The DeLeon Free Press. (De Leon, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, January 15, 1932 Page: 3 of 4
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PAGE THREE
—
® ’fRainfaff'Hprp Was ™ese de leon hens
n<tiuiau-nere was make good showing
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PARENT TEACHERS ASSN.
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my
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......... 24.99
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—
Automobile Show
—T-*--
< DRUG CO
7
'Show in
T
When
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1
girl
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re—^>>
to
PHONE NO. 25
t
r
to
kt
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his
.<■
- r
or.”
1
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p
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understand
whetever ywr’ycunp lady! Laugh that off if you
. L-v>r<a.' OOF MlCC IT O V*1 ZA U’O
do
if
of delight.
“You win.
'I came to* talk
obeyed
the
queer
put up
24.99 Inches Dur-
ing Past Year
c
N
E
< JOHN
WEAVER
—
AM
11:55
f
r
B
I
■'<
Tf Cover Every Need
BONDS
DEEDS
LOANS
ABSTRACTS
COMPLETE AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE
Deeds, Abstracts, Bonds,
Notary Public -
PHONE 4«
CREAM
VERMIFUGE
For Expelling Worms
gm1 likl iMMshV. I J.VTJ
■-/'./V' A; *'
fagfc
-• 7 .. . ;
_
THE DE LEON EREE PRESS
■
“j ! room.
the silence.
|W
■J'7^
|
j her.
TOTAL ...t...,.
crippjpd
i* look
, average weight 130
at 5c per pound.—A. M.
tfc
PM PM
4:10 8:35
Leaves De Leon for Fort Worth
AM PM - PM
• 1:00 6:00
DR. W. W. SNIDER
* DENTIST
DUBLIN, TEXAS , .
Teeth Extracted Without Pain!
of my very poor ability,
t: ~* “. * ■
sincerity," he stood up,
hand in a gi _
his voice, “Lynda, I want
meet some of my friends."
At the changed timbre
A. C. MARTIN
■ —■'Lr—-------
GENERAL INSURANCE
agency
y at
I
down her
head - and
I
_ B- IL McPhail, of Roscoe, is here
y
a
_ i
8®.
\
\ -.
' ^1
1 ■ I •
31
<:«
I
a appey, sieepy reeling, it contains no
harmful drugs. Get Adlerika today;
by tomorrow you feel the wonderful -___
cleansing effect of this German doc- sponsored a baby
Paso recently.
Fifty seven different crops were
exhibited by one farmer at- a fair in
Portales, New Mexico recently.
GET SHAVED AT
Arch Hansford’s
Where Your Patronage Is
Appreciated
* PLEASED
- Customers
OUR BEST AD.
We Invite Your
Patronage
FAMILY BARBER
SHOP_
(=phiujps:
For Troubles
due lo Acid
INDIGISTIO"
I ACID STOMACH
| HtARTBUR*
| HtAOACHt
1 GAStS-HWM*.
■ WM
ROBERSON BUS
LINE, INC.......,2
New* Schedule December. 1, 1930
Leaves De Leon for Brownwood
Texas.
16, SH OATS,
lbs. for sale i
Johnston, Rt. 3.
Sleepy Feeling
After Meals
Due To Poison
came toward him, speaking
ly. A new Jocelyn seemed
.him at every turn he made.
“Felix, can’t 1 learn how
these things for you ? I mean,
** Miss Deal could teach me, I’d love
--to understand
...____________ of
voice the four card players turned.
“Boys, I want to present to you
my daughter. Miss Lynda SandqJ.
Mr. James Drory, Mr. Saul Morri-
son
very serious
‘ and
The other reason
you with
Good Plumbing Service
Experienced! Courteous Prompt
Plumbing Service.
CALL PHONE 220
Reasonable Prices
W. W. GREGORY
“Yokir Home Town Plumber”
Brother and Sietet*-./
Meet After 32 Yea*^
Mrs. Wallace Morgan had the plea-
sure of seeing her half baither, W,
AZ King, of Jenkins. Okla-who came
hey^to visit- hla sister, this week.
Tlfcv had not ;een each o‘.her since
she left their former home, I.angston,
Ala., in 1899 and came to Texas.
Later he nwvad to Oklahoma. Thev
had lost trace of each -other through
<-he years and were reunited through
will.remain here for some days, guest
of his sister.
foot. .
I Jocely shut the window* went back
to the lighted front roo*,.
This was her father, she thought.
One day Felix offered to take her,
to her office.
_“Oh, Felix, will you?, I’d love to
see your office. Will you show me
everything? Will you explain ev-
erything? I’ve never been inside an
American office/’
-r*--in-Kent’s inner sanctuary she was,
introduced to Miss Rebecca Deal,
little ruddy sturdy woman v.-;
Jocelyn was amused by this,----
, Felix -left to interview
Mrs. Mae- West of St. Louis, Mo.,
= =wnt®st “J’m only 28 yrs, old and
weighed 170 lbs. until taking one
box of your Kruschen Salts just 4
weeks ago. I now weigh 150 Mis. I
also have more energy and further-
more I’ve never had a hungry mo-
- ment.” t—
Fat folks should take one half
teaspoonful of Kruschen Salts in a
glass of hot water in the morning be-
fore breakfast — it’s the SAFE,
harmless wray to reduce ai tens of -
thousands of men and women know.
.For your health’s sake ask for and
get Kruschen at any ^drugistore—the
cost for a bottle that lasts 4 weeks
is but a trifle and if after the first
buttle you -are not joyfully satisfied
with results-—money back. ,
L visitor. 1 . _______
a twist of his whole face, got up and-
shut the door.
Jocelyn sat down beside the crip-
ple on his battered lounge and put
her hand uncertainly on his free
one. He took it up as though k had
been something more pdrishable than
his own and peered into her fade.
They spoke in low voices, trying tb
^create for themselves-am illusion K
! privacy.
“1 wanted to see you, father,
got out the way you showed
Mother doesn’t know I’m here.”
“Nothing wrong then?”
“No. 1 felt that 1 must see you.
There’s something in me that belongs
to you. And I’m really very lonely.”
“Lonely ? With a fiance and a
mother and* a crowd of friends?”
“Felix is still a stranger. I have
. no friends.”
... WE WANT YOUR ... .
Furs and Pecans
Highest Market Price
Give’Us a Chance To Buy Them
* BAGLEY & NANCE
(Rowell Bldg.)
revolving chair before his g -
neat handsome desk and looking at
Miss DcaT wTfh ’ar her eager eyes bes
gan to question her: J
“You work here with him every
day?”
“Half the time he’s ofL 'Miss
Harlow?, in Chicago or the South-
west. He’s interested, as. of course
you know, in all his mines.”
“It seem4 jjp queer to me," said
Jocelyn with her slow wistful smile,
“that all this side of his life just
means nothing to me. How much
better you know him than I do!”
Rebecca blushed and laughed.
“I wish I were as-clever as you
are and had your experience. I
would so love . .
X Here Felix entered and the
earaest-
to meet
- ,-yi
> to • work with you.
“You shall know „
whatever you want to know, sweet-
heart.”..
In the limousine, on their way to
^lunch, Felix espoke tenderly:
do want you to be in my con-
fidence but I never thought you’d
be interested in this sort of thing."
“But this sort of thing is just
part of all that I must know, Felix.
I have been put away and shut up
' ... like one of those unlucky
. princesses in towers. It is hard to
be a medevial infant in a world bf
grown-up moderns. I must know.
I must learn. If I had friends here.
; who could, teach -me . .young
people . • • ” Felix controlled a
wincing motion, “but without -them
how shall I ever learn unless you
will teach me. Do you think I
could take a business course, perhaps
after we are married ?"
"You may take any course you
like, beloved. But you musn’t hat?
vbur beautiful innocence. It is just
because you are so exquisitely dif-
ferent that I love you.”
In her own room, she sat down on
her bed and thought After a while
she pulled out a big leather valise
from her closet and rummaged there.
She dressed herself . in a pleated
short plaid skirt, a black tight jer-
sey. long-ssleeved, high in the throat
e little jacket and in a big tam-o’>
shanfvr. ■ ■
Before she put,-this on her head
she ran her Ungers back and forth
through her sleeked frock hair until
_ 21*' _____ * _ > ;
She went to her mother's
room Slid exahdned the Nkeness she
had so aehievivl: a girl
high-^elvrod face, a firm, rich mouth
Our meeting List Thursday with
the North Ward school was enjoyed
by everyone present. The papers
-presented, each meeting are" in-
structive.1. The program eriyen by "the
. ipds is always interesting.
Due to the League work, the P. T.
A. will meet once a month during
January, February and March Th»-
msatimt wHl be on the first Thurs-
day. The next meeting will be wijh
♦ he hi«*h school in February. —-_MrA.
Hall Reporter.
AIN
Lomes
5X711 AT many people call indiges-
VV .tion very often means excess
acid in the stomach. The stomach
nerves have been over-stimuiated,'
and food sours. The corrective is aa
alkali, which neutralizes the acids
instantly. And the best alkali known
to medical science is Phillips* Milk
oi Magnesia.
Ona spoonful of this harmless,
tasteless alkali in water neutralizes
instantly many times that much
acid, and the symptoms disappear
at once. You will never use crude
methods when once you learn the
efficiency of this. Go, get a smaB
bottle to try.
physicians for 50 years in correcting
excess adds. 25c and 50c a boUto—
any drug store.
AT TARLETON CONTEST
Pens of-Whitt Leghorns from
Hillview Farm, owned by Alvin
Strin$<ellow, are making histoYr
the Tarleton Imefnational Egg !
mg contest. Thjsre are 35 pens com-
peting this year, and one of String-
fellow’s pens was 2nd high for Dec-
1 f ill in ion » r ii • a111* ^ad three hens in the
’’ 1‘M1' Ra,n fe in ev’r>’ roontht“i<rh ten of die cerite; t, according to
in tW year, with May and October1 official statement given out. His best
' -bringing- the heavielfprecipital fons TP^. *‘3 ^i!S, IrSwever, tlm'eggis
The rainfall for May totaled 4.84 : k n'(lu.ire,t
i (4- i-qz to the uoxon) <uul t»e was oriven
Wmle that for October was 3.01. July ; 251 30 points for the, month’s yield
barely registered with a total of .61. I . ,_T2’P’ •>;. t pen from Hillview Farm
September showed 84 and January 1ls Ppfy 3 points out of second place
.93. ’ u" to »iate and only 30 poinU but
" Tk„ v n . < flrst P,ace in contest His
i he I ree I ress guage was damag- Second pen placed 8th in. the contest
-erl by a sljght freeze in December fnr
and the rahifall frem- the 152to -20th
of December was lost, however, con-
servatively estimated at one inch.
This was the only estimate of the
year, the other having been fairly
accurately guaged following" each
rain. _____•________ . ;
The rainfall by dates, follows;
January 1 2_^^~..-.......
January 20 ................. 73
February 7 ...................... 1.05 -r-
--February 12 .................... .25
February 15 ........... 1.00
February 22 ... ........ ,22
March 1 ........................... ........55
March 15 -...... .....r„,...................... .26 —
March 26—......... . .25
March 27 ,. ............................... 2 .37
-—March, 30 '........... ? ,52
- Mril 1.7 ......;........... ..... ' '10
■April ,27 ■
April 30 ......57
•'[ay-13 ■........................’ .89 •
May 18-19 ......,............... 4.35
- May 20 <- 2.60
Jun® 9
H June- 11 ........................... ,____________ g2
July 18-19 „.
A ugustr-tT”’ ■■*•-----------------------"T.22”
August 20 ....................... .22
August 29 ..................... .95
“ September*-nr-TT 7 ' —•• -.Rf-
October 12 _______......' ~2. -2.47
October 23 ..............54
November 16 .............. .95
November 26-29 .53
November 30 Dec. 1 ...........1.23
December 15-20 (Est) 1.00
When the doors open Saturday to
the National Automobile Show in
Giand Palace, New York, Chevrolet
occupy, the position of honor on
the snow floor for the fifth cnnsec*
iitive year.
2 Each year the NatimJl Automobile
Chamber of Commerce?awards first
place at the national hhows to the
member company which has done the
largest dollar volume of business in
the previous 12 months.
Th? award , is- much coveted in the
distinction it Conveys it also carries
with it the right to first choice of
exhibition space at the national
shows, at New York and Chicago.
Chevrolet first achieved the posi-
tion Of honor in 1928.' Since then the
company has consistently maintain-
ed its leadership. < .
Wholesale grocers of Lamesa, Tex-
as, reported a forty per cent increase-
in'volume of business from June to
October.
One hundred t^ns of salt every
week is being marketed from the mine
near Crane City. Texas.
West Texas Herefords captured the
premiums at the State Fair of Texas
this year.
The wheat produced in the Pan-
handle of Texas this season would
make enough flour for three billion
loaves of bread, enough to feed the
lieople of West Tevas bread -for five -
years.
The El Paso Chamber of Commerce
’ beef show in Ei
T’riee flight up.”
, . . - 2-2-.J she took
the last few steps of her ascent of
Across the, room Nick Sandal
battered sofa against
---- up pain-
and smoked a pipe with deep, eager
sucking noises, cuddling -itsr bowl in'
one of Tiis Swollen and distorted
hands. . Jli.^ bright eyes’ watched a
; ___ ______________... group oF four, men playing cards at
■v ~~Wnfused excitement it made on her i a table. j . b
W came rapidly tqi the last few
.j- step® and stood in the dobrway.
Nick Sandal, tmrdrrng away
.... - * ------ — a qhv<* ,,,
■7rt? eAsP’Tijf‘ exclamation, then put up J “ vh-hum.”
‘ v" L i as though, to prevent an, in-
j suit and struggled to his feet. .
“Boys, this is my .daughter,”, he
1 cried out sharply.
TJy“re w"’? a"rtrairrei;.si1ufrr'v-iTi”thr’ ’
It was -Jocelyn herself who broke ^or bim.
e silence. ________ > “Who
uGq tfn with your game, please/’^-
she said. ‘F came to’talk to my
father.’ ’ , , " '
The men obeyed with alacrity.
—D^ ER .pupils is always
Miss Alpha Waldon and Mr. Edward I a
Dyer were married at the home of
Rev. A. F. Nabors on Tuesday after-
p. m. They were accompanied to the
noon, January 12, 1932, at 3 o’clock
home of Rev. Nabors by Messrs. Bud
Brownlee and Lloyd Handlin, who
witnessed the ceremony. These are
both De I^eon ybUng people, the groom
a son of Mr. and-Mrs.’ Jesse Dyer.
They will make their home in De
I>on the Free Press understands.
“HUMAN TARGET”
WITH BUZZ BARTON
FRIDAY-SATURDAY 1
For those who like plenty of action
and fun in their all-talking weiterns,
“Human Targets” with Buzz Barton,
which plays- at the Liberty Theatre
Friday and Saturday, should more
than pleased. . It is a western of the f 8-45
old style with plenty of hard ruling^'
clean,.fighting and honest fun coupl-
ed with plausible story.
Lost 23 Lbs. of Fat-
In Just 4 Weeks
FRIDAY JANUARY 15^ 193?*
woow
by © m.
KATtiARINt NfWLIN BUUT-®
— METOND INST4I I-MENT i - ;
Fresh - from a French convent,1 aiJlTwith
Jocelyn Harlowe returns -to New
York to her socially-elect mother, a
religeous, ambitious woman. The girl
is hurried into an engagement with
the wealthy Felix Kent. Her father,
Nick Sandal, surreptiously enters the
y girl’s home one night. He tells her
, he used to call her Lynda Sandal.
The girl ,is torn by her desire to see
life in the raw and to become part
of her mother’s society. Her father
studies her surroundings.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
“U.hdm7 I suppose so. Will you
—— get his picture for me?”
“Felix Kent’s?"
“Sure thing. Your young man’s;"
■» . She laughed. Thg whole thing be-
• gain to be an astonishing adventure.
— i . This father Ttj&1_ a way with him that
opened a door in her heart. He was
so casual, so hard, so vibrant
t. There had been nothing like him in
her life. f......
2 to get the picture.
She was .very quick, being
-*'—- Ive La i.
ever if she left him. R„
back light-footed she found hint
turning to his place from
swift furtive investigation c_ ___
TOOfti. She noticed this, but in her
w... . i.. iiivnc ciiouc: uii nr:r i
at that time no particular impres-
. „ sion. Later she was driven to re-
*. meniber it. , „
2.2_ Her father stood up to go, catch-; sm°k® of his pipe, made
~ ing his cane, smothering’a cry ~ni ' *r “
the pain all .sudden movements cost i bis hand
him. j “’,u 1
“I mustn’t see you again/ But—|
here’s my address.” He pushed aT[
folded scrap of paper into her hand j
. and bent-his fingers over it: “IJ
want you to have it for two reasons, i
--—_ -If-.you evar need me you can ■ send
’ for me or come to me. But I ad-
vise you unless it’s a i
- business to forget me
whereabouts.
—. .well, I won’t bother
that. May I kiss you ?
? _ She lifted her face.__She was in
tears. 7
She followed him into the small
back room, her own bedroom. It
startled her to think that he had
climbed in at her own little dark
window. Now Sandal got himself
himself painfully cut across its sill
and Jocelyn wqtehed him climb down
the fire escape, swiftly and quietly
a 1
_______ _______ with i
bright eyeglasses and a wide mouth, j
Jocelyn was amused by this* new 1 rrie”a* * don’t mind loving you.
manifestation of womanhood, when I I’*11 noL the most' creditable parent
ZTJL- -—* someone in ■ in the world. And I don’t want to ------....... .. ,„K„- - -v„c
his opter office she sat down jn his rRet you in trouble with _your future way. Will sell chdap or tradeZfor lot “wistry, because in addition to the
revolving chair before his “great j busband and with the reputable side and- difference. ” .......”“*i—’
“.I’ll1 never let them know.”
“I say, Lynda, take it easy. Let’s
talk it over sort of quietly.’ That’s
better,” as—she let her body relax
against the seat. “I’ll tell you frank-
ly. I have no feeling of- obligation
toward your mother or your young
man. 1 like you. T like your run-
ning off by the way of the fire es-
cape to visit me. It’s the way I be-
gan, running away nights by way of
a back window. But I don’t want to
hurt your life or spoil your chances
any. What do you want?”
“I want” said Jocelyn, speaking
low and rapidly, *‘I want to know
what life looks like when it—-comes
round from behind and you can see
its face. I want to know people,
all kinds of people, different sorts
of people.’ I want to know how good
it is to be bad, and how bad it may
be to be good. I want adventure,
risks, dangers; I want—”
“You want too much. You're only
a girl and what’s worse, you’re A
1
can Miss Jocelyn Harlowg.”
She put dier hand across his lips.
“Hush! Not here. Here I’m Lynda
Sandal.”
At that Nick pulled
hand, threvt back ( his
laughed with a great painful yelling
And I surrender. Lyn-
da Sandal, I hereby take' you as my
child for better or for worse and
promise to show you all the reality
and the adventure I can decently
suPPl»,^ And if this madness be the
death of Jocelyn Harlowe I do here-
by promise to aid’ succor and sup-
port Miss Lynda Sandal to the best
* . - . ’7 ’7". In order
to seal our compact and to show my
.....- 722 lifted his
reat gesture and raisel
you
pair, of tilted gleaming eyes: a
_ 7 7. a swagger that, was mada
charming by jts lines of race arid
breeding. . “ r
J‘Oh, Lynda Sandal,” said Jocelyn
•1 am going to be like you. Maybe
it will be wonderful!” ' ' \
There in the little bedroom, its
door, locked, coiling a trunk rope
around her arm she switched off her
light and swung her leg across the
window sill.
, She drove to’the address her fath-
er had given her. She got out. paid
the driver and climbed up the dirty
steps-of an old-fashioned brown-
stone building on a greet which must
once havp been lined with sober
dwellmgs. A Japanese boy answer-f-
“Does a Mr. Sandal live here?”
“Yes’m. ' 2”/:„'2
. \Jocelyn paused before
I ’ ‘ _J
the three flights of stairs.
the.
' crouched on a
was .very quick, being real- [ 9le wal1- He was twisted ____
’ ly afraid_ that, he might vanish for- lully among some tattered cushions
So, coming
'.2.J re-
i some,
of -.-—the.
I
- N
S
V
•
R
I of first place in the
for December.
hard,
Si;e. hurried to her room ;
real-1
—Sloan’s Grocery.
FOR SALE OR TRADE—My farm
13.1'4 acres north of Dublin on high-
Box 331, Mynday,
P ''
» -A---
it was the wild unruly mop of a gol-
Uwog. She went to her mother’s
1 with a slim | hunting grounds. Aylewwrd.*
..De Leon received just a fraction
less than twent-five inches of rain-
inth^
“Lonely ?
* “fanBer' ' ’,av',»2^00 8
Nick put an arm roughly around ’ Hampton^
“ AH i vii u a sack of »ur Shawnee’s Best
AB right, Ljnda. I 11 be your -FWr—it’s good. —Sloan’s Grocerv
fnend. I don’t mind loving you. ——----------
"Boys, I want to
my daughter. Miss
and Mr. Gustave Lowe. Jack
Ayleward, my protege and protect-
or.”
Jock rose and bowed. The other
men sat where they were and shook
Lynda’s hand with cordiality, star-
ing, and grinning hard grins up into
lw*r face. Jock Ayleward *li«i not
stare. He looked at her once keenly
and looked away.
“Don’t stop plajdng. May
watch the game?”
“We’re quitting, Miss Sandal. So
long. Ohl Nick. See you later-at the
Th«7 *«Mt, slipping into tight,
net,? coats, slapping on uieir hats at
rakish angles, smiling at J.ynda last
with"” probing looks. ’
After the men -had finaly" taken
their leave Jocelyn questioned her
father.
“What is the hunting grounds?1^—’
“A gambling place.”'‘
“Is that how you make your living
father St 2 „ ,
He held out his crippj^d hands
with a gesture and a look which
clearly meant, “How could I ?’’ No.
Jock Ayleward, who is like a son to
me, does ail that,” he told her.
After a long and troubled silence
she asked him “When may I come
again to ree you?” _.27]
. “Whenever you please, my dear,
or can make it> convenient. I am
nearly always at home. Most of the
time on this old sofa. Every day I
find it harder to get about.”
“Oh, father, can’t • something—be
done?”
He shook his head.
“Jock has done what he could for
me. He takes eare of me now, you
must know.; It’s fair enough. There
was a time when 1 took care of him.”
“He loves you father, J can see
that when he smijes.”
“He’s riot a bait scout, but don’t
get. romantic about him, Lynda. He’s
not the man your Fexil is, for in-
stance,. He has a poor outlook in
life and a character which might be
called unstable.” _______=
“He’s loval to you.”
There's m sort of stability in that.”
“(Jh-hum. Emotionally, I should
say he as a sort of bulldog. . But
that’s lieenu-e, perhaps, he’s not been
-eoddled—any—by-Hfe.—Jfc”knorv'.’S’”the’
value of the few people that care
v* Liwv *’ ___
Who pfs£_bgside you, Father?”
The ’brilliant-eyed cripple laughed
in a low and taunting key. -“About
a dozen women, roughly \peaking.”
, rne men obeyed with alacrity. . CONTINUED NEXT WEEK
They returned to their cards and to , _
their smoking, ignoring Nick and his ' DAUGHTER OF W. M.
““t on® them, wink and WYLIE TO TEMPLE ________
FOR AN OPERATION ,______
Wy M; Wylie, section foreman .at
De Leon, accompanied his daughter,
Miss Irene Wylie, of Fort Worth, to i*—-------------
^>cott & ’White sanitarium to Templet jUL 1 ■ O • I
last week where the young lady was VllCVTOlCt 01X 1S
to have an. operation. The Free Press MIA ao
y.fter mlny yS„ MtmOrCQ M H. I .
_ Mrs.' Bessie White, daughter of
visiting in the'Lome of L. S. Hodges
And of Adrian Ballard.
FOR SALE—Best fifty acre farm in
De Leon territory, with nice bunga-
low dwelling and other good improve-
1 ments. Small cash,, payment, balance
year> ? P®r interest.
A dopey, tired feeling is ALWAYS
a sign that waste food matter stays
too long in the bowels. It ferments
and forms gas. It breeds germs. It is
sure to noison heart, kidneys, brain.
Adlerika washes’ out BOTH uppei
and lower bowel. It brings out poi-
sons which cause gas, nervousness and
dopey, sleepy feeling. It contains
O ** * “ v ■ a w- a z ix <* VxJ <> Jr v
by tomorrow you feel the wonderful
torts simple remedy.’ T. p. Weaver
& Son, Druggists.
< ITATION BY^ PUBLICATION
The State of Texas - ' ——
County of Coinanche
To the Sheriff or any Constable of
Comanche County.—GREETINGS:
You are hereby commanded to
summon Ivan Jeffrey by,making pub-
lication of this citation once in each
week for four successive weeks ' pre-
vious to the return day hereof, in
some newspaper published in your
county, if there be a newspaper pub-
lished therein, but if not, then in the
nearest county where a newspaper
is published, to appear at the Jan
uary Term of the Justice Court of
Precinct No. 5, Comanche -County.
Texas, at the City Hall in De Leon,
Texas, on the S econdWednesday. in
Feb. 1932, the same being the 10th
day of February, 1932, then and there
to answer-the petition filed, in said
court on the 17th <hty of November,
A. D. 1931, in a suit, number on the I
docket of sai<l court No. .826, where-
in the Good Year Tire and Rubber
Co., is plaintiff and Ivan Jeffrey “7s
defendant, said petition alleging’that
defendant iw indebted to plaintiff in
the sum of (140.00 upon open account,
and that the same is past duo ond
unpaid, -
: Herein fail not but have before
said ecuirt cn.thn sflid February 10th.
19.32, this writ with your return
thereon showing how you have exe-'
cuted the same.
(liven under tny hand this 10 day
of January A. D. 1931.
H. C. Heath, Justice of lhe Peace.
Free. No. 5 Comanche County, Texas. ■■
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Scott, R. L. The DeLeon Free Press. (De Leon, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, January 15, 1932, newspaper, January 15, 1932; De Leon, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1278635/m1/3/: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Comanche Public Library.