La Grange Journal. (La Grange, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 22, 1922 Page: 4 of 5
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Fayette County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Fayette Public Library, Museum and Archives.
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THE LAGRANGE JOURNAL
. ?.:.-___
>lk
Five Reasons Why!
1. High Quality — Wholesome
high-grade materials.
2. Economy —25c for a large
* can, 12 ounces. ^
3. Purity—Contains no ingredient
that is not in itself wholesome.
' • ».
4. Gives Fine Food Flavor—Leaves
no bitter taste.
5. Dependability—Unvarying per-
fect results.
D? PRICES
“ PHOSPHATE. V
BAKING POWDER
9
Large Can 12 Ounces, Only 25c
^PRICES
^osphate
Baking
Powder
SPECIAL!
/
NOTE—Some grocers may
have a few cans left of Dr.
Price’s bedring the label with
the special advertising offer
recently announced for a
limited period. Ask your
grocer about this unparal-
leled bargain.
CONTAINS NO ALUM!
FOUR COMMON BIG LIES TOLD
JUST FOR THE FUN
CITATION.
No. 3280
THE STATE OF TEXAS
County of Fayette
To the Sheriff or any Constable of
Fayette County—Greeting:
You are hereby commanded, to
cayse to be published, once a week
for ten days, exclusive ’of the first
day of -publication, before the return
day hereof, in some newspaper of
general circulation published in said
county, which has been'* continously
and regularly published in said coun-
ty for a period of not less than one
year;
The State of Texas
County of Fayette
To all persons interest'd in the wel-
fare of the Estate of I|aac Thomp-
son, deceased:
You are hereby notified, that G.
Crans has filed in the County Court of
Fayette County, Texas, an application
for the letters of temporary adminis-
tration upon the Estate of Isaac
Thompson, deceased, and on the 11th
day of April, A. D. 1922, by order of
the County Judge of said County,
Henry A. Sengelmann was appointed
temporary administrator of the
Estatesof the said Isaac Thompson,
deceased, and at the next regular
term of said court, commencing on
the 1st Monday in July, Al D. 1922,
the same being the 3rd day of July,
A. D. 1922, al the courthouse thereof
in LaGrange, Texas, at which time, all
persons interested in thevWelfare of
said Estate are hereby cited to ap-
pear and contest such appointment, if
they so desire, and if such appoint-
ment is not contested at the said term
of said court, then the same shall be-
come permanent.
Herein fail not, but have you then
and there before said court on the
said first day of the next term there-
of, this writ, with your return thereon,
showing how you have execued the
same.
Given under my hand and seal of
said Court, at office in LaGrange,
Texas, this 12th day of June A. D.
1922.
(Seal) ALBERT F. MACH,
Clerk County Court Fayette Coun-
ty, Texas.
By Edmund A. Giese, deputy. 25
CITATION.
No. 2467
1 HE STATE OF TEXAS
To the Sheriff or any Constable of
Fayette County—Greeting:
Joseph Michalec, Guardian of the
estates of Louis, Adolph, Barbora,
Marie, Albina, Josef and Willie Mi-
chak'c, minors, having filed in our
County Court his final account of the
condition of the estates of said 'mi-
nors, numbered 2467 on the probate
docket of Fayette County, together
with an application to be discharged
from said Guardianship.
You are hereby commanded, that
by publication of this wtit once each
week for three successive weeks be-
fore return term hereof, in a news-
paper published in the County of
Fayette, Texas, you give due notice
to all persons interested in the ac-
count tor Final Settlement of said
Estate, Jo appear and contest the
same if they see proper to do so, on
or before the July Term, 1922, of
said County Court, commencing and
to be holden at the Courthouse of
said County, in the city of LaGrange,
on the 3rd day of July, A. D. 1922,
when said account and application
will be acted upon by Raid Court.
Given under my hand and seal of
said Court, at my office, in the city of
LaGrange, Texas, this 25th day of
May, A. D. 1922.
(SEAL) ALBERT F. MACH,
Clerk County Court, Fayette Coun-
ty, Texas.
By Edmund A. Giese, deputy. 24
citatTon.
No. 3170
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To the Sheriff or any Constable of
Fayette County—Greeting:
WHEREAS, J. H. Weasels, Admin-
istrator of the Estate of Mrs. Kate
Pausewang, deceased, having filed in
our County Court hia* final Account
of the condition of the Estate of said
Mrs. Kate Pausewang, deceased, num-
bered 3170 on the Probate Docket of
Fayette County, together with an ap-
plication to be discharged from said
Administration.
You are hereby commanded that,
by publication of this Writ for twenty
days in The LaGrange Journal, a
newspaper printed in the County of
Fayette, State of Texas, you give due
notice to all persons interested in the
Account for Final Settlement of said
Estate, to appear and contest the
same if they see proper so to do, on
or before July Term, 1922, of
said County Court, commencing and
to be holden at the Courthouse
of said County in the City of La-
Grange, State of Texas, on the first
Monday in July, 1922, it being the 3rd
day of July, A. D. 1922, when said
Account and Application will be act-
ed upon by said Court.
Given under my hand and seal of
of said Court, at my office in the city
of LaGrange, State of Texas, this
25th day of May, A. D. 1922.
(SEAL) ALBERT F. MACH,
Clerk County Court, Fayette Coun-
ty, Texas.
By Edmund A. Giese, deputy. 24
666 quickly relives Colds, Constipa-
tion, Biliousness and Headaches. A
fine tonic.—(Adv.)
MEMORIAL SERVICE
Dawson Lodge No. 132, Knights of
Pythias will attend the Methodist
church in a body next Sunday, June
25, and listen to Rev. J. H. Wiseman
as he preaches the annual memorial
service for the Pythian Knights.
Everybody is' cordially invited to be
present.
During the past several months
there has been added to the member-
ship of Dawson quite a large num-
ber of excellent young men who will
help greatly to makd old Dawson rank
high with the other subordinate
lodges in the Texas domain.
A liar said he was riding on a
horse through Russia when there
came a heavy snow. He rode all day
without seeing a house and about
dark tied his horse to what he thought
was a pointed stump, and went* to
sleep in the snow. By morning the
snow had melted away and he found
himself lying in a graveyard sur-
rounded by a village. His horse was
Ranging to the top of a church
steeple. Taking good aim with his
forty-four, he shot the bridle rein in
two, brought- down the horse and
went on his journey.
Abraham Lincoln used to tell a-
bout the fellow who would lie about
the size of the fish he caught, so that
his neighbors could not beleive a
word he said. In order to convince
them he bought a pair of scales and
would weigh the fish in their pres-
ence. One day a neighbor borrowed
the scales to weigfl a new baby and
was surprised to find that the young-
ster tipped them at forty-six pounds.
A medicine vendor thrilled his au-
dience when he said that his girl liv-
ed in a big department house, which
caught on fire. The elevator shafts,
stair cases and halls were full of
fire and smoke; the fireman’s ladders
were too short- to reach the ninth
floor where she lived. Sticking her
pretty head out of the window,, she
looked down at him like a dying calf
and cried.* “Help!” The medicine
vendor said he ran seventeen miles
to a neighboring town, bought a
rope, ran back and threw it up to
her. She tied it "around her neck and
he pulled her down to the ground.
An old fellow with billy-goat whisk-
ers called him a liar right to hiS face
in the presence of the crowd and said
he didn’t have “no faith in him or his
medicine rfeither, after tellin’ that!”
In our humble opinion, the Goliath
of Lies is this: “The world owes me
a living.” The fellow who started
that lie should have been sent to the
penitentiary for life, and may have
been for all we know. Many who
have beleived it have gone there. It
has a touch of reason in U which
makes it dangerous, poisonous. The
man who tries to collect what the
world owes hinj is playing seven-up
with Trouble and Destruction. Every
thug, every gum-shoe thief every
blue-sky salesman believes that the
world owes him a living.
v :o:
The foregoing was discovered in a
Yecent issue of tne Bryan Eagle, and
was given the honor of my ' author-
ship, in fact, -the sub-head plainly
read: “By Ben F. Harigel.” This is
growing very interesting indeed; Lee
Rountree edits the Bryan Eagle, which
is giving you an idea why the charge
of authorship is made Against me.
“The wbrld is a stage,” so’ Shake-
speare is supposed to have charged;
he is also charged with the statement
that we are all actors. Had old
Shake been gifted with the foresight
that so many of his admirers have
charged him with possessing, me-
thinks he would have said that “all
the world is a lair, and that all men
are liars,” the situation would have
become modified. I fail to get the
necessity of an honor such as Lee
Rountree seeks to impose by li—er—
misapplying the authorship.
Had he—meaning Rountree and not
Shakespeare—desired a spacefiller,
of the kind and style he combines
above, h6 could have secured it from
Pink Gresham, Ferd Lehmann, Sam
Fore or Fred Herndon, of the Texas
Press Association; these boys are real
nimrods who visit the bass and trout
habitats regularly, with an abundance
of bait—especially bait—and to
whom fish logic is a part of their
diploma. Or, Lee might have done
me the honor, after affixing my name
to the yarns above, to have stated
that he never told a lie in his life.
Friendship prompts me to say that
someone would have believed him.
B. F. HARIGEL.
COVERING OROUND
Austin, Texas, June 19.—Hon.
Earle B. Mayfield’s speaking
tour last week was one of the
most succesfui ever enjoyed by
a candidate for office in this
State. He made speeches Mon-
day *n Van Zandt county. Ac-
companied by a party of a hun-
dred friends froth Dallas and
Terrell, ihe candidate's tour of
Van Zandt county resembled a
triumphant procession. At Can-
ton a big chicken dinner and bar-
becue was prepared" for the can-
didate’s party, and business was
suspended during the time he
was there. At Wills Point and
Grand Saline, large crowds at-
tended the speaking, and about
4000 people heard the Railroad
Commissioner speak during the
day. Wood county voters turfi-
ed out in large numbers to hear
Mr. Mayfield speak on Tuesday
in Mineola. At Tyler Wednes-
day night, over • five thousand
people heard Mr. Mayfield de-
liver one of the strongest ad-
dresses ever made there. In all
666
Cure* Malaria, Chills and Fever
Dengue or Bilious Fever. I( kills
the germs.—(Adv.)
FOOT BRUISED
HON. EARL B. MAYFIELD
Candidate for U. S. Senate
likelihood, this was the largest
crowd ever assembled in Tyler
to hear any candidate for office.
At Palestine another record
crowd turned out to hear, him,
over 2500 people gathering in
Cronin Park for that purpose.
At Crocketton Friday afternoon,
the courthouse was filled to over-
flowing; and at Rockdale Satur-
day, over 800 people heard Mr.
Mayfield discuss the itsues of
the Senatorial campaign.
Mr. Mayfield particylarly
stressed in all speeches the ne-
cessity for a sweeping reduction
in rail rates and the restoration
of rate-making powers to the
State Railroad Commission de-
claring the only hope for people
to secure relief was the repeal of
the Each-Cummins Bill hy Con-
gress and that his candidacy for
the United Senat was dedicated
to that endeavor. The tillers of
the richest soil in Texas heard
Mr. Mayfield advocate the estab-
lishment of a financial system
which would meet the require-
ments of the farmers, and hearti-
ly applauded his announced pur-
pore to promote such legislation
if elected to the senate.
BASE BALL QA/VIES
ANOTHER IMPROVEMENT
E. A. Luck, proprietor of the San-
itary Meat Market, was doing quite
a bit of limping Friday and Saturday,
due to an injury to his, right foot.
Mr. Luck had floored his steer but
had not subdued him. Irr endeavor-
The local ball team was at El-
linger Sunday and played a re-
turn game with the ball team of
that village. The big end of the
score fell to the LaGrange play-
ers, who feel that turn about is
fair play. Eilinger had defeated
the locals at the opening of the
season. Sunday's game was won
by a score of 10 to 8.
Fayetteville’s crack team went
to Weimar Sunday to play a re-
turn game and romped unmerci-
fully upon their foes, the score
being 14 to 2 in favor of the Fay-
ettville boys. The extreme one-
sidedness of the ‘game made it
very apparent that the Weimar
boys were not strong enough for
their visitors, and also that the
game previously won by Fayette-
ville was a deserved victory.
PrQpoeed changes in the Les-
ter Hotel entrance and the Qor-
ner Drug Store—which in under
the same roof—have befen an-
nounced by Gerhard von Minden,
the proprietor. Only recently
Mr. von Minden made very com-
menable changes in the hotel, on
the scond floor, by adding bat h
and modern convences to the
rooms. The further proposed
improvements are:
Remove the brick columns at
the Corner Drug Store entrance,
also romove the door on the West
side, antf substitute^ plate glass
show window and marble base;
remove all doors at the front, and
convert the front by placing
large plate glass windows ofi
either side of proposed vestibule
entrance to the store; iron col-
ums, marble ba$e and large plate
glass doors for the entrance.
The open, apparently unused
space at the hotel entrance will
be of some pratical use after the
brick columns are removed and
an entire plate glass front; with
irofi columns and iron beams sup-
porting the heavy structure are
substituted. The unused west
side doors to the dining hall will
be closed with brick and the
tonsorial parlor of Henry Munke
removed into the proposed rental
space, thus placing the business
to the front. A vestibule en-
trance as is proposed for the Cor-
ner Drugstore will also be built
here, and very probably the
Western Union Telegraph Com-
pany will occupy the office room
on the opposite side of the en-
trance, thus placing another pub-
lic necessity where every busi
ness man can have access ,to it
without much inconvehience.
The wooden columns in the
lobby will also be .removed and
iron columns erected, the lobby
greatly enlarged and a special,
high-priced battleship linoleum
floor covering placed upon the
large floor space. When the en-
tire renovation will be completed,
the public will agree with the
Journal that our property owners
are endeavoring to keep abreast
of the times.
X
inK to treat the animal for skin in- „rftIn „p.n1
factions, the blamed thing raised its! GULL/ 11N 1 xlE# HLAD
head and brought it down with great rhow SubjIct^^'fr^uent^Vold!?^1 a?e
force, the short horn striking the in- *" * —' —'*‘*]—
step of Mr. Luck’s right foot.
Fortunately the bone Vas not
gmer&Ily In a "run down" condition.
HAL,I,*8 CATARRH MEDICINE Is a
Treatment consisting of an Ointment. to_
be used locally, and a Tonic, which acts
Quickly through the Blood on the MU
broken, but the injury was neverthe- 1 cous Surfaces, building up the Systsm,
less painful and caused him much, *,^iT‘bVn*ru,«iB\?*fo““oiVX'T^.”
inconvenience. 1 F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo. O.
Anticipation
Is not one whit ahead of
realization whpre our
candies are concerned. If
you want to appreciate the
quality of our confections,
just bite into one—that tells
the story.
At this store, you’ll find a
variety of things to make life
more worth while.
Most important of ail
our drugs and prepared
medicines are fresh and up
to the standard.
We sell
DR. MILES' REMEDIES
the kind your mother used
and your great grand-
children will swear by.
J. MEYENBERG
Druggist—LaGrange
MUSIC CLASS
I am now starting a music class
here at LaGrange. Piaqo, violin, cor-
net and all band instruments taught.
For further information call or apply
to Gus. G. Streithoff, LaGrange, Tex.
If your wedding presents shall be
cut Glass, select them at H. C. Will-
mann’s and save a reduction of '20
per cent.
*
$348
FO B. DETROIT
NEW PRICE
*/. •
Yoirhave never before had the
opportunity of securing as much
motor car value at so low a
price. Take advantage of this
opportunity and place your order
now when you can 'obtain*
prompt delivery.
Terms if desired.
;r.____ ___yt
We Sell Goodyear, Firestone |
And United States Tires
• LAGRANGE M01SR COMPANY
“The Home of The Ford”
.Expert Battery Repair Work Done v
• V. . — 7-
THE LAGRANGE JOURNAL .
HEWS FROM THE COURTHOUSE
DOINGS OF COURTS AND OTHER
MATTERS OF INTEREST
FOR OUR READERS
Heal Eslate Transfers Filed During
The Meutli of Jui
John R. Adamcik to Vine Peters,
transfer; 2166 acres Win. Alley
league.
John H. Grigjs, et al to Sam F.
Drake, deed; undivided interest in and
to 450 a^cres John F. Berry league.
Wm. Green, et al to C. 6. Kerr,
deed; 138.4 acres F. O. Berry league.
Wm. Hermes, jr., to Anton -Hansen,
release; 80 acres John H, Moore one-
half league.
Ewald Kelm, et al to "F. Kelm, set-
tlement and transfer.
John Kocian and wife to Peter
Marek and wife, deed; 63.15 acres M.
Muldoon No. 12 league.
Agr.es Kocian, et al to Peter Ma-
rek and wife, deed of jcorreqtion.
Carl and Conrad * Letzerich by
heirs to August Heintze, release of
mechanic’s lien; lots 19 and 196
block 23, LaGrange.
Mrs. Louisa Von Rosenberg to Au-
gust Heintze, release; lots 195 and
196, block 23, LaGrange.
Mrs. Louisa von Rosenberg by as-
signee to August Heintze, release;
lots 195 and 196, block 23, LaGrange.
Julia Spacek to A. J. Guettler,-as-
signee, release; lots 25 in block 4,
town of Fayetteville.
Wm. F. Weisner to estate of Rosi-
na Baca, deceased; release; J. Green
labor and J. Andrews leagues.
:o:
Marriage License
Alfons G. Fajkus—Millie Ma*-ek
Chas. Davidson—Luna Barrcr
Herbert Blaize—Eda Brown
List of Colored
Marshal Beverly—Runge Lee
Reuben Adams—Johnnie Jackson
David Jackson—Juanita Taylor
GHU.S 'AND BOYS
Are you Progressing in The World or
> Moving Backward
REV. SCHMIDT INSTALLED AT
SERBIN
<Rev. Herman Schmidt of Dexter,
Iowa was installed Sunday as pastor
of the Lutheran church at Serbin.
The church had been without a resi-
4pnce pastor for Hvo and one-half
years and when it seemed that about
all ministers to whom the call had
been extended would not accbde to
the invitation, Rev. Schmidt accept-
ed. He was reared in that commun-
ity and his parents still reside there
and his acceptance was welcomed by
the-entire membership.
The installation sermons wef-e
preached Sunday morning by Rev.
Fischer of Giddings and Rev. Bohot
of Winchester. The Giddings male
choir under leadership of Prof. Dube
rendered several selections which
were very acceptable. During the
afternoon, a receptpion was tendered
the new pastor and his family, at
which time Prof, Louis Kasper de-
livered the address of welcome in be-
half of the membership.
The Serbin church was founded in
1854. On May 23, sixty-eight years
ago, d body of Wends in Germany
who could not tolerate persecution
and who were denied their religious
freedom emigrated, five hundred in
number with their pastor Rev. John
Kilian to Texas. The party landed
at Galveston, December 14, 1845 and,
with pastor, a church organ and a
church bell, they proceeded to the
Serbin community. A log house was
soon erected on the spot of the pre-
sent church site and this house serv- 1
ed as pasonage, school and church j
house. Rev. Kilian besides serving'
his own colony, would make a trip on
horse back once a month to New
Ulm, forty miles away and preach.
He also preached at Shelby (Austin
county,) Swiss Alp (Fayette county)
and at Bastrop.
The present rock building was de-
dicated December 3, 1871. The older
inhabitants of this section of the
state still remember that day as be-,1
ing one which drew people of all de-
nominations and classes for miles
and miles. The largeness of the
building and its location away from
any of the principle lines of travel of
those days were extraordinary fea-
tures. The building stands today as
it was originally planned. Rev. Kilian
continued to serve as their pastor
preaching in three languages Eng-
lish, German and Wendish until he
was succeeded on July 22, 1883 by his
son the late Rev. H. T. Kilian who
served for almost forty years, death
having called him from his active la-
bors. Another son of Rev. John Kil-
ian, Prof. G. A. Kilian, was teacher
for more than forty years of the pa-
rochail school which is maintained by
the church. He was a master musi-
cian on the pipe organ and his music
has charmed many hearers for the
many years. The present pastor is
the successor of Rev. Kilian and the
the school is taught by Profs. Schroe-
der and Kaspef. More than a dozen
ministers and teachers have gone
from that church to stations scatter-
ed over many states.—Giddings
News.
CAR OF POLTRY
The Peter Company caused to be
shipped to New York last Friday af-
ternoon, a car-load of poultry, about
17,000 pounds. This, it might be
said, is an average rhipment, merely
.mentioned so that the reading public
may know there is still a large
amoiint of poultry purchased here,
used here and shipped from here, al-
so quite a bit of eggs. This was very
forcibly impressed upon the minds
of the members of the railroad com-
mission and the railway representa-
tives when our Chamber of Commerce
committee appeared before the rail-
way commission last week and talk-
ed “depot facilities.” The Peter
Company is the successor of the
Fayette County Produce Company.
For' Sale—The Blaize homestead.
Apply to J. Meyenberg. . 6
Are you chained to a small job and
a small salary? Are you in-a rut
where you are just holding your own,
whtere you are not improving 'your-
self and have no future? Don’t think
you are standing still. You can’t;
you either move forward or backward.
If you are not progressing you are
losing ground. You have ambition,
you want a good position and pros-
pects for success in the future. Don’t
allow yourself to stay on a small job
and a small income, without making
any progress in life. Get your feet
on the ladder of success. How are
you going to do it?
There are several ways from here
to there. You can travel the twenty-
five thousand1 miles around the earth
and arrive in the next street, or you
can start a straight line Across the
block and reach your destination in
two minutes. The world is full of
the people trying to cross the block
by goinf? around the world. The ones
who get somewhere are the ones who
know how to select a direct route.
The direct route to a good position
is thru the Tyler Commercial College.
If you don’t believe this, go out
some day and make a dozen applica-
cations for positions. Approach the
employer add say, “I would like to
have some kind of a position,” and
when you are asked what you can do,
tell him you havn’t any particular
training, but that you can do most
anything. Ninety-nine times out of
a hundred he will tell you he wants a
bookkeeper, stenographer, typist,
somebody who can do some one thing
in a superior way.
There is a short cut to busipefls
success and there is a long route, and
when yuu are young you have the op-
portunity to select the one or the
other. Doubtless you can get sohae
kind of ; job in a business and work
up-. Jlut don’t underestimate the diffi-
culty of the task of working up. Suc-
cessful business men are too busy to
teach school in their office. Select
the short, direct route, through T.
C. C., and you will reach your desti-
nation early enough to enjoy the
fruita'of the journey.
You do not heve to be a sage to
understand that these things are true
but you will be a wide young man or
woman if you realize their signifi-
cance, realize that they apply to you
and not to some oqe else, take advant-
age of the opportunities that the right
sort of action will open up. Take a
course with us and we will place you
in a good paying position as soon as
"Hay, /allart! Gama’a a*t
Jimmy Smith’s mother eoye
•very boy can have isms
KAIogg’s Corn Flake*! Ska’*
treat in* the whole nine *memam
we elected her Jimmy cap-
tain! Oy-yoi, yoi. yoil"
Easy to digest
perfect summer days food-
CORN FLAKES
Heavy meals during warm weather encourage drowsi-
ness, sluggishness and headache l Eat Kellogg’s Com
Flakes liberally because they are the ideal summer food /or
youngsters and older folks. Kellogg’s digest easily and
let you walk or play or sleep in peace. And, tiey’ro
satisfying to the keenest appetite. De-
licious with fresh fruits I
Insist upon Kellogg’a Com Flakes In the
RED and GREEN package which .bears the
signature of W. K. Kellogg, originator of Corn
Flakes. ‘None rte genuine without it!
Mto9
* I PAti kT
COHN FLAKES
Also makers of KELLOGG’S KRUMBLES sad KELLOGG’S BRAN, cooked aad krakUl
1
REICHERT & KNEIP
j;
COMPLETE LINE OF
:
HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE
>
; ;
MATTINGS, WINDOW SHADES, RUGS, LINOLEUM,
;
!
PAINTS AND OILS-
/{
FUNERAL SUPPLIES AND EMBALMING
you wish. Fill in coupon below and
mail to us for free catalogue, des-
criptive of our courses of Bookkeej*
ing, Shorthand, Business Administra-
tion and Finance, Telegraphy, Cotton
Classing, etc., and of the largest com-
mercial training institution in Ameri-
ca. /
Name .................................«.....................
Address ....................................................
Tyler Commercial College, Tyler,
NEW STORE BUILDING
C. J. von Rosenberg, who recently
purchased the ground where the Geo.
Hopper old store stood, will utilize
the space as quickly as the contrac-
tor can get to it. The building now
being usef by'the Von Rosenberg
Company as their pnts’ furnishing
department, and which hps stood for
many years, and known as the old
Farquhar building w’ll be razed, and
the ground where it stood, together
with the ground of the Hopper build-
ing will be used for the proposed n^tv
building to be erected *by Mr. Rosen-
berg.
Inside measurement of the modern
structure will be thirty-five feet in
width and sixteen foot ceiling with
skylight and modem shelving, and
will extend the full length of the
main building of the Von Rosenberg
Company’s dry. goods section. One
double door entrance at the front,
with marble casings and plate glass
show windows. The contract has
been let to C. P. Burt of Jarrell, who
completed the work on the concrete
warehouse for the Von Rosenberg
Company the past week, and work
will begin early in July.
Notice to School Teachers—Want-
ed, an experienced teacher, holding
first or second-grade state certificate;
reasonable salary. Call on or write
W. B. Jones (at Pin Oak School)
Muldoon, Texas, Rt. 2.
The Journal and Galveston Semi-
Weekly Farm News. $2.60 per year.
WEDDED AT BLANCO
Herbert Blaize, .who c&nducts an
army store on the East side of the
public square and Miss Eda Brown,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Brown
of Blanco, were united in marriage
at the family residence of the bride’s
parents Wednesday forenoon of the
past week, the ceremony being per-
formed by Rev. Ezzel.
The happy couple arrived here on
the evening train of Wednesday and
are now occupying the Blaize home on
East Colorado street, where they
will be at home to their friends.
The Journal sincerely wishes the
newly wedded pair a long life of hap-
piness, and bids the young bride a
very cordial welcome to the home of
her husband whose friends here are
legion, and who readily join us in ex-
tending congratulations.
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF
PARTNERSHIP
Notice is hereby given that the
Fayette County Product Company, a
co-partnership composed of Robert
J. Petef?*-Jake Alexander, and Geo.
C. Simmons, all of Fayette County,
Texas, doing business at LaGrange,
Texas, has been, by mutual consent
of the partners, dissolved. 22-4t
ROBERT PETER,
JAKE ALEXANDER,
G. C. SIMMONS.
Wanted—Reliable German family
in country; woman to do washing and
housework for family of four, man to
do general work; prefer couple with-
out children. Furnished house, use
of cow, salary F75.00 monthly to the
right couple; reference required.
Write fully in first letter. Address:
P. O. Box 1262, Port Arthur, Tex. 26
I
f
iii
Think of itl In a few years the
'ame of Tanlac has gonfe round the
world. The reason Is merit alone. J.
Meyenberg, druggist—Adv.
v>*
. _______
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La Grange Journal. (La Grange, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 22, 1922, newspaper, June 22, 1922; La Grange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth998344/m1/4/: accessed March 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fayette Public Library, Museum and Archives.