Red River County Review (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 15, 1923 Page: 2 of 4
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» 7V
RED RIVER COUy TY REVIEW
a
7tUf)
News of Our Neighboring C©ntie
Condensed From Their Papers
VHarvey (Miller** says at last j
I (Worn down the morale '^r*fc3J
Suitors and they ilon>
hiajfiany longer.
Or
-o—*-
^■-V TITUS COUNTY
(Mt.~;Pty9a&aait Times-Review)
■ Mount PleasaulTbusineas meif are i
McCURTAIN COUNTY, OKLA.; much more profitable thanjcow&fcsas
(Idabel
Mrs. J. V.’. Laden
15 years ago, died
her old home In Missoi. . and was
burled there. £he is survived by a | coming the hufltl;
husband and six children in Idabel j orchard and
a^ one in Chickasha. - homa. Its
rof. • R. H. Clark, teacher of the,_stream» ab^od In game and fish and i srv .Wrmfversafy of the founding of
figh School Orchestra, died Thursday, the fruit and fkek Industries are “Very -thatijjU'fr by inaugurating a good
GOOD
Gazette,■ -4.an<^2 car loads were shipped. About- (b pull off a, prosperity get-together A D CTTCC
n'who } a^ed here 20lfecf£s of marketed stra*berrlaa fftaaquet ThursdaV nigbti Feb. 22. ^ VlwMlAk I I EL9
; whttL.- ^Siting at jyieroW'lH) to 1 Gyrates per adft. | 'A&jUSfr-county jtfetihg held Wed-i %
ccwty is rapidly .be- n|sday the bask^^bJl char
ufltin^flshlng. truck and( fdlf' county was won
vineyard section of^Okla-'*^ field Jv&Sk . v
tfflffyfQIub wflU celebrate the
1 championship ^
by Win-
mountains,-. forests? and -p^g
A brother in Missouri came -for the profitable,
body. He was an Cdd Fellow, K. of ordinarily bestowed on.a cotton crop
•-out
jf F.‘ and Elk.
Willis Willie, a full blood, Choctaw,
was arrested Wednesday on an in
dlctment charging him with the mur-
der of Dixon Parker, another Indjan .
(four years agoy t Heretofore
*er of barker has been an
-*ery4
an was taken with s
*ver bottom Wednes-
’longing to J.
-est been mi
them
ever given thff care
rnTce
citizenship campaign commencing^
wfth sermons on good ttlzenship by (
maKing great ajj the pa8tdr8 an(j continue by mee^1
Winans-Powell ingg and iecture8 throughout the week
especially directed to the boys and 1
youths, through the BoY" Scouts and
the schools. This is another blow at
Bayless - and Clyde G. Wag- the ?oonshiners.^n^Kbo.tleggeTs.
her to his home A one-legged deaf an?F dumb negro
named Okra shot and killed his wife
and Miss Annie at a ■«llegT0 8tore Thnfaday night and
was- lodged In Jail. Officers also ar-
Idabel churches are making great
preparations 'to? the
revival to commence soon in their bif
tabernacle.
A^Eurnrlse wedd
GENUINE
“BULL"
DURHAM
TOBACCO
fas that of Miss
Bern
staff who. will take'her
in Dal
Rainey
flrere divorced Ti year ago
ed Sunday and left for
UNTY
News)
i*!8wn by
-B&K-acd
e f^snr-
^ttildren
\
Univei-i..
psput;
jerwof
liepc.
north <5t
VlWland
for a
Febnf-
idneted by
of the State
'iG-ame Warden Beavers
^■pdf i
2(^000 rainbow trout
the county schools are
bond Issues for new
buildings. There were 16 applicants for
rested a negro in th<
they found a “
Elmer Ban
generaLotfl
ley, tfefehi T
Bethel CommWnJt
on whojp
ey.
otton Belt
d Miss Val-
,rvey of the
lng with the Philadelphia club in the
American baseball league on March
1, at a considerable increase of salary
because of his fine work with the club
last year.
Nearly every hillside farm between
Deport and Paris has been terraced
Jto prevent washing.
Though over 90 years old. Uncle
[Nathan Grant has recently recovered
[from two attacks of heart failure.
Roy Embry has moved his family
arried Wed- ^rom a farm near Deport to North
"l reside in Tyler.
|of Mrs. A. P.
Carolina.
Postmaster Bell
. ..Illlams-of Mounff’lelreant, was mar
*ed. J tester’s certWtcates before^ board ried ,n Wedne8day.^ Marion ifused $50.
mumonla of ex^miners^hst weeVl6 of them of citjr I Several
f0r,r^-I”** license . . | On account of faiim^heattfc. Miss
year^o son o °^*te Bert Murphree has Wen obliged to
r » - -*r oi
lost a fox
hound
oo yer rent Of Bowia #^Tnty
WXes have been paid, le^Vlflg b^lr<
I^r fibnt to go on^toe dellauea®’lis'h4
Ogdeir ofTSrt^j^Aw^-gljren.
5 years for thdfTUt and |
into tlAj Aunty. Sam Smithies given
$'^eaiToff i
.. J of pneumonia for-which he had rs-
sed $50.
Several boys near Roxton who tied
|a rag to a fine bull's tail, saturated
it with kerosene and set it on fire to
0f see him run, are being tried for ma-
| licious mischief.
| Annie Ruth, little daughter of Lewis
We Are Saving Others A
X"' Few Dimes
r How About You?
You can find just what you want** *Ne.
If temporarily out of an article, we are glad to get it for you.
Don’t hesitate to command us for whatever you may want
sent up.
Saving a few dimes on each bill counts up
What you save counts as well as the high quality we sell you.
You can’t do any better elsewhere; you might do as well.
•
Youkon Flour and Youkon Meal are the best.
We have the best Seed Oats to be found anywhere.
Prices and Qbalfty Guaranteed
West-Underwood Gro. Co.
/ >
Mrs.
Hill I
n ^ . ThcRWand on ha-
J ernment fish . atchCry at Neosho, Mo..- beas Curpfis pro-, eedings was admitted
and will put 30,000 more' In other
[streams of McCurtaln county
.Mary, daughter of L. T. Campbell
Ark., was married at her
Terrell of New
V j>lea of MTty to ar
_ Smith ffwfioiod
fS^urt^er of J-.A.
d streams a^fffndfield Smith wa»^ indicted for
Bow, from, the gov- tffltifu
J. C. Mason of Merkel, formerly of’
band , Deport, seeks appointment as railroad
commissioner to succeed the late
Allison Mayfield.
Miss Ruth Guest, music teacker in
Fulbright school, is arranging to pre
sent a musical comedy about Feb’. 20.
After but a few hours of in
anders died in the Gr
unity Mfhday. leaving a
several children.
Mayor C. L. Duncan went to Dallas
Saturday to enter a sanitarium tc
be’ treated for blood poison due lo a
bruise on his heel. ^
Mrs. Hose Majors was called to Mt.
Vernon Saturday by the' sudden death
of her father, S. M. Long, at his home
near ML Vernon. He had just eaten
T,oMl°” * “• •*« * w“Sey'”“Td t,.. movedTlfc «W •»« -..efi. .f U>. «*««. •
‘ Id un- lster Protests against making a nWck-
ery of one of the most sa’cred sacra-
himself, was recently released fnKn
jail ifi Paris under a bond of $10,0W
Jeffus, is recovering fnrm diphtheria. w&g for a malI
to baft in the sum of $5,000.
The grand jury recessed till March
5 after returning 59 bills for' various
robbery near Texarkana and also for
a bank robbery and a nmrder. He
was- 50 years Old, and his body was
covered with old scars of woands he
had received iff a long career of
Hfs wife
(Blossom Bee)
Blossom Parent-Teacher Association
having staged a Tom Thumb wed’ |
ding in which 50 chlTdrtnt participated, !
I8lness
receiving 50 stills voluntarily sur- - - - ,
rendered under tMlr amnesty offer. paper from Rif-Wand t0 Win
M j . der a contract by which fcae^
J J.^ndlcitll^T^La ”i^^^%an-elfim>aa MeqUate me0tS °f ChUFCh'
r ^ ^RVo'r^ake, fifash
Uj-Os-owner of the premises
jtqually guilty. . - + *
The report of the farm demonstra-
tion agent shows that while the dry
weather cut the hay yield about half,
212 acres of alfalfa grown under dem-
•’sfration methods yielded a'n av-
four tons per acre, ordinary
three ami a half
tons.Had the season been nornftl
the yi^ld would have been 6 to 8 tons
p^r acre. Soy beans yielded ISO’ bu-
shels per acre “under (ftmflnsfratlon
culture and "only 100 bushels under
*rage v- ,
method! " prouZ ced
had tQ uhdlt^df'
"ti
suit brouglrt against 7
Commissioners’ court will”have to ^ormer coufelv_trei84j
appoint 310 road overseers this month. the recent audit of the fou f9J>oa,C3 jeTked^it’out
Dr. Imogene Perry Cooper ^of-Green- |8h°w to be due the couni i.
'to lgtlv.e x’f '*? e a c h
cw,ve'f froze tb- death in tbef
flroi of, lasV^week.
d#red '
^ewart. I
crime of desperate' kinds,
lived in Dallas and went arfd claimed
the body.
The lake of the Lamar Country
Club now cowers 55 acres.
There are still 3,000 bales of cottfflff
Iff the compress platforms at Paris.
W. E. McKnigkt, who formerly lived1
at Detroit has received tlifings
the death of menfngltis of the 2-year-
The Methodist ladies are to stage old dteoghter of H*s nephew, L. K. Mc-
Knight. Jr., in San Antonio.
Grandpa Vaughan, aged 78, died at
the home of hia son, George, east of
Po» -rfy, of poeumonla, the .first of
the week- T .
a parcels post sale on St. Valentine’s
Day.
A. C. JJorrison and wife have moved
to Hotiey^GroVe.
At Bob Patton's the poker fell into
„ the fire and was not noticed' ttTT It
... 0, ’ ’iia(j become very hot when someone
the cou a.’s .books ..... oQ {he floor and ^nt
it to cool off. Soon
ville, Miss., and Dr. George A. Hayes
of Texarkana have filed certificates
to practice medicine, with the district
clerk.
vEifty chauffeur-licenses and 2.35C
automobile licences have fleen Issued
In this county, v
-‘'•'Muddy roads compelled several
rural carriers to make theij rounds
on horseback Monday.
W. M. Raper of McKinney has been
made manager of the Burton hog
♦ » - ■ away leanng
Just after stepping out of a bank - ... „ ___
„ , __. afterwards Mrs. Patton went into me
at Enloe Wednesday. Joseph R. Dea- J . . . .. . ’
. room and not knowing the iron was
son sank to the sidewalk and ex- 1
Of George Randolph fell and broke *
her arts.
J. W. Colly, living smithwest of
town in' Cross Roads community, says^
he and 25 Jelpers killed, dressed and
salted down ll hogs by 3 o'clock, some J
of them weighing as much as 500 V
poifOds. .v-
Esnily Virginia, dsaghter of ,
Har\<y Birch, was married in New , 1
York city to Wortham Collins and
they will live l'fl Oklahoma City.
Dr. L. P. McCulstion Is back from;
St. Loots. wheiTt he was calleaNJtf
treat a relative.
Burglars recently robbed the sL?i
of the Beonet Mercantile Compaa'y at
Pattonvilfe, which was closed for some
time under bankruptcy pro«e*ir.gs.
Deaths cironicled in Sunday's News
were S. E Griggsby; aged 71; Mrs.
Newt Logattl who died while ^Jjutlng
a son at Bef!ville, III; Mrrf AnKffdi
MycrS, sgCtf 81-;
arm
hunting ois the river. At the time -»f
the accident his fatherwas in a Parts
1
ordinary culture. This crop proved farm near DeKalb.
V
r>r'
gXlUIDHaAKEK.
The 1923 series Studebaker Big-Six Tourirtg Car is
essentially the) same splendid autoZSSbile that has
proved its merit in the service of fifty thousand owners.
The 1923 refinements and bettermefits enhance its
value and make its ownership even more desirable.
The Big-Six Touring Car. is comparable to the finest—
and highest priced—cars built—fj^p
Studebaker manufactures all vital parts in its own
plants which means the elimination of parts-makers’
profits. These savings are reflected in the ’23 series
Big-Six Touring Car—the finest open chr and the
greatest value Studebaker ever offered.
After seventy-one years of service the narriF Stude-
-baker enjoys public confidence and respect more than
ever.
1923 MODELS AND PRICES-/, o. b. factor*M
CIQHT-SIX
Roadster <3-Paw.)_ 97S
Coope-Roedeter
(3-Paw.)_ 1233
Sedan_I_
1550
SPECIAL-SIX
j-Paw., nrw. a.
30 H. P.
1375
3-Pnw.)_12SO
Coape (4-Paw.)_1875
Sedan _3050
Tooriaa_81
Roadeter (2-Paaa.)_l
, BIO-SIX
7-Paw., IW W. B.
tom. r.
iesg££tt
Cog. ^5-POw.)-2330
pired. He was a prominent farmer
61 years old and is survived by a wife
and several children.
Poll taxes paid in the county num- i
ber 3,196. Total taxes collected foots j
up, $188,000, leaving but $10,000 de-
linquent. i
While Thad Eddins was in Fort
Worth with a carload of mules his j
big feed barn and a lot of corn
and cottonseed, two wagon^hal’m.ss.
hot picked it up to place twwtiere ft ggni^duin! and bis metfier was nuxs:
lng him, b*rshe went to her son.
; belonged when it stuck to *her haiad
and took the skin off.
People of the Broadway community
find the cheapest amf besrt way to
get their children to school its to send'
binder and hay press wt
by fire, supposed to be
origin?
estroyed
ndlary
According to the receivers^chedule |
the bankruptcy of Carter Anderson
Co. of Paris and Cooper and, C,
Anderson seems to be a bad smash.
He places the firm's liabilities at
$245,285 and assets at $145,647, and
Carter Anderson’s liabilities are 37S,-
361 and assets $105,425, while C. E.
Anderson’s liabilities are placed at
$667,356 and assets only $232,878.
Creed Blevins, who was reared i%
Cooper and is only-?2 years old, bas
resigned a job as mechanic in Paris
to accept like work in Tampico', Mex
at $3,600 a year. •
Terms to Meet Your Convenience
ft. T. GOODMAN
This is a studebak?.
LAMAR COUNTY
(Deport Times)
Owing to condition of the roads
Monday the rural carriers couM not
make their rounds.
A Houston dredging concern which
is cutting a straight channel nine
miles long from a point twy, suiles
west of the fork of 1 ilphur south of
Cunningham westward to redeem
6,000 acres of rich land. Is wofklng
right along, raiu or «hlne, with thfclr
big dredge, but the levee machine had
to suspend. The district is bonded
for $450,000. It will take about a
year to complet^rfe Job.
Deport Communlt^Club has elected
the following officers fdr the'ensuing
twelve months: President. W. O
White; vice president J. R. Kelsey;
secretary-treasurer, W. E. Veteto with
R. H. Glover assistant. Beginning
February 20 a social meeting will be
held once a quarter and the ladies of
the Bay View Club will provide a
banquet for the first one.
Frank Tomlinson, former Deport
boy, was second high man of a travel-
ing sales force of 25 men on the road
for a big grain firm; and Frank has
only been on the road two months.
Schilling, who is spending his
inter vacation with relatives atvDe-
jortl and Paris, w'V rerort tor tra1.-'
being turned over to the United
States marshal the youth pleaded
guilty to counterfeiting an<f awaits
the action of the federal grand Jury.
He exonerated the other one who was
released and the third escaped. He
gave his name as Fraley, his age as
19 and his home as Seattle, Wash.
Frank Holloway, who was killed by
' treacherous comrades near Tulsa
! Okla., who feared he would betray
! them in order to secure immunity for
then! on t&« backs of tturro^ that cost | Texas.
(Paris News)
For a second time bad weather com- jpa'ed 8treets of pari«.
pelied postponement of the county
meet to select a basketball team to
represent Lamar county at the (ji*
trict meet, this time to Feb. 17.
When a young man overheard three
suspicious characters at the Frisco
depot in a whispered conversation he
found they had left a stolen car stuck
in the mud somewhere near town and
phoned the officers. On being ar
| rested one 6f them tried to conceal
’ | several $10 bills which were taker
i from him. On examining them Ben
Sharpe who happened along gave it
I as his opinion that they had been
raised from one dollar blllB. .This
turned out to be the case and on
^ 78- who died' at th> h^meWr h'egalbcaAr
The ltLyear-old sort of George far-'Mrs. Sam Biggers. in BfE&. «
penter livtag near Chthota accidentally | A Sunday -nrhool ar 1' Epworfh Lea-
shot himtelf through the fleshy part j gue workers’" fnstituU is being h»Jd
of the arm above the elbow while j in the baseir.wnt of tiie First Meih-
odis< -Church every evening, supper
being served Gh 60 att-mdants l>y lie
ladfes of the'" church. U*nerts are
doing the instructing.--■’ S.
Next day after she and her
observed the 57th anniversary of th
marriage, the wife of Rev. J.. H. Bi
ette. pastor of the First Baptist Church
erf Durant. OkTa., .died,, aged 71. Vef
■was- pastor in Paris 30 years ago and" •
she was a native of Cass county,
By the vigorous usee of two drags' ,
Street Commissioner Owen gretdiy
improved the condition of the
»«. P
ir-
Bof-
but three to five doSfcrs tq own and
nothing to feed.
J. W. Show has brvught rtit against
J. M. McFhdden f&r- $J,W0 damages
for building two vdre fences across
the road'leading north from Brooftston
to Rock Ferry on the rirefr. aatf for
a mandate requiriag-Mii to remove the
obstruction; claiming that this road
has been in use fpr more than fifty
years.
Whffe running- on the playground at
Viewpoint sctjaoL the llttlje daughter
OntyutrA!
Protect your stove against rust and wets
by using i
•fplird »nd anneals to the Iron as If • pert
of It. All Its advantages have been proved ovef
and over again by million* of women everyw heta.
Uaad by dealers on aaznple atovea and for exhb
bition work. _^ *
Sold by hardware and grocery dealer*. Liquid
and paate—one quality. Cat a cam today.
Black Silk Stove Polish Works >
„ _ Stwlint, Diieote —
Uaa Slack Sim Air Drylag Iran faswal on gratMb')
regtatera, store plpta- praranU mating. ,
li the little da ugh te
(Efgbt waguus are hauling blanks
Horn the saw- mills at Cunuingh^h /
and Ta^ortown to the handle factwy
at Purls.
————o-
It is easy to get rid of the misery
of heartburn or Indigestion. Herbine
goes right to the spot. It drives oat
the badly digested food and mak^s
you feel fine. Price, 60c. Sold »-
J. C. Barton.—Adv.
666.cures Bilious Fever.
SATISFACTORY EVERY-DAY SERVICE
That
feeling
of security which one should
have in purchasing drugs is always experi-
enced by our customers. v
^ It is most gratifying to us to note this ,for it
r t proves that our untiring efforts to provide the
JJ best of service aid the finest and purest of
drugs have had'the desired effect.
; ;
f If you are a careful drug buyer, let us serve
you regularly. * -•
Butcher Drug Co,
NORTH SIDE SQUARE - - V.
PT70^
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Ladd, J. L. Red River County Review (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 15, 1923, newspaper, February 15, 1923; Clarksville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth850693/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.