The El Reno Daily Democrat (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 55, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 18, 1921 Page: 3 of 4
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EL RENO DAILY DEMOCRAT
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VVT^xY V-
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A have stocks of desirable merchandise
le for you.
5 5
rich Tire Prices
• r J per cent
The last, word in Quality
Ttworrl in Price
LORPS
i ! *24.50
■*y 15?."41*26.90
[sAtybo^ilais] |w^|3fr4*2830
r rviv i v; ;37.is
Effective May 2
a 30x3k—Jwe Taints of "Excellence
c ality
trcize
x 'y designed
ntkid
tr ice
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The name of Goodrich on a tire means
one quality only. I ii " all other Goodrich
tires this 30x3 '• is one quality. This stand-
ard is a fixed principle, and that quality
must be the best our resources, skill and
experience can produce.
THE B. F. GOODRICH RUBBER COMPANY
cAkron, Ohio
I The Story of
Our States
By JONATHAN BRACE
XXIV.—MISSOURI
WHETHER
M Isso.irl
wag actually
visited by De
Soto at the
time ot' Ills
discovery of
the Mississip-
pi Is not definitely known. The
first authentic exploration of
(his territory was by the French,
Jollet and Father Marquette iu
1673. French settlers gradually
located in Missouri, in 1704 St.
Louis being settled. This was
one year after Spain acquired
from France the Louisiana Ter-
ritory of which Missouri was a
part.
Colonization greatly increased
after the ordinance of 1787,
which excluded slavery from the
Northwest territory, as this nat-
urally deflected many to the ter-
ritory west of the Mississippi
who otherwise would have set-
tled in the north. The slavery
question continued to hold the
stage In Missouri history. After
the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 1
added this vast western area to .
the United States, emigration •
increased to such an extent that
in 1829 Missouri formed a state 1
government and applied for ad- !
mission to the Union. Bitter an- j
tagonisrn immediately arose in .
congress against flu? additlou of j
another slave state, (in the otli- i
er hand the slavery adherents ]
pointed out that Maine had just •
been taken into the Union as a ]
free state and one state would •
therefore balance the other. A ;
final settlement was made by the j
famous Missouri compromise, ]
which accepted Missouri as a '
slave state but prohibited slavery !
in the rest of the territory north !
of a line extending from the ]
southern boundary of Missouri '•
to the Rocky Mountains. In- !
deed, It was this agitation j
which, temporari'y smothered at !
that time, burst forth in the Civ- j
il war. !
Missouri Is in the forefront j
of the important states in nation- •
al politics as it has eighteen j
electoral votes'for president. Its ;
area Is G0.420 square miles. )
(© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) •
the property belonplnpr to said defen-
dant Trulock Ice Company, a corpora-
tion. sufficient to satisfy a judgment
rendered in ^nld action In favor of
said pi tin tiffs gainst the said Trulock
Ice Company, for the sum of Six
Hundred. S vcnty-six 21-100 (676.21)
Dollars, together wltn Interest on said
s m until paid, at the rate of eight
. per cent per annum from and after
| the 2Mh day of May, j*ji i. and the
further sum of One Hundred Fifty
| ($150.00) Dollars attorn- vs fees, and
i-tl.-o it satisfy a further- judgment
rendered in said action in favor of the
said defendant and cross petitioner.
, National Refrigerators Company, a
J corporation, against the said defen-
dant Trulock Ice Company, a corpor-
ation in the sum of Sixteen Thousand.
I one Hundred Sixty-nine and 1:5-100
(.$16,IV.' 13) Dollars, together with in-
terest ther«-«.n until paid from and
after the 28th day of May, 1921. at the
ira'e of six per cent per annum, and
.the further sum of Sixteen ll—dred
(11000) Dollars attorneys fees; also1
to satisfy a further Judgment rendered
in said action in favor of the said de-I
fondant and cross petitioner Gould
investment Insurance Company, a cor-
poration, against the said defendant j
I ruiock Ice Company, a corporation in
I the sum of Forty-five Hundred. Fifty- I
one and 6S-100 ($1551.GS) Dollars, to-'
. gether with inter st on said sum un- t
j til paid at tue rate of eight per cent
! per annum from and after the 28th
i day of May. 1921. and the further sum
of Eight Hundred (800) Dollars at-
torneys feet,; and also to satisfy a
further Judgment rendered In said
cause in favor of the said defendant
and cross petitioner- Gould Invest
ment Insurance Company, a corpora-
tion, against the said defendant Tru-
lock Ice Company, a corporation in
th. sum of Thirty-nine Hundred Fortv
and 69-100 ($3940.69) Dollars, together
with interest on said sum until paid
at the rate of ten per cent per annum
from and after the 28th day of May.
1921, and all the costs of said action;
I have levied upon said lands and
tenaments belonging to said Trulock
Ice Company, a corporation, not ex-
empt from sale under seizure, for want
of goods and chattels « t said Trulock
Ice Company, a corporation ,to-wit;
All that part and portion of the
S\V. 1-4 of Section 4, Tup. 12 N. of
Range 7, W. 1. M. more particularly tie-
scribed as follows, to-wit: Beginning
at a point on the south line of said
quarter section 950 feet east of the
southwest corner of said quarter sec-
tion, thence east of said south line a
distance of 615 feet to a point, thenct
north 40 degrees 30 minutes w^st on
a line parallel to the main road bed of
the C. •(>. & G. Ry. Co., crossing said
quarter section of land, a distance 6t
'.'45 feet to a point; thence aouth a
distance of 70S feet tJ the point of be-
ginning-, e. ntalnlng o acres, more or
11 so all that part and portion or
said S\V. 1-4 of said section 4, Twp.
12 North, Range 7 West, lying be-
i we. n that certain «« acre tract first
hereinabove described and the main
road bed of said C. O. & G. Ry. Co..
which crosses said quarter section of
land, and all improvements thereon,
situated in said Canadian County, State
< f Oklahoma; and have caused said
lands inil tenaments to be appraised
according to law. at $44,000.
Now i herefore, notice is hereby
Riven that in pursuance of the com-
mands of paid writ. I will offer for
sale and sell for cash, to the highest
bidder, said lands and tenaments, or
SO much thereof, as will satisfy said
judgment and costs, on the 2nd day
of July, at 10 o'clortc a. in of said
da\. at the east front door of the
court house in the city Dt El Reno, In
said county and state.
Witness my hand this first day of
June, 1921.
JACK SMITH,
Sheriff of Canadian County Okla.
W. J. DAVIDSON,
Attorney for Plaintiffs.
OLIVER C. BLACK ,
Attorney ft r National
Refrigerators Company. .
<F
THINK IT OVER
Greatest Tire Value
ON EARTH
30x3 1-2 Tire unci a
Buckskin Tube for
$17.00
State of Oklahoma.
'anadian County, ss.
IX Till! DISTRICT COI 1IT
Geo. W. Brandon, et al, Plaintiffs,
vs. No. 5937
Trulock Ice Company, et at.
Defendants.
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF
LAND
Notice is hereby given, that in pur-
suance of a writ of execution issued
out of the office of the Court Clerk
for the District Court in and for Cana-
dian County. State of Oklahoma, on
the first day of June, 1921, in an ac-
tion wherein Geo. W. Brandon and O.
,f. Davison, partners, doing business
under tho name and style of Liberty
Boiler & Engineering Co., were plain-
tiffs and Trulock Ice Company, a cor-
poration, Mutual Investment company,
corporal Ion, and its successor in bus-
iness, Gould Investment Insurance Co. a
rporatlon, and National Refrigera- .
tors Company, a corporation, and K. VV
S. Trulock *nd J. .1. Trulock were de- ^1
fendants, oftxzimandiny me to levy upon
Other Sizes Accordingly
We Do l ube Repairing. — Don't cuss, call us when
you have a Hat tire.—Automobile Repairing.
Tompkins Garage
i 10-12 N. Rock Island
Telephone 1361
ii
BROAD
LAUGHS
CHUCKLES
Geo. Cohan's Funniest Play
His Greatest Success as Playwright—
His Biggest Hit as an Actor
SCREAMS
GIGGLES
WAY
YELLS
GUEEAWS
With a New York Cast
Redpath-Morner's Crowning Achievement
Plenty of Climax
Ileart Interest
Action—Clean Fun
Typically American
A T ('in UTA UQUA
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Maher, T. W. The El Reno Daily Democrat (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 55, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 18, 1921, newspaper, June 18, 1921; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc91305/m1/3/: accessed May 19, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.