The Bellville Times (Bellville, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, December 21, 1923 Page: 2 of 8
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fc"i-
41
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----
HMY hzad trafled hes to (le terne-
PRIMA DONNA SCOUTS' PAL
brought false charges agaias her.
■table*. but toney is all-pewer rul. and
7th day of January, A. D., 1924, then
then covering with earth
She
the
am, with an my many thousands of
$
frends and own family, alone.
8
Not with a child in her arms.
* ct
E. G. LA AS, Dealer
nursery window. A child pluyed there.
BELLVILLE, TEXAS
..-3°
62
gt
SEAL
Three
Clerk District Court, Austin County,
*)
48-41
Texas.
Cars sa ©ne!
Citation'By Publication
* I
be inch as to affect the strength
soon
NEW
Sp66la Holiday Fares
SEAL
ber, 1923.
THE PRESIDENT ON SCOUTING
Phone 11
Robert Schulz, who recently
ibruary let and 2nd, 1924.
▼M« MV 9COUT GOAL
/6
<14f
a
Between points in Texas
and Louisiana
wearing qualitles of the concrete,
though concrete begins to harden
Given under my hand and
the seal of said Court, at
office in Bellville, Texas,
this the 1st day of Decem-
or
Al-
i
i
i
■
i
i
i
To relieve rheumatism, sprains,
lame back, lumbago or pleurisy,
Ballard’s Snow Liniment is a
remedy of proven merit. It is
very powerful and penetrating.
Three sizes, 30c, 60c and $1.20
per bottle. Sold by Tesch &
Tesch. — Advertisement.
I
>
a
2
Thos, B. Wheat
5O-2t
VCHAMPION
BELLVILLE MOTOR CAR CO.
and alleging In substance, as follows, I
tn-wit:
That defendant has been guilty of ।
THE STATB or texas. I
To the Sheriff, or any Constable of
Austin County—GREETING;
You Are HEREBY Commanded that,
by making publication of this Citation
in some newspaper, published in the
County of Austin, if there be a news-
paper published in said County (but if
not, then in the nearest County where
a newspaper is published), for four
weeks previous to the return day here-
of, you summon Garfield Wenfrey,
otherwise known as Richard Winfrey,
whose residence is unknown, to be and
appear before the District Court, to be
holden in and for the County of Aus-
tin at the Court-house thereof, in Bell-
1323, Wester N-w,pa»
of said Court, in Bellville,
Texas, this the 29th day .of
November, A.D. 1923.
J. L STIERLING,
J. L. STIERLING,
Clerk District Court, Austin County.
at
running several hour* a day.
The advantages of one or another
method of curing were not found to !
i
□
57
Curing Newly-Laid Concrete by Flood-
ing.
: the great prima donna has forgotten
neither her promise nor her scout
DheJan on Buick, cars
aids materially in cooling the
powerful Buick Valve-in-Head
motor. Qhe wide fan belt can
be replaced without removing
any part of the mechanism
CAnother reason why
Buick is the
Standard of Comparison
Bunceed.
"The troubie wt’ the Methodista,"
Tickets on sale December 20-21-22-2
limited to reach original starting P°"
by midnight January 7, 1924. I
------- Germol" forindigestion gives the digestive
8900 map mmediate relief ond removes nystem (
For particulars and reservations ask
Your Santa Fe Ticket Agent
(Conducted by National Councul of the Boy
Scouts of Amerlea.)
4th and Sth, 1924.
6th and 7th, 1924.
Ath and Sth. 1924.
at 1th and,16th, 1924.
mber Sth and 6th, 1924.
mbsr 6 and Sth, 1924
H. A Ripple,
Co,Supt.
BOY-
SCOUTS
.....
A wonderful business car for dad—
big loading space for samples, grips,
tools, anything — by removing rear
seat and upholstery! A wonderful
closed car for the whole family — bo th
seats adjustable forward and back-
ward to accommodate everybody,
tall and short! A wonderful vaca-
tion car for next summer—seats and
upholstery make up into full-sired
bed! More service at less cost! Come
and enjoy a free demonstration.
Ji
fascinated her, always aroused bitter-
ness in her. It was the win low of an
apartment bouse, facing the tenement
house in which she lived. It was a
From County (Superintenden’s
Office
1
you knew how hard I work, after I
wax two and one-half months ill, near
frantic woman. She looked ab > n her
Iowa inaugurates Roads
Campaign in Each County
The |„w. Good Ronds asnocintoi
permnanen tiy orzantand and with a dog
Z hlzhway buliding protram Adopt
of the Mate and“tnvsop
expected to carry the pr.
attended by a nurse. A rich child
with toys. There was a doll as big
as a child, teddy bears, mechanical ।
____— - ________a fire scape - gk 8
with a child in her arms is a card tiat i .c222
"" “1 - I « 21£8
Nora Wenfrey filed in said “Coure ! thtends is shown in the tollowing let
11 J e c a 1, , ter recently sent by her to the scouts
against the said Garfield Wenfrey, R .
otherwise known as Richard Winfrey, ° °
home thereon, of three rooms
end front and back porches.
He and Mrs. Schulz moved in
last week, and their farm is
with the child.
Luis had tied
ON THE SQUARE”
hast per fer a
M-==- l
L. anont Rome time
they had tracked bar down. even to
the tenement.
ing tlicvugl a friend. The j ..i •
in the service of the detetlives
would take Billy trom aer.
Il was by order of th- court
child wus four months old, aau
ago. _______
Distress after *2*
bad digestion. H ere
band and;wife, insupportable. Where-
fore, plaintiff prays the court that cita-
tion be issued by publication, citing
the defendant herein to appear and
answer this suit, for judgment dissolv-
ing said marriage relations, for costs
of suit, and for such other and further
relief, special and general, in law and
in equity, that she nfay be justly en-
titled to, and she’will ever pray.
Herein fail NOT, but have yeu then
and there before said Court, this Writ,
with your return thereon, showing how
you have executed the same.
Witness, J. L. Stierling. Clerk of
the District Court of Austin County.
Given under my hand and the seal
giigb-4
in ifteen nsinutes. Lois bad ua i waru
r
-
thought she had outwitted tne
1 rer s2 • 2
! HN8. Lgp
That window opposite had away" —ej.cn’
ha,-i
unn u Cl id -l aruu 13 a cum -m- >
drawa a crowd. That window- into 39
the next-door apartment ? Impossible. "
-
By MYRA CURTIS LANZ
ran about
place like a
frequent intervals. These were kept
- " cipenneeme
** ‘ *. • "°**0C382
They wanted the boy. They wanted i of the
to get rid of the poor girl whom young weeks
2
Madame Ernestine Schumann-Heink
has a special place in her heart for
the boy scouts. A promise made by
her eighteen months ago to the scout*
of Boise, Idaho, to go camping with
them and sing for them around the
fur escape. The tire escape? lupoy
things, trains, all such things as her
own boy would be denied.
Every morning at that hour the
nurse took the child for a walk. She
had taken him out now. There was
no one in the room. And there, |
propped up in the window, was the
doll, monstrously life-like, life-slze, as
big as her own child.
Suddenly a frantic thought came to
the young mother. She darted back, ;
They were gone. She was drensing
her owa child again. She was *t**|.
tag down the stairs carrying him Th* the poopi. o;
janitor had gone. Sha was eut l. the port"th.o
Street, free, with her child still bars. mi» 1
They dhould never find her ngatn, | "amto completlon
by order of the court.
h
after it is mixed, the full strength is ■
developed by progressive hardening i
over a period of time. The hardening !
process is sald to be not a drying
process, as the presence of moisture
is necessary to assist the chemical
action which causes concrete to harden.
Philip had foolishly married. The sec- ! he cheaper
ond part of the plot had been accom- ; because of the labor necessury 2
pUsUed.. But the first— shovel the dirt on to the pavement
Lois glanced desperately at the an I later clean it off. The ' it 1 r
sleeping child. He was so good, ill- ( qulred to keep the earti Wet Wi2
ready he was beginning to tnow tier about as much as if- t he suit.ee ° i
and tv smile when she took him up. ' the pavement was flooded.
They should never get him' i Some contractors reported that the
use of hay was best. They said it
would hold more water and could be
ment. They would be at Let duor
their further living together as hus- attend to, you would forgive my not
1 coming or writing. You see, boys, I
— t
Im
THR 8TATE OF TEXAS. I
To„the Sheriff or any Constable of
A us tiniC ounty — G R E ETI NG:
You] Are Hereby Commanded to
summon JAmy Jackson by making pub-
lication of this Citation] once injeach
week for four successive weeks pre-
vious to the return day hereof, in
some newspaper published in your
County, ifsthere be a newspaper pub-
lished therein, but if not, then in any
newspaper published in the 22nd Judi-
cial District;! but if there be no news-
paper"published in said Judicial: Dis-
trict, then in a newspaper published
in the nearest District to said
22nd Judicial District, to ppear
at the next regular term of the Dis-
trict Court "of Austin County, to be
holden at the Court House thereof, in
Bellville, Texas, on the first Monday
in January 21924, the same being the
7th day] of January, 1924, then and
thereto answer a petition filed in said
Court on the 30th day of November,
1923,Jin a suit, numbered on the docket
of said (Court No. 6158, wherein Geo.
Jackson is Plaintiff,'and Amy Jackson
Defendant, and said petition alleging
abandonment of plaintiff by defendant.
HEREIN2FAIL Not, but have you be-
fore said Court, at its aforesaid next
regulariterm,:this Writ, with your re-
turn thereon, showing how you have
executed, the same.
Witness, J.L. Stierling. Clerk of
the District LCourt of Austin County.
Louisiana Parish Saves
Money by Using Iron Ore
Iron ore, found In northwestern I
Louisians, has proved of great value 1
in road building in that state, and, la
some locnlitles where it has been used
has effected a saving of $2,000 to
88,000 a mile in ths cost of construe-
tloa.
Highway engineers in Louisiana
have been using th* ore as a binder
instead of sand or clay, and have
found it far superior to that material
in many instances. During 1922 th*
Louisiana state highway department
completed 850 mile* of new roads.
Most of tbit mileage consist* of gravel.
The remainder consist* of roads built
of shells, sheet asphalt or bitulithic.
The 1923 program includes a larger
amount of asphaltic construction.
Iron ore was first used in De Soto
U. In 1917. Then a large de-
PooIt was found northwest of Arcadia.
Ore from this depostt Is belng used as
A base course on the new Homer-Min-
don highway, the Arcadia-Natchitoches
Alh"A: the Ruston-Arkansas high-
*»y and the Pershing highway. The
state pays about 10 cents a yard in
royalties for this material, against |1
Auargin sand clay gravel. The waving
erected amounts to about $1.50 a yard.
pntgn on X «neducationai
‛r ‛
I x' ."2
y ere always money, -jtjs the legiaintw
» i* your church, rv. been some la n upon to enget
for a f—r saw, an bow necemury to the program.
t yo think If* cost mer
sible I
There bottom.
purchased a home place in the turned from San An Wi
southern edge of town, has he spent some tim pn
built a small but comfortable daughter. Mrs. Al eb
other relatives. Mr.
astonished at the J
growth of San Antonioi
last trip out there 80
weumemsazd4i
‘36 >
harsh, abusive and cruel treatment to-1 dying; how I had to make up all the
ward plaintiff, and generally conducted, postponed concerts and bank and
himself in such a manner as to render j house—oh, gee, all sorts of things to
Different Ways to Cure
Newly Placed Concrete
was Recent survey of numerous high-
They way construction projects show that
“ontractors emptor direrent.
Th* to cure newly-laid concrete. This cur
Lis ing I* said to be one of the veryLI- |
husbund. the son of a million dre, bud portant processes in buiding • 5
class concrete pavement.
cured a divorce, with Billy's cust • ty. 1 On level sections of highway. e
sie ' preferred method, it was found, is.the :
con- ' building of earth dykes along the edges
of the pavement and flooding the in |
' *|de area as shown In the illustration. .
j The water is then kept on the surface
She would be stopped at the
A woman on a fire escape Iq
Sum guT," now occupied by Wm. Pomikal
piumsspentfor Highways and family.
I *«* iLTh^-1-r**''* the United —-----------
5.
et tralia 2t.7. * r
ville. Texas, on the first Monday in I
January. A.’D., 1924, same being the* campfire, is still unfulfilled, but that
SCOUTS FLAN BIG GOOD TURN
The forces of the Boy Scouta of
America are to be drawn up in a na-
Boa-wide civic good turn in th* form
of assistance in community rat-kill-
tag campaign*. The executive board,
Bey Scout* of America, ha* recently
given official backing to scouts’ help
in organized effort, to rid the land of
th* malignant rodent.
That scouting’* standards of fair play
and humane ideals will in no wise be
endangered by scouts' partieipation in
the extermination of the peats, la cited
by Dr. W. T. Hornaday, director of
the New York Zoological park, known
the world over for his high sportsman-
ship and aympathette knowledge of an-
imal lite.
“I cannot concelve of a more laud-
able use of the surplus energies of
the boy acouts than in helping in the
task of bringing about the total ex-
tinetion of the common rat, the rec-
ognized pent throughout the world,"
•ay* Dootor Hornaday. “The boy
scoutstshould be commended and en-
couraged in the ruthless killing of
rata. If the lose of the million* of
dollars to agrleulture and th* trad*,
aaused by these animals, 1* not suf-
Aelent to justify destruction, then con-
dder th* further menace as the car-
rier* of many contagious diseases
which they alone are th* mean* of
ecattering broadcast. In my opinion
there I* no danger of Impairing th*
morals of boy scouts er encouraging
ruthless siaughter of wild animals
while engaged in the extermination of
these loathsome peste. If the Boy
Seouts of America should be the meant
of killing off all domestic rats and
rodente they would be entitled to a
medal and a monument a mile high to
ehow the appreclatton of the world in
general."
„g.m28
I.-M-142 -
$-93+ % Y “*
d --T.
1 ,3.
"e
concrete for ten days or IWo
ThIs method was thought to ,
'My Dearly Beloved Scout-Sons:
“Don’t lose faith in me, please. If
I am "authorized by the State
Department;of Education to an-
nounce to the;trustees and teach-
ere of Austin County that $2.00
per capita is now available.
The dates for teachers exami.
By Order of the
Court
one years I lost the tine, dear father
of my children, and since I am to ful-
fill the duties of father and mother,
and sing besides. As you know, my
children now all are married, have
their own children. I am free, so you
think, to run around and around and
enjoy life, but not I. My duties are
just as great, and even harder, though
I love it and I am happy to be ‘the
most necessary fact’ in many ques-
tloua.
‘This year's vacation I used to fix
my new home, where I will lie till
the Great Ou ll er comes whom we all
have to follow peacefully. I am still
singing, so I hope, for four years more
before I retire. Then I shall have
been singing fifty years and close my
career with my golden jubilee. To
see yon all once more, beloved chil-
dren o’ mine, and be with you 'round
a campfire and telling you some sto-
ries and facts of my life, shall be one
of my dearest duties to fulfill, and
when you are men and come near my
home in (California, sooner or later,
you-will be very welcome there, every
one of you.
“My best love and wishes are with
you and yours and beautiful, great
Idaho, and the Boise Oity people.
“Devotedly, faithfully,
(Signed)
“ ‘MOTHER’ ERNESTINE SOHU-
MANN HEINE."
she snatched up the clothesline, made
one end fast to the Iron bed. tied the used several times over. Moreover,
other about her waist, climbed to the It was not hard work to distribute the
windowsill. The window below was hay or rake It uP after the curing
only six feet across the gap, She let period.
herself down. She pushed out from the | Where water was plentiful, some
wall. She swung above that dizzy contractors expressed themselves in
space. Then her feet touched the sill j favor of using sprinklers A water
of the opposite window underneath, Pipe was laid down the center of the
and in another moment she was stand- road, with lawn sprinklers attached at ,
ing on it.
A moment later and she had the doll
in her arms.
Another moment, and she had swung
free at the end of the rope. Hanging
in midair, eh« was conselous of an
8 motlon," Hid bls friend.
• cost uet three end
Mf’l been taken in," M|g
■ * Hew dest thou make
9,
a14
is no loving husband. Since twenty-
Prenident Coolldge 1« a firm believer
in th* boy seont movement. "You
organination," be ba* snid to die
scouta, "nerves to preserve wne hrina
out valuable traita, and I believe that
the Bey Bcouts of America have w
frost tuture before them and const l
rate a reel torce working for wood citt
awful sickness. But, grasping the
doll tight, she climbed up the rope
with hands and feet until she found
herself once more standing upon ths
■III of her own window.
In a moment or two she was inside,
and had begun feverishly to strip off
her child's clothes. He opened his
eyes and smiled at her, stretching eut
his little arms.
“Listen!" She was pretending he
could bear her. "You mustn't make a
sound, not a sound if mummy is to
keep yon I”
Hs almost seemed to sense the mean-
ing of her words, for he lay looking
at her in silence, his large bin* eyes
fixed wonderingly upon hers.
Feverishly she undressed him and
put the long clothes upon the doll.
She thrust it Into the basket that was
the boy’s cradie. There came the
sound of footsteps on the stairs.
She looked about her desperately.
Then, picking up the boy in her arms,
she deposited him in the bottom
drawer of the rickety ehiffonler. She
nearly closed it
A hammering at the door. The child
wailed. She gasped in despair. She
stroked his face. The wall ceased
Ha was falllag neleep again.
“Ops*, Mrs. Constable, or we’ll
break in the door. We know you're
there."
She cast one glance at the basket
and ran to the door, opened it. “What
do you want?"
Tt’a the court'* order. We’ve come
for the bey."
"Mal Yon shan’t take him!” She
fought desperately over the basket.
She sobbed. 'There, then! Don’t
wake him!"
"Why, that’* a senstbie little woman!
It’* tha court’* order.”
"Don’t wake him. I’ve dona my best
by him. Keep bla face covered in the
cold. Oh, go, go, before you kill tael" i
20575484(
SIXES
Five Passenger Tourin* $1295 Three Passenger Sport
Two Pxienaer Roadater 1275 Roadster . , Slave
Five Passenger Sedan . 2095 Fourp,.s. : •*07
FEEgessaouble. R . 1725
Sevep Passenger Touring 1585 Brougham Sedan . . , 2235
Seven Passenger Sedan . 2285 Four Passenger Coup* . 199$
FOURS
Five Passenger Touring $ 265 Five Passenger Sedan so
Two Passenger Roadster MS' Four Passenger Coupe . i303
Prices f o. b. Buick hotoini; iortmmtnt tar to bo add»d
8.33
"• g g 23 ,0
« 3.0 •
V ’ 3. - r"d**,
.,.,0xss
AHD,
4 1 X -■ , (
p
"We ar* prlmarlly coucerned
bonding out of Um boyhood ot ton
• manhood for
folly equlpped
endmeraliy, not
lems ef the hom
den, bo. the pre
to ■ end
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Zeiske, Richard E. The Bellville Times (Bellville, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, December 21, 1923, newspaper, December 21, 1923; Bellville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1579948/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .