes
at times during the past several
years. It is said that he never fails
to. produce a lot of vegetables ev-
ery year, no matter what kind of
weather prevails. We asked him
the other day how many railway
carloads of product he suppoaed ha
had disposed of here in his rounds
from house to house, and he said
he had no way of making an accu-
rate calculation but he was sure it
would require a good many cars
to contain the entire output of the
yeara he has done business in this
Prof Raymond Pack was here
Wednesday enroute from, his home
near Huckabay to Gatesville, near
which city he will begin his second
year next week as principal of a
rural school. Raymond has been a
reader of his home county paper
since early boyhood, and came by
the office to have it sent to him
weekly at Qatesville,' the same as
he did during «the last school year.
It is fine to note the interest the
young people of this county mani-
fest for grand old Erath, as busi-
ness calls them into other local-
ities beyond its borders.
Hudson McElyea of route five,
city, could only push his figures
up while in town Wednesday to
put him into 1933, but expects to
get around again before the bar-
gain days are over. Now that was
a nice thing to do, manifesting due
appreciation for the liberal offer
the publishers are making and a
willingness to help to the extent
of his ability now, in a financial
way. Good luck to you, "Me,” old
boy! Your evident good-will means
a lot to the producers of the paper.
J. B. Stanford of Huckabay was
also a renewer Wednesday to the
extent of his ability, and will show
up into the new year ahead for the
present, and hopes to make a fur-
ther advance later on. Everything
said relative to Mr. McElyea goes
for Mr. Stanford, too.
Rev. Joe I. Patterson, pastor of
the First Methodist church of Ste-
phenville, separated with two dol-
lars at this station Wednesday,
and it is a pleasure to add his name
to the three-year bunch. Like every
pastor who has served a church in
this city, Mr. Patterson knows and
fnllv appreciates the helpfulness
of his home town paper, and does
not hesitate to say so. Pastor Pat-
terson is now serving his second
vesr here, and the C. M. would bet
dol!«rs to doughnuts, if he were a
betting man. that all the people in
town would like to see him return
conference.
Superintendent of Education.
Practically every prominent atttfr-
R. T. Fisher, one of Dublin’sj ney from elsewhere who has at-
splendid citizens, renewed while tended court here in those years
here Monday. Mr. Fisher reported j was on the guest list of the Hall,
an improvement in business con- while traveling salesmen by the
ditions in his town, about such as hundreds have registered there,
is to be seen.here. Mr. Fisher was g0 Clerk Tudor, as collector of the
formerly a traveling salesman for hotel bills, has perhaps had deal-
a well known wholesale grocery jngr„ direct with more prominent
establishment. Stephenville was on personages from other places the
his route and he was a regular past half dozen years than any
visitor here at least once a week other citizen of Stephenville.
for years. If all the groceries he
sold to grocery merchants of this _ . _______________________________LJi
place during those years had had Mrs. C. M. Loring may not find j pd here by the 'November annual
to be shipped in a single day, even it out until she reads this, but she
Mr. Fisher cannot imagine how is a new subscriber this week and
many freight trains would have will receive the paper the ensuing
Keen required. That was before three years, by order of her son-
this town had a wholesale grocery, in-law, Mr. U. K. Grimes. Placing
_ | the name of this good woman on
Sam M. Russell, our district *h« “8t. brin*s memories of her
judge, advances his figures to departed companion, our old friend
April 9, 1936, on the bargain rate. Lum L°?ng. Lum and the writer
Friends of Judge Russell will be ™ereL botb fond of the old-time
glad to know he was able to be in brush arbor meetings, and in past
his office Tuesday, after being pars, it seems ages since then, we
kept away several days by illness. have. ">**• .1®n* .drlv“ 1"to ,tb®
Years ago when Sam was a young country behind his quick-stepping
country school teacher we heard buggy horses to attend some of
one of his trustees remark that he them Lum could quote more senp-
was giving a service that pleased ture than any layman we have
all the patrons and that he believ- ever known-
ed the fact that all the kids re-
garded him as their .friend was a
helpful factor. A few weeks ago
must have seemed to his children
to be an almost ideal parent—for
when Jesus sought to give man-
kind a new conception of the char-
acter of God, he could find no more
exalted term for hi* meaning than
the one word "Father.”
Thirty years went by. Jesus had
discharged his duty; the younger
FAMILY
y DOCTOR.
>• JOHN JOSEPH GAINES MQ
A TALK. WITH TEAtHERS
It is long ago now—that I was
a teacher in rural schools. I can
look back and see my unfitness for
such responsible position, but my
standing then was "average” or
above. My license was based on
qualification. Standards are high-
er today.
If I were a teacher today I would
spend much time in trying to bring
about “health habits” in the chil-
dren. It can be done without books.
Habits of eating,-drinking, posture,
and study; the proper use of the
eyes with regard to light; propeT
forms of exercise, with caution for
the growing organism not to over-
tax in eagerness to break records.
Children should be taught less of
vitamins than of breakfast values
—begin no day's work without a
good breakfast. End no hard day<e
work with a heavy meal. A quart
of wholesome water daily for sec-
ond or third grades. Bad practice
County Tax Collector R. E. Go-
•till stands well with little folks. ^lld^hlTve ’"thTsSttai
and also that he likes them. He hnw.nl*
had motored to the Ward school He XL had I
at noon for his little daughter, and ^ Alt.
™ tSStt~£zt2JS%
3 hTs car as he Carefully steered ijT Zh for* moving
kannv^Ia run. Wma.lV *d Mrl Golightly’s co-operation and
lit! !t WM Promised provided the cops
fi* b* transported that flock of lit- jntended to be reasonable and coup-
tie boys and
dinner tables.
girls toward their
teous in their dealings with any
Ross Tudor completed his sixth
year on the first, as a clerk in the
Hall Hotel. While joining our
three-year brigade Tuesday, we
asked him if Mr. and Mrs. Tharp
had been host and hostess to very
mkny notable patrons during that
time, and he-readily named quite
a number of such guests. Among
those mentioned were two United
SU
Miss Annie l|M Clark is not go- States Senators; first Hon. Earl
Ing to he deprived of the pleasure B. MovfieTd. and later Hon. Tom
of reading hsr favorite newspa- Connally. Two former governors
POULTRY
CREAM
AND EGGS
WANTED
Bramblett Produce Co.
Schmeling Today
I'
liiii
-
I m
m0
'■ :•
Max Schmeling, former cham-
pion, is the best heavyweight on
the fistic horison today, say ex-
perts, as the result of his victory
over Mickey Walker. Champion
Juk Sharkey, to whom Max lost
thi crown, must give him a re-
turn battle er retire, aay these
same experts.
NOTICE OF TRUSTEES SALE
State of Tnu, County of Erath.
Whereaa, on the 11th day of June. 1917,
Geo. S. Rawle. a single man. of the county
of Erath, Texaa. executed a Deed of Truat
conveying to Loula Brelllng. Truatee. the
real eatate hereinafter described to secure
The Union Central Life Insurance Com-
pany of Cincinnati!, Ohio, In the payment
i of a debt therein described, said Deed of
'Trust being recorded in Vol. Z. Page 10»,
of the Deed of Truat Records ‘of Erath
County, Texas.
And, whereas, the undersigned has been
appointed substitute trustee in the place
of the said original trustee, who has re-
fused to act and has resigned.
And, whereas, default has occurred In
the payment of the indebtedness secured by
said Deed of Trust, on account of which
default The Union Central Life Insurance
Company, the holder of said Indsbtedness,
has declared the whole amount thereof due.
and has requested me as substitute Trus-
tee to sell said property to satisfy said in-
debtedness.
NOW. THEREFORE. Notice is hereby
given that on Tuesday, the 1st day of No-
vember, A. D. 1982, between the hours of
ten o’clock a. m. and four o’clock, p. m ,
THE IMPORTANT PLANK IN
OUR PLATFORM
The one outstanding need, a
balance between income and
and expenditure is achieved.
Follow this pSlicy and you will
win through to success.
children were big enough for zelf-
support. The atrange stirrings that
had gone on inside him for years
were crystallized by the reports of
John’s success. The hour of the
great decision arrived; he hung up
his tools and walked out of town.
' ' What sort of looking man was
he that day when he appeared on
the bank of the Jordan and applied
to John for baptism? Unfortunate-
ly the Gospel nairatives supply no
satisfying answer to these ques-
tions; and the only passage in an-
cient literature which purports to
be a description of him has been
proved a fbrgery. Nevertheless, it
requires only a little reading be-
tween the lines to be sure that al-
most all the painters have misled
us. They have shown us a frail
man, under-muscled, with a soft
face—a woman’s face covered bv a
beard—and a benign but baffled
look, as though the problems of
living were so grevious that death
would be a welcome release.
This is not the Jesus at whose
word the diseirles left their busi-
ness to enlist in an unknown
cause.
And for proof of that assertion
consider only four aspects of his
experience: the health that flow-
ed ont of him to create health in
others; the appeal of his personal-
ity to women—weakness does not
appeal to them; his lifetime of out-
door living; and the steel-like hard-
ness of his nerves.
NEXT WEEK: A Strong Man
Speaks.
to wash down solid food with gulps
of water; masticate the food bet-
ter—never swallow coarse, hard fi-
bers that have to be washed down.
Sit and stand erect, do not "slouqh”
in the living room, at diningtahle,
or when walking. No hard exer-
cise immediately after eating, nor
with the stdmach empty. Don’t go
to work hungry. Children should be
able to sleep on either side, — I
should be suspicious of the little
fellow who only sleeps on the back.
Class pride in the school room
may be increased by “every pupil
erect.” Children love s degree of
parade. An upright battalion may
be organized, to overcome slouch-
ing. A better, sturdier array of bod-
ies will be the reward. Breathing
exercises pay wonderfully, and may
be practiced in concert drills. Talk
lo the children about the lungs and
them importance; start an “anti-
cough” campaign, with more hand-
kerchiefs and cough-dodging. God
bless our teachers!
I will Mil uid real estate at the door at
the County Court Houm in the elty at Ste-
phenville. County of Erath, State e< Texas,
to the hlirhe-t bidder for cwh. Said real
estate is described ex follows, lylne and
helnc situated in the County of Erath,
State of Texas, bounded and described os
follows:
About 14 miles S.W. from Stephenville.
Texas, end belns a part of the 1280 aero
survey patented to M. McMahon, ax aa-
s tones of George H. Walker, by Pat. lti,
Vol. 4. Abet. 886 and described as follows:
Resinning at the N.B. corner of original
Geo. H. Walker 8urvey; THENCE 8 80 B
448 vrs. to the N.E. comer of the W. Q.
Payne 128 84-100 acre tract: THENCE S
60 W 1700 vrs with N.B. line of said Payne
tract to S.W. comer of this in the E. B-
line of the Dublin and Alexander public
road: THENCa N 08 W 808 vrs with the
east aide of said road to the North line of
original Walker 8urvey; THENCE N 80
E 1086 vra with North line of original
survey to the place of beginning, contain-
ing 160 aena of land.
Dated this 6th day of October. A. D.
1982
R. R. WALKER.
Substitute Trustee.
A
The Stephenville
State Bank
“A Good Bonk in • Good Towm”
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Stephenville Empire-Tribune (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, October 14, 1932, newspaper, October 14, 1932; Stephenville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1120229/m1/14/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Dublin Public Library.