Stephenville Tribune (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. [32], Ed. 1 Friday, August 4, 1922 Page: 4 of 8
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The USCO
You Buy To-day is
at the ?I022 'Price
with No Tax added
AST Fall at the $10.90 price it
seemed to motorists as if the
**£$1 30 x USCO had reached
the peak of tire value.
Yet the makers of USCO have now
produced a still better USCO—a longer
wearing tire with—
Thicker tread—thicker side walls.
Better traction, longer service, /
more mileage. /
And the tax is absorbed by /
the manufacturer.
The new and better
USCO is a tire money’s
worth that was impos-
sible a year ago.
It is possible
todav only in
USCO.
Ofewt'
Better
30x3/1
Copyright
i*r:.
C. «5. a hi vj.
United States Tires
United States Subber Company
.. ***** *•# ftrrn re*
P 'Oh**- • ' *»%0m I
T•«<#
thtrhgmftms |fv-i
*ral among babloa
the teething pei
harmless, mixed o
Perfectly
to direo
If it is good house paint you
lant it would be well for you to
*> H H. Hardin as they have a
III line of “B. P. S.” the best
►use paint sold.
PERRY BROS
Stspbsnvills Tribune
PUBLISHER EVERY FRIDAY By
CLEMENTS I HIGGS, Publishers
Clements A Higgs, Sole Owners
Entered as second-class mail mat-
ter at the postoffice in Stephen-
rille, Texas, under act of Congress
of March 3, 1879.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One Year------------------$1.00
Six Months------------------- .50
<"• Three Months-------------- .35
Loca] and Personal
Joe E. Price left Monday for
Cisco and Ranger on business.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Arch Jones
spent Sunday in Dallas with Mr.
Jones’ mother, Mrs. Adeline Jones.
Miss Ben V^illiamson spent lasf
Saturday and Sunday in Dublin
with Miss Hattie Ruth Christie.
Mr. and Mrs. Harve Keith and
Jim Keith went to Fort Worth
Saturday to take Mrs. Keith's
nieces, who had been staying
with her and attending summer
school here, to their home in that
city.
Any erroneous reflection upon
the character or standing of any
peraon or firm appearing in its
columns will be gladly and prompt-
ly corrected upon calling the at-
tention of the management to the
article in question.
Stephenville, Texas, Aug. 4, 1922
Good for the Hico News-Review.
They declare that Hico people
favor a highway running through
Erath county, Hamilton county
and on to Lampasas. The com-
missioners court of Hamilton fa-
vors the idea and has taken some
action. Morgan Mill folks want
it; Lipan has stated her position
and Weatherford and Parker
county have an organization ready
at any time. This highway can
be built and at a much lower
figure than the highway running
through the county from Bluff
Dale to Dublin.-
Mrs. George Barton of Lubbock
is visiting her father, B. F. Beach
at Johnsville, this week.
R. L. Ross left Monday for Ran-
ger after spending the week-end
with his family here.
Bill K. Tarver returned Satur-
day from a pleasant visit with his
son, K. H. Tarver in Fort Worth.
Miss Louise Barekman has been
ill for several days at her home
on Clinton avenue.
Mrs. Rufus Higgs and little
son, John Fielding, visited the
home folks in Comanche last week.
Chas. Read and James Foote
spent last week out at the J. W.
Bunch plantation on the Paluxy.
An ice cream factory is being
equipped in Dublin ready to be-
gin the manufacture of ice cream
for the public. Mr. Carmony, who
own$» and operates the Dublin ice
plarit will also operate the new
faoAory. J. W. Heaton, manager
o/t the Texas Power & Light Co.
plant at Stephenville is installing
the light fixtures and appliances.
Electricity will be the power be-
hind the machinery. Mr. Heaton
says the plant with its equipment
will be one of the neatest, clean-
est plants to be found anywhere
and the ice cream as perfect a
production as can be manufac-
tured.
The ladies of the 20th Century
club of this city have been con-
templating the building of a nice
library on their lot near the
First Baptist church, and last
Monday when Architect Linbach,
of Dallas, was here conferring
with the Baptist church building
Mrs. Rena Williams is the guest
ier mother, Mrs:
on Long street.
Mr. and Mrs. Eb Jones and
Elizabeth Long left Monday for
their camp on the Leon river,
where they will stay for several
days and fish.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Williams of
Breckenridge spent last week-end
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Bingham King, of West Washing-
ton street, and their sister, Mrs.
Steve Borders, Jr., and family.
Mrs. Sid Rankin,. Misses Mer-
cedes Trenckmann, Frances Foote,
Louise Keith and Kenneth Foote
motored to De Leon Sunday for a
visit with Messrs. Sid and Lon
Rankin who are employed as ex-
pert mechanics in the railroad
shops there.
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Dickson and
attractive daughters, Miss Jewell
and little Miss Mary Alice, of
Temple, came in Friday night on
the motor and will pe the guests
for several days of Mrs. Dickson’s
brother, and his wife, Mr. and
Mrs. J. W. Clements, of Greet!
street.
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Outzs of
Waco were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. A. P. Young and other
friends in the city last week.
• Mrs. J. R. Rice of Gordon was
a visitor last week in the home of
her mother, Mrs. Jane Anderson
and also visited her sister, Mre.
Mack Creswell and her brothers,
Percy and Hays Anderson, and
families.
Mrs. Hood Bryant and children,
Miss Maone, Vincie Beryl and
John, are the guests of her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Gray.
They will stay several weeks with
the family here before returning
to their home at Garland.
Dean J. Thomas Davis and fam-
ily left Sunday for Navasota.
They will visit relatives there and
in other towns in that part of
Texas before returning to their
home here.
^Little Miss Annell Marie West- Hon. Sol Frank writes the Tri-
court arrived Thursday, July 27th! |>une from San Diego, California,
to make her home with her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred William
Westcourt of this city. She is a
very pretty young lady and is
sure to be quite charming and
popular. Mr. Westcourt, who is
professor of horticulture at Tar-
leton College can hardly be
blamed now for wearing that
beaming smile this hot weather,
since his friends have learned
about the young lady.
that he has recently had built a
new home and expects to get
Miss Kathleen Ayers is the
guest of her aunt und other rela-
tives in De Leon this week.
moved into it some time soon. He
also stated that he would be in
Stephenville about September first
and that he hoped the beauty club
of which he is a charter member
would meet him at the depot with
a good brass band in recognition
of his outstanding beauty. The
Tribune hereby turns the matter
over to J. J. Bennett, who it seems
has acted in an advisory capacity
for the club for several years, al-
though we do not think he is a
member.
Messrs.. Ned Davis and Craig
Stewart motored to Exray Sunday
and brought Mr. Davis’ sisters
back to Stephenville with them
where they boarded the Frisco
passenger train for Fort Worth.
They will be away several weeks*
George Keithley was here last
Friday from Eastland visaing his
old friend, Mrs. W. H. Pate, at
the home of her son, B. B. Pate.
Mr. Keithley is a cousin of Glis-
son Bros, who used to live here.
The three families all came from
the same town in Tennessee years
are good friends.-r
Mrs. Tom Donnell will have as
her guest this week end, Mrs.
Homer Peeples and son, Homer
Jr., of Fort Wort. *
Mrs. D. A. Patterson and daugh-
ter, little Miss Josephine, of Fort
Worth, were the guests of Mrs.
Wm. Arch Jones last week.
gone to Post City where Mr.'
Menefee will teach next year,.
They have been furnished a nice,
comfortable home and the profes-l
sor was given a handsome in-1
crease in salary for the coming
term.
Clifford Yearwood who has been
in Pioneer for several months, re-
turned Friday to his home on the
^-anch near Selden. ^
Joseph McCloud of Fort Worth
is the guest this week of Billy
and Nick Keith on Tarleton and
Clinton avenues.
Mr. and Mrs. John Roberts were
guests last Sunday of Mr. Roberts’
committee, these ladies decided to parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Rob-
engage his services for a little erts at Thurber.
while during the day and have!/ --
him go over their lot and submitt Clem Davis of Midland is here
.some of his plans for a library) visiting his brother Ned Davis.
I Building. They came to no defi-jHe is also the guest of friends
[nite conclusion and made no fur-[while here.
ther plans than simply looking1 —- J
lover some blue prints of Archi-, Miss Claudia Robbins, the
Itect Linbach’s. They will have j charming young lady employed in
nothing definite to give out to the [the county clerk’s office, visited
{public as yet, but it is to be hoped her mother and brothers in
lthese progressive ladies of thejbin last Sunday.
20th Century club will be able to
[announce soon that the much
(needed library building will soon
[be in course of construction. It
k«
It hi
(to the people of Stephenville ana
lErath county than any one other)
Har-
Mrs Henry Thornton of Breck-
enrioge came in Sunday to spend
sc\crai days with her daughters,
of the long felt wants of j Mrs. Tom Bridges and Mrs.- Thad
town, and would mean more j Ator.
______ Mrs. J. J. Pate spent part of
institution—^except churches and, her vacation very pleasantly with
Schools. .. I her mother, Mrs. J. B. Mitchell at
Granbury and her sister, Mrs. J.
H. Gandy at Lipan.
PARR—CAREY
Ben Parr and Miss
;arey of Chalk Mountain
tarried Friday, July 14, at Glen
lose, Rev. English, Baptist minis-
»r, performed the marriage cere-
rony which was witnessed by on-
ly a few members of the family
tnd friends. Mrs. E. C. Overby
ind Miss Myrtle Parr, sisters of
the groom, and the bride’s family
ind a few friends were all the
fuests who attended the marriage
ceremony. The bride is a daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. John Carey
>f Chalk Mountain and has many
friends there.
Mr. Parr is a son of Mr. and
Irs. Berry Parr, who live at Val-
ley Grove, near this city. They
kre long-time residents of this
»unty ami have numerous rela-
tives and friends here who are
rishing the best things of life to
tome to this happy pair. They
Mrs. Mamie Chambers, after a
Myrtle [visit of a week or more with her
were daughter, Mrs. Chas. M. Edmiston
at Hamilton, returned to her home
in this city Thursday night.
Miss Laura Fellman, director of
girls’ athletics in Tarleton Col-
lege, left last week for her home
in East Texas, where she will
spend part of her vacation.
Rev. Geo. A. Curlee and wife
left Sunday night for Tennessee
and Kentucky where they will be
gone" for about a month on their
vacation.—Childress Post, July
26, 1922.
Mrs. J. Shaw Patterson left
Monday morning for Lelia Lake to
visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J. D. Cook. Her mother has been
in ill health for some time. Mrs.
Patterson will probably be gone
several weeks visiting at Lelia
Lake, Clarendon and other towns
in the Panhandle.
/ Messrs. John Roberts, Rom _
^laughter, Oscar Allen, Ben Hicks t toms of indigestion disappear. In a
and Harrison Edwards camped on
Ithe Leon from Thursday to Sat-
urday morning of last week. They
caught lots of fish and had a
splendid good time on their out-
W J
Misses Beulah Johnson and
Eloise Jones, Messrs. Cap Watson,
Paul and Ben Higginbotham and
Dean McCluskey motored to D’al-
las Sunday. Ben had been mak-
ing a short visit with the home-
folks and the party went back
with him to Dallas, returning that|
night.
Indigestion? Try
Iconized Yeast
Do you suffer with indigestion or dyspep-
sia? Are you troubled with that uncom-
fortable bloated feeling after meals? Are
you bothered with frequent headaches,
gas, nausea,or chronic constipation? if so
you should lose no time in tryinglronized
Yeast, which has brought amazing re-
lief to thousands of stomach sufferers.
Simply take two tablets with each meal.
Then watch the results. See how your
appetite immediately Improves. Note
how quickly the bowels become regular
—how painful and distressing symp-
remarkably short time you will have
no thought of stomach trouble. Eating
will become a pleasure. You can get
real joy out of every bit of your food.
Get Ironized Yeast today. Then experi-
ence the blessed feeling of being able
to eat a hearty meal without the least
thought of discomfort. To try Ironized
Yeast entirely free simply mail post-
card for Famous 3-Day Test. Addre- s
Ironized Yeast £o.. Dept. 103, Atlanta,
Ga. Irunized Yeast is recommended
and guaranteed by all good druggists.
Rev. J. N. Russell, pastor of the
Presbyterian church in this city,
has just closed a meeting at Ling-
leville which resulted in two con-
versions and two accessions to the
church. It was a splendid good
meeting for the little city. There
was some exceptionally good
preaching and the church feels
greatly revived and will take up
their work with renewed zeal and
courage.
SPENT $750.00
TO NO AVAIL
WITH' DOCTORS
Ironized Yeast is sold and recom-
mended by all good druggists,
such as Perry Bros-
Sliced peaches
with Kelloggs Corn Flakes!
Can you imagine anything so good to eat early on « warm
morning or for lunch as sliced peaches and milk, all-cold and
fine—and Kellogg’s Corn Flakes, crispy and delicioasl
Eat plenty of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes and fruit and know
the happiness of feeling sprightly, despite the heat! Kellogg’s
Corn Flakes are exactly the sort of a
diet you need. They are not only satis-
fying, but uourishing ss well and just
wonderful for little folks, in particular,
because they digest so easily.
Be certain to get Kellogg’s Corn Flakes
in the RED and GREEN package bear-
ing the aignatnre of W. K. Kellogg, origi-
nator of Corn Flakes.
i
T°A$ED
I
my
ip5
FLAKES
AIm ul.r. a KtLLOCC'S KtUBBt.CS .ml KEU.OCC’3 BKAN. c»k*d ••dkreabl.W
Ware’s Baby Powder Relieved
His Baby of Intestinal
Indigestion in 48 Hours
Cured in a Few Days
Geo. W. Thomas, prominent citizen
of Shreveport, La., wrote u:s July 28,
1919, of this experience with his baby
boy: “Eight years ago my baby boy,
then three months old, wa3 in con-
stant pain, crying continously,
suffering from intestinal indigestion,
and after spending 4750.00 with the
doctors, I got a box of Ware’s Baby
Pow der, and in 48 hours my baby was
relieved and in a few days was
entirely well.”
R. L. Meek and son, Robert who
have been on a business trip thru
the Panhandle country, arrived in
the city Wednesday night.
JVnade the trip in their car.
■v - — y
They I i
ill make their home in this city.) irhe annual meeting of the Far-
--; piers Mutual Insurance Associ-
O THE CITIZENS OF ERATH ation, meets August 10th in I)is-
COCNTY
jtrict Court room at 2 p. m.—M. O. j
iCumhie, Pres., Dave Stephens, Sec.
desire that you accept my sin- — —
thanks for the courtesy and Mrs. O. L. ( ambron lett Wed-
Kvou did me in nominating nesday for McMinnville, Tenn.,
•andidate for countv clerk after a six weeks’ visit here with,
primary of July 22. her sister, Mrs. C. L. Hudgens
^ hite ! feel a sense of un- and her brothers, Lawrence and
>rthiness 1 appreciate your sup-J Craig Stewart.
tort beyond expression and earn- --—
ptly solicit the co-operation of Miss Carlotta C hambers, the
»ry citizen ll managing the at- popular and efficient aalealady at
_ of the office in su. h cour- R. E. Cox Dry Goods Co., is taking
feogs and business like way that her vacation these hot days and
IviH not regret or b#> ; sham-, will enjoy a delightful trip to the
having elected me. Icool coast country during the next
I am yours to serve. few weeks.
COLEMAN 1). NICHOLS.
Mrs. John Hollingsworth and;
What a Houma, La., Mother Say a
About it
Mrs. Alodoro Picou, 803 Eas1: Park
Ave., Houma, La., writes us March
30, 1922, as follows: “Please send
me twenty (20> boxes of your Ware’s
Baby Powder by parcel po;,t, c. o. d.
1 have used your baby powder in ray
own home and many of my friends
want your Ware’6 Baby Powder
because they have seen what it did
in my home. One of try childr r.
weighed 13 ' pounds before he began
using your Baby Powder; before two
months had pussed he Lad gained
■nine pounds; and today he weighs
291 pounds and is in perfect health.”
For over forty years, Ware’s Baby
Powder—the prescription of Dr.
James Ware, famous old Southern
physician—has been a healing boon
to bubi- s for bowel troubles, teething
and sumznei coj ipluints, • t •. K-
tiie stomach aad Dowels in a healthy
condition and you need have no fear
of thepe distressing troubles so gen-
sotis, John, Jr., and Sam, left on
the motor Saturday morning fori
Hico to visit her father, S. O.
Durham, and family for several
days. **
thins. <a teaspoonftil of Ware's Baby
Powde’-, a half t.iaspoonftil of sugar,
add enough water to make four
doses), children love to take it. At
your drug store, in 50c and $1.00
packages Prepared in the labora-
tories of J’he Ware Chemical Co..
Dallas, Texas. Adv.-No. 4
For Sale in Stephenville by
•yyyyvvvTrv 77 Tryvw yvw7v’y>yv v
Where You EVANS AUTO CO., Stephenville, Texas
Can Buy EVANS AUTO CO.,Bluff Dale, Texas
U. S. Tires: EVANS AUTO CO., Lingleville, Texas
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Stephenville Tribune (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. [32], Ed. 1 Friday, August 4, 1922, newspaper, August 4, 1922; Stephenville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth877711/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Stephenville Public Library.