The Clarksville Times. (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 94, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 1, 1908 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Red River County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Red River County Public Library.
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TmiMiMCni
•artllM.
8rd week Deo. 7th.
Sen Young, murder.
Sid Wileoc, theft of oettle.
8id Wilson, theft of cuttle.
Sid Wiinon, huff theft.
Sid Wilson, altering mark of
hatfi«.
Sid Wlluon, tlinft of cettle.
bid WiUon, fraudeittly dUpoe
iiiK of mortgaged property.
Sid WiUon, Horae theft.
Charley Smith, Burglary.
Henderson Pringle, hog theft.
Henderaon Pringle, bog theft
Foe ter Jonea, Sodomy.
Alic Hudson, aaaault to mur-
der.
John Scaggs, burglary.
Gabe Grizzle, assault to mur-
der.
Tuesday Dec. 8tb.
Biil Roee, hog theft.
Bill Roee, hog theft.
Henry Totten, assault'to mur-
der.
Bud gotten, assault to mur-
der.
Wednesday Pec. 9th.
Percy Epps, rape.
Bnddie *Gray, assault to mur-
der.
Thursday Dec. 10th.
Nath Bond, forgery.
Friday Dec. 11th.
General Johnson, murder.
Frank Harvill, incest.
4th WEEK MONDAY DEC. 14TH.
. Farris Day, murder.
Will Hunter, hog theft.
Isaac Hunter, hog theft.
George Austin, perjury.
Charley Min ter, perjury.
Tuesday Dec. 15th.
Joe Caloway, horse theft.
Joe Diamond, theft from per-
son.
Will Gaffney, assualt to mur-
der.
Wednesday Dec. 16th.
Robert Lowery, murder.
Will Baggett, burglary.
Will Baggett, burglary.
Thursday, Dec. 17th.
W. O. Pollard, forgery.
Friday Dec. 18th.
F. L. Green, murder.
5th WEEK MONDAY DEC. 21ST.
John Clampit, murder.
J. R. Turner, bigamy.
John Mitchell, perjury. .
Tuesday Dec. 22nd.
Wednesday Dec. 28rd.
Will Lee,,rape.
G. C. Thurman,, forgery.
G. C. Thurman, forgery.
Will Lee, seduction.
Will Lee. rape.
Will Lee, rape.
me kind.
As news Is sea roe and this Is
our first "trip” we will dose.
Success to The Times and its
iniiuy readers. 8cribbler.
sir
The cleverest imitation of real
coffee ever yet made is Dr.
8hoop’s Health Coffee. It is fine
in flavor—apd is made in just
one minute. No tedious 20 or
80 minutes boiling. Made from
pure parched grains, malt, nuts,
etc. Sample free. J. A. Dick-
son A Bros.
MMtllR.
We will attempt to givo a few
r’ots from our community.
Health Is generall very good.
School is progressing nicely
under Prof. Travis Hughston's
management. We have a fine
oountry school under normal
conditions. We have been both
ered a great deal i n getting
books, but we are pretty weft
supplied now and school is mov-
ing along the nicest kind.
J. M. Kegley and family are
moving tbis!week to Mose Eudy’s
place below Garvinsville.
We had a good shower Sunday
night and another Wednesday,
but we need a good rain yet, as
stock water is getting scarce.
C. E. Stephers and family of
Johntown visited in our commu-
nity Saturday and Sunday.
We have singing every Sunday
evening and you have an invita
tion to be with us any time.
Have just ordered some new song
books and everyone likes them
fine.
Prof. Hughston visited a
Garvinsville Saturday and Sun-
day. He says he was visiting
his brother Sam, but we only
have his word for that.
Chas. and Ross VanWey were
in your city Wednesday on bus-
iness.
The young people of our com
munity enjoyed a nice singing at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robt.
Stevens Sunday night.
Mr. Editor, ’possums are ripe
and ws are planning a big hunt
for some of these pretty nights,
and we would be glad to have
yon oome out and go with us
We will instare ybu a timb—of
—
EXPERTS POOLED EY MASTER.
Are Net Always Able te Judge Au-
thenticity of Picture*.
One hoarq ao much about false “old
aatera” and fake art treasure* that It
Is lntereetlns to recall the following
anecdote, which la vouched for by M.
A Bernard, ao well Informed ou all
that concern* art and artiata. The
alary concern* a Rembrandt, which
formerly figured at the Antwerp mu-
•earn, under the deacrtptlon of the
"Jeune horn me a 1* culraaae." during'
the exhibition of Rembrandt’s work*.
To-day the canvas belongs to the Ger-
man emperor. Twenty years ago the
owner of the picture went to a col-
lector, M. Seldemeyer, and showed
him the Rembrandt, offering to sell It
to him for (1,600. M. Seldemeyer In
turn showed the picture to his usual
experts, who declared It to be an lml-
lon, and the next day It was re-
turned to the owner, with the remark
that he could not get a couple of
guineas for It In Paris. The possessor
of the “Jeune bourne a la culrasse"
said nothing, but took the picture to
M. Antonin Proust, who at once recog-
nised it to be one of the beat examples
of the great Dutch painter. The Ger-
man painter Knausa, purchaser for the
Imperial museums, happened to be In
Pails at the time, and wben tbe Rem-
brandt was shown to him he immedi-
ately offered to buy it, and the deal
was concluded for $1,600. The trans-
action was one which the German em-
peror has never had any reason to re-
gret, for If be wished to sell the pic-
ture to-day he could easily obtain
$100,000. '
RISING IN BOY’S ESTIMATION.
Drummer’s Gifts Caussd Rapid Ad-
vancsmsnt In Tltlas.
Titles have their value In the south.
“Here, boy I” said the drummer as he
handed a dollar bill to the bellboy at
the hotel in Atlanta, “take a dime out
of this for bringing up that ice water.”
‘Yea, cap’n,” answered the boy as he
saluted.
“And, by the way, boy,” continued
the drummer, “If you will go down and
get me more letter paper you may
keep a quarter out of that dollar.”
“Right away, majah; right away!
m shush bring you that ah sta-
sh'nery,” replied the boy, as he bowed
tow.
“And, while 1 think of It, boy,” re-
marked the knight of the grip, “If you
can bring out my trousers and have
them pressed and back here inside of
an hour you catp keep a half dollar of
that dollar.”
“Ah auttlnly can do dat ah same,
colonel—’deed ah kin! ” quickly replied
the youth as he turned to go toward
the door.
“Walt a minute now, boy,” Mr.
Samples said as he walked over to
his trunk, “If you can take out this
suit and have It pressed gnd back here
la time for me to go to the Bijou to-
night I’ll let you keep every cent of
that dollar.”
‘General,” said the hoy, his eyea
bulging out of their sockets, 'TU do
dat shush, general, or give you all
dat money back.”—N. T. Times.
Tha Race Is to tha Fleet.
“This Is what you call welcoming
the fleet,” murmured the hundred-
yard sprinter as be breasted the tape
in eight and four-fifths seconds, amid
the applause of tbe multitude.—Judge.
Will Power and Chearfulneaa.
Through will power you may cheer
yourself. Think of noble things, think
ot all who have overcome grief and
disappointment, and take the beet of
Ufa with faith and with courage.
Simian Journalism.
A scientist has discovered that both
onkeys and Insects know colors. This
may account for the color of some
newspapers.—Fresno (Cal.) Herald.
London's Water 8upply.
London did not have an adequate
water supply till 1906. Two-thirds ot
It comes from the Thames, the rest
from artesian wells.
Uaalesaness of Worry.
Sympathy la loving understanding,
and the expression of it helps a lot
Worry la sympathy run to seed—and
that doesn’t help In the least.
Shamrock Develops Into Clover.
Shamrock brought from Ireland and
planted in England always developed
Into clover, said Dr. W. E. St Law
rence Fanny at Kingston.
♦oeoeoeoBoeoeoeoeoBOe»♦»«!
For Sale.
I have a few horses and
mules that I am offering
for sale. These are all
nice animals and are all
well made. If you are
in heed of a
Horse or Mule
oali around at my barn
and price my stock be-
fore yoa buy. I will sell
you tor cash or the right
kind of a note.
-
-r—
- 'in in’, i u.ir'
Will F. Conlon, Comedian With The Tolson Stock Company.
ARB LEARNING TO DRINK MILK. SOME LARGE FRENCH FAMILIES.
Only Lately Have tha Japanta* Evan
Tolerated the Beverage.
Official Statistics
Are Rathe
Give
Flguree
rising.
That,
Japan Is learning to drink milk. A
Japanese newspaper says of the phe-!
nomenon: “There was a time whenj
milk was regarded in Japan with the
same abhorrence as cheese la In
China, especially the pungent and
strong-smelling variety. Recent statla-|
tics, however, show that time has
worked a great change ln thls respect,
and milk and butter are now In great j
favor In Japan. Whereas 26 years ago '
not more than one or two per cent |
of the persons visiting a European
restaurant or eating a European meal
at a friend’s home would have thought
the rule In
8mall families are
France, butT*there are some striking'
exceptions. The following data were
taken by Consul Chapman Coleman of |
Roubalx from the latest official sta-
tistics of the population of France.
According to these statistics the total
population of France Is 38,350,788. The
female sex exceeds the masculine In
numbers, the figures being, respec-
tively, 19,633,899 and 18,816,889. On
the other hand, an excess In the num-
ber of unmarried is shown on tbe mas
culine side, the respective figures be
9,917,178 and 9,114,366. There are 2.-
of touching butter, fully 40 or 50 per' 884,897 widows and divorced women,
a relish. They
content to do
cent, now eat It with
are, however, quite
without It. *
“As to dairy farms, they have In-
creased notably In recent years. Thirty
or 40 years ago milk was abhorred.
The average Japanese could not In-
duce himself to drink It But to-day
many a household consumes one or
two bottles of milk dally, partly be-
cause people have come to like It and
partly because the doctors have recom-
mended It as a unique and wholesome
beverage. •-
“ ’Milk halls,* too, are now quite
numerous. Butter will probably take
much longer to come widely Into
vogue, because-of Its expeDslveness.
A pound of fresh’butter costs at least
one yen (49.8 cents .gold) In Tokyo to-
day, an extremely high price for
Japan.” t
KEPT UP FIRE OF COMMENTS.
Duke
of Cambridge Took Lively
terest In the Sermon.
“The late Dr. William M. Stonehlll,"
•aid a college settlement worker of
New York, "was called the bishop of
the Bowery. It was a title of af-
fection. The Bowery loved this good
man.
“He sometimes used to laugh over
the naivete of his Bowery audiences.
He used to say that In their frequent
audible comments on his sermons
they reminded him of the famous duke
of Cambridge—the old duke, you
know,
“From his great pew the duke rum-
bled out all sorts of remarks and
criticisms every Sunday morning. It
would be, said Dr. Stonehlll, like this:
“Preacher—‘Let ns pray.’
“Duke—’By all means.’
“Preacher prays for rain.
“Duke—’No good In that as long aa
the wind Is In the east.’
“Preacher (reading) — ‘Zaccheua
stood forth and said, “Behold, Lord,
one-half of my lands I gave to the
poor.” ’
“Duke—’Too much, too much. Don’t
mind subscribing, but can’t stand
that.’ '
“Preacher quotes a certain com-
mandment.
“Dike—‘Quite right, quite right, but
very difficult sometimes.’
“Preacher quotes another command-
ment, which need not be indicated.
.“Duke—’No, no! It was my brother
Ernest did that.’ ”
Distances seem to shorten.
Thing That 8truck New Yorkar
His Latest Visit to Old Home.
"The thing that struck me this
time,” said a New Yorker who had
just made a little visit to the town
In which he was born, “was the short-
ness of the distances in the old pise*.
“I remember that when I first used
to go back the buildings there that bad
seemed big to me In my youth grad-
ually grew small, but this time the dis-
tance had dwindled remarkably, too.
“The railroad station there Is on the
edge of the town and you tgke a
•treat car to ride to the business cen-
ter. That used to seefh to me to
be quite a ride; but this time we got
there before I knew 1L
“’Whatr P said, ‘you don’t mean
we’ve got to Blank atreetT*
“ ’Tea, here we are,’ said tbe old
home friend, and so we were.
“You see, the distances were shrink-
ing’now, as tbe buildings had already
done; and. friendly and pleasant as the
old town seemed—and It’s steadily
growing, too, and Is a bigger place
than ever—still It teemed smaller and
smaller to one whpae later and now
fixed Impressions were of the big
bnlldlnga and the big distance* of the
Mg town of New York.”
as against 1,005,884 widowers and
vorced men.
The number of French families It
8,781,117, of which 1,314,773 are with
out children; 2.249,337 have but one
Child; 2,018,665 have two; 1,246,264
have three; 748,841 have four; 429,794
have five; 248,159 have six; 138,769
have seven; 71,841 have eight, and
83,917 have nine children. These fig-
ures represent. In a rapidly decreasing
proportion, the number of families
having a large number of children.
For about two-thirds of the families
of France the average number of chil-
dren does not exceed three; while for
about 1ft per cent, of them the aver
age number Is Beven. and for less than
one per cent of the families, eight chil-
dren. Twenty-four families are re
corded, however, aa possessing 17 and
84 aa possessing 18 children.
PRICE OF LAMARTINE’S POEM.
Pecuniary Value Which the French
Poet Put Upon HI* Work.
The Paris Gaulols tells a good atory
of Lamartine’s estimate of the pe-
cuniary value of his poetry.
It was In 1848, when he was at the
acme of his glory and a cabinet min-
ister. He had Just contributed “La
Marseillaise de la Palx” to the Revue
des Deux Mondes, and Bulox, the
editor, called on him at the ministry.
“I believe 1 owe you £ 80. Here Is the
money,” said Lamartine, producing
a bundle of banknotes.
“Pray deduct the amount of the
Revue's Indebtedness to you for your
poem," said tbe editor.
“I meant to make you a present of
It,” rejoined the poet.
“Not at all; I Insist upon paying
you.”
“How mu*;. •
“Your own price, whatever It may
be.”
“Ah, well; If you will have It so I
must oblige you,” said Lamartine; and
with a magnificent gesture he swept
up the whole bundle of notes repre-
senting the £80 and restored them,
with solemn dignity, to hie pocket
MAM
THE MEMORY OF A BUSY
Hew Husband Forgot Dinner Engage-
ment and Gave a False Excuae.
Dinner had been ready and waiting
80 minutes The wife of the tardy
gneat waa very much embarrassed.
Juet to think that her husband waa ao
rads aa to be late at a dinner engage-
ment and keep all the guests wait
log! After a while the belated one
arrived, redfaced and perspiring.
"So sorry to keep you waiting,” he
•aid. “But I was detained at the of-
fice with aa out-of-town customer. Just
couldn't get away.”
The exenae sounded all right and
was accepted by the hostess, but It
waa a myth.
Tha truth waa: Preoccupied he had
■one home from the office at the
usual time and found the house locked,
much to hie surprise. Where In the
mischief were his wife and childrenT
he wondered. Why didn't they tell
him they were going awayT
He weet all around the house and
tried the doors, but they were locked.
Then he found a piece of Iron In the
backyard and broke open n window
and crowded In.
He crowded out through the win-
dow for the evening paper and crowd-
ad back. He read the pager, and attll
the wife and children didn’t return.
At 8:08 o'clock he remembered the
dinner engagement While he dreeeed
end rode 20 blocks the guests waited.
Bttt other* have mad* the same
blander.
For Isis.
75 head of work mule*, caah
or good ootes. 11-24 8t
John K unite I
T^iD you
ever look up the meaning
of the words “ Price” and “Cost”?
We venture you’d be interested, even
surprised.
“ Price” originally meant not money, not cash—
hut Reward, Praise, Worth. In the days of
fUesar they called it “Pretium.”
‘ Cost” comes from the old Icelander word
‘ Roster,” signifying to Choose, to Test, to
Prove.
So “Price” is really the Worth of the thing sold.
“Cost” means how well the thing bought proves
up in actual use.
So we’re not so far off the track today, Jor when you
buy paint, the Price of it (hould be the measure of its
usefulness, in appearance and wdar. Its Cost to you
will be how well it stands the test you out it to. If it
does well, it’s cheap; if not, you paid too much.
Measured by this, poor paint costs far, far more than
good paint; never worth the price asked and never
stands the test of wear.
There’s one house paint made that’s worth the price
and stands the test, and that’s HORSh SHOE
BRAND HOUSE PAINT,—best lead, zinc, aged
linseed oil, japan, coloring matter and nothing else,
honest materials, honestly prepared, sold on honor.
Seven gallons of HORSE SHOE PAINT covers as
much surface as ten gallons of ordinary paint and
covers it longer.
Then, too, there’s a full line of good HORSE SHOE BRAND
Paint Specialties—HORSE SHOE BRAND Paint for the Barn,
for the Roof, for the Porch, for the Floor, for Inside Walls, Screens,
for Buggies, Wagons—in fact, for everything.
When you’re ready to buy paint or paint specialties, and want the
Price and the Cost both right as well as the Paint, just remembut
that here is one store where you'll find what you’re looking for.
Tuesday god Wednesday (her*
was a mad dote running riot in
Clarksville and bit two boys, ss
well as several doga and thia is
to notify all owners of dogs to
keep them tied for tbe jiext 80
days. If yon do not they will bo
killed, aa I have thia day orderd
the city Marshall to shoot svery.
dog he Meet* running loose.
Either heed this notice, or
don’t get sore when your dog
comes home dead.
A. D. Lennox, Mayor Pro-tem.
Obeying the Impulse.
Slowly, almost reverentially, the
young clergyman who waa taking his
nrat trip across the Atlantic bowed
hit head over the vessel's rail.
“I’m doing this,’’ he muttered with
pale Upe, “in response to an Inward
prompting.”
Thereupon the others drew away la
alienee and left him communing wtyh
the great deep.
Giving It Away.
Young Lady—I should like to em-
broider a nice pair of slippers aa a
birthday present for my aunt
Shopman—We happen to be quit*
out of new patterns Just now.
Wouldn't something else do as wellf
Young lAdy—Perhaps a cigar-case
—Stray Stories.
The Spanish Flag in Kaneae.
In the northwestern part of Repub-
lic county, Kansas, on the site of an
old Pawnee Indian village, stands a
granite hionutnenl erected by the
state, commemorating a unique Inci-
dent In American history. Here on
September 29, 1806, Gen. Zebulon
Pike, leading a straggling band of
American soldiers on an exploring ex-
pedition through the unknown coun-
try beyond the Mississippi river, came
upon a Pawnee village in which a
Spanish flag was living. After much
maneuvering and almost at the point
of the bayonet Pike forced the Indians,
who outnumbered his command ten to
one, to haul down Ihe S|ianlsh flag
and hoist the Stars and Stripes in its
place.
c
The Corley Drug Co.
E
—
BROILES
i»»e. j.
ItLSEIT 18 ME 188 LIMIT tlCATTl.
■I 0FFEI m THE UNI Ml Ml«UU EIKIIEICI
ISTUIIMEB Mt MOST.................
Authorized by the list* ■
MICA SIX Wt (USrsBtM to rafund money If do* 01
““sSfflSL.
refund money If oot ouraa. all modi
■run or Injurious medlelnee
i. Panama et o dletenee
sent everywhere free
■t O. O. D. unless la-
ss SlUUIa
oloes furnished ready for use—no
nnod. No datsntion from buetn
treated ky moll end axpreas. Medieinei
from (ate or broakofs. No medloiao —- • v. v. •>. —
■trusted. Charges low. Thousands of onaea cured Biota your
sans and sand for tsrms. consultation no and aoatdsatlM. la
> person, or by latter. Call or writ* today. Don’t delay.
mdleelly cured witness tbe am er
harmful luatrumenaa A aew Heme
Xu pel) aud ue assess!*. aeusttc
figUs or Bounds._Wo detootlo
Ilf*. Wowusatopn
ivolop aa
Bffiklf.MB
mill
riMiac.
Ilf*. Wo o*a stop miff to
rlOTOlopSLBd ffififiro 7*t
MkJy.oad wrooks and
u Wo dotoatfo* from bust
Wo IBBIBBlM to rofund
1..Z uverulea m mym, KS*afigdiK5:<,,“> "" “
low of Bunhood.elfl., corod f... / . Enlorood toIro la «ko sorotow-
t looooo, rootoro loot TlioHtj VtrltOOtU couotor oorwoos dobUlty, wookoow
•T or tbo bottom systom, oto.. poraBAOOBtly oorod wllt-
«*"t pom. ^ _
a".".- Hy drssBls £rr.r.;y? ——*
BklMAsla1** buoto-oorod IB o *sw doye
r H I m 0 9 I 9 without polo.
book
tk o offoeto ood euro, wot soolod to <ptmim wroopor
Frss Mustflm iWSKSLaKi.fei
la Dales. Very tnetruwwe. Oo.yeyea n«imy»r^
erwotoly and
r.?5oliy*u DUmH' Dicers, S-elil
Oouorrnoae. Ulsst sad ell M
er middle awed
make them at for mi
that terrleble dleeuee, te .11 Ik
e, eared far life.
* D leers. Swellings. I
-sorrbeea. Sleet end ell farms ef prlr.u die
red te .lay Oared. We aearsnteeto refund
way If net penaeaeatly eared.
KidBty lladdtr and Prastatic
Dissatss &S55rVM,a/SB,2:
ed by pelslma end blssdlaes methods.
•I. BROILES MEBICAL IRSTITRTE
laeWtskesi Beeama. mtM Mala it-1 Sea Antenlo. *NM Bearden
B9IRI Too aro Uivltod to aoo It wfc«
•"‘-iK'i'aSnSwsa'ifSw
t DALLAS, TEXAS
■ ati W. Weetb. waif Hein amset
We Are Now
Prep ev.red
To make your winter sheet rod
are better prepared than ever to
handle your orders. We also
handle shop made harness, sad-
dles, etc.’
I X. L. Harness
COMPANY
c
»0«B-
Just From the Press
JOE SAP’S TALE’S”
The most laughable book ever published. Beautifully
bound in silk cloth,^ Illustrated by Hal B. Crandal. Con-
tains 225 pages. A smile in every line—a laugh in every
sentence. The book is dedicated as follows:
All who ‘‘toil and spin” as well as those who “spend and
toil not,” and those behind prison bars or in dark, dank
dungeons, the farmer, the mechanic, the day laborer,
the sailor, the soldier, the doctor and all those who are
suffering from diseases, real or imaginary; such as back
ache, ear-ache, stomach-ache, torpid liver, in-growing toe
nails, sore eyes, night sweats, los9 of memory, loss of hear-
ing, loss of character, losp of friends, loss of srnell, loss of
pride, loss of hair, loss of gratitude, swimming in the head,
buzzing in the ears; also saint or sinner, Jew or Gentile,
Democrat or Republican, in fact anyone that can raise the
price of this book, no matter what your religion, politics or
present standing in society, these pages are lovingly
DEDICATED.
Agents wanted in every county in Texas. Write at once
for exclusive territory and terms to agents. Price of book
$1.50 by mai.l, address. JOE SAPP1NGTON,
Temple, Texas.
The Texas & Pacific Time Table.
»M8»8»a*8l8l8»8«H8l8W488t8tM>»t«84>40«8*—♦
WEST BOUND
No. 35.
No. 81.
No. 33.
g
T
larksville to Sherman.—
exarkana to Fort Worth..
Texarkana to Whitosboro..
______ ...b:45 a. m.
_______ .'..9:14 a. m.
______...8:12 p. m.
EAST BOUND
No. 84.
No. 12.
No. 36
Whiteaboro to Texarkana
Fort Worth to Texarkana...
Sherman to Clarksville....;.
.11:50 a. m.
____4:21 p. m.
.8:15 p. m.
We Nave Secured
Sa.p •• •
THE AGENCY
for tbe Ideal Laundry of
Paris. Will call for and
deliver your work. Also
agents for the Daily and
Semi-weekly Ft. Worth
Record.
Gorner Barber Shop.
c
= IIIIIIIIMimillllMllffiSIIMIIIIIIIII:llll3IIHMUIIIIII|
BIS. CORLEY Ml SCAFF j
SPECIALISTS
Eye, Ear, Nose
and Throat
Office Hour* 111* 12 ail
S to I p. o.
■iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin fimmiFiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiuiiim
Dr. G. T. GLftRK ...
does a general office and con-
sultation practice, making a
specially of tbe eye test for
Glauses free. Only the best
lenses used and charges rea-
sonable. Office
RT BARTON’S DRUG STORE.
c
DR. J. C. DURRUM
Physician and Surgeon
Office at L. H. Goldberg’s drug
store. Can lie found at night at
residence. Telephone in connec-
tion. Dr. Durrum offers his
professions] services to the peo-
ple of Clarksville and surrounding
country. Rectal trouble* and dio-
essea of women specialties.
Office hours 2 to 4 p. m.
i
SO YEARS*
- EXPERIENCE
Patents
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Stanberry, W. M. The Clarksville Times. (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 94, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 1, 1908, newspaper, December 1, 1908; Clarksville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth973576/m1/4/: accessed March 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.