Texhoma Argus. (Texhoma, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 1, 1913 Page: 3 of 10
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■'1 II
\
Foster Hardware Co.
Hardware, Machinery andjRock Island Implements.
Sharpies Tubular Cream Separator
M: Rumely Oil Pull Engines
We Solicit your Patronage
Texhoma,
Oklahoma
GRIGGS AM) KOUTK KO.l
Mrs. E. Burner tbade a trip to Tex-
Wpdnesday on business.
"Taul Stucklr left for 1m old home
Waukomis, Okla., Friday.
H. Browder and wife went to l a-
homa Tuesday.
Mr Wade Combs, Mr. Perry and
1 evi and Lot Leonard are helping
Charles Craig haul his maize to mar-
ket at Texhoma.
William Murray and Mr. H. Brow-
der helped Joe Henderson on his
well Monday.
.Miss Nettie Harwood left Monday
for her home at Leeton, Mo., alter a
two months' visit 'with her sister,
Mrs. U. M. Smith.
George Pulis took a load of maize
to Texhoma for Charles Craig Mon-
day.
Mrs. J. W. Smith was taking in
Texhoma Monday.
.Miss Crabtree returned to her
home on R. No. 1, Texhoma, after a
short visit with Mrs. A. J. .Jiles.
There was a good attendance at
(he Rose Hill Sunday school Sunday.
Mrs. L. M. Vipond helped Mr. Jiles
move his barn the first of tlie week.
Everything at the Cassidy sale sold
well, considering the day.
THE TEXHOMA ARGUS
P A. STARCK
FRESSDENT
I
arck Pianos!
No Money
in Advance
— Sat initio
(lou Guar-
anteed —
LowestNet
Factory
1* rices —
IS n h i e m t
Terms —A
n vi 11 (J oi
S 1 OO to
S 2 O O —
From Fac
tory Direct
orsoreo
JOE L. BUCKLEY, Editor
Published Every Thursday
One Year
Six Months ...
Three Months
.$1,00
. .50
. .25
Entered as second class mail mat-
ter January 25, 1908, at the post of
fiee at Texhoma, Oklahoma, under
the act of Congress of March 3, 1879.
CDCE TQSAI !H
rtfEx e illAk own home
we will sliln you a beautiful Starck Piano for 20 days' free trial, in your
I home. No cash laynu-nt required. All we ask 1h that you will play upon, use
i-iriri tost this piano for 30 day* If, at the end of that, time, you do not find it tht
h?Khest grade, sweetost toned and finest piano in every way, that you have ever
<;poti for ihe morey, vou at" at perfect liberty to send it back, and we will, In
Ievent, pay the hnm wayu. This Starck Piano must make yood with you,
or there is no sal
Save $I50.0C w Um
I Yi'e riiip .live ct ;■( ;>•« or,r factory, at
I prices that :-i:vc you •.;1nvnrtl- ..f si50.00 in til-
cost of your pi: no; \Yc yiiarant.c to furnish
you a better pi nr.
secure elSt where.
J a satisfactory & s
S piano.
fur the mom
You are a-: «n
vt toned (lit i:
than you c.fi
,1 of rccrivinf?
le liig'.i srrade
Evolution in Park-Building.
A change is coming to park aifairs,
the ideals are taking a more compre-
hensive form, and better suited to the
needs of the people. As the park mis-
sion is being better understood, parks
are no longer a rarity, but are com-
mon. While esthetical requirements
tire greater, yet they are being better
adapted to every-day use.
It is necessary that what we do
shall be symbolic of some thought or
feeling, that it shall be a physical ex-
pression of some desire or purpose.
We are not only learning these things,
but also that the parks are more for
the people, and that the people who
rove over them are the most beautiful
feature a park can contain, and that
no park, no matter how barren and un
sightly it may be when empty, cannot
be devoid of utility and beauty when
filled with people enjoying themselves.
COUNTY DIRECTORY
District Judge R. II. Loofbourrow
County Judge: R. L. Howsley
County Atty... M. G. Wiley
Clerk Dist. Court Geo. M. Frittz
County Clerk W. H. Grimm
County Treasurer W.~R. D. Smith
Reg. of Deeds J. C. Williamson
Sheriff C. A. Leeman
County Supt Nettie B. Lynch
County Surveyor Hugh E. James
County Coroner
County Weigher W. M. Goodnight
Com. 1st. Dist Smith Haynes
Com. 2nd Dist L L. Gilson
Com. 3rd Dist G. C. Kennedy-
Value of Playgrounds.
"So long as there is a child in our
land who toils in shop or tenement
when he should be out at play, whose
school is without a playground and
whose out-of-door is bounded by the
gutters of the public street, with
never a tree or shrub or flower, so
long the masses will hate the classes,
the policeman will be to the boy an
enemy instead of a friend, and the re-
public has not had a,square deal To
give a boy back his childhood is more
tuan justice and common sense—it is
sane government.
P. M. Williams went to Kansas
City on business tlie iirst of tlie week.
Sheriff Gamble of Sherman county,
Texas, wired O. F. Foster from Buck-
lin, Kansas, Wednesday that he had
caught the man who robbed the Fos-
ter hardware store here Friday
night.
J. A. Robertson came up from Dal-
hart Saturday night and spent Sun-
day with his family.
25-Year Guarantee
Every Stare!; Piano U
guaranteed for > years.
This giui-nutee !::i< U; '•
of it our H5 yc .us )•'. >•
experirtice, '"l t; • repu-
tation an oW-t -it nl "is'rtoJ,
responsible piaii'j hovsc.
lessotn
To every purchaser of
Starck Pu'ios, v.y give free
music lessons, iti one of
tlie best known schools in
Chicago. These It «ons you
can taka in your own liotr.e,
by mail. This represents
one year's free instruction.
!P. A. STARCK PIANO CO.,
2nd - Hand Bargains
We have constantly on hnn l
fi largo number of slightly usM
awl H'Tond-lur.nl pinno* of all
itaiidard makes taken in ex-
change for new Starck Pianos
: nd Player-Pianos. The follow
!n{* are a few sample bargains:
Weber $110.00
Steinway 92.00
Chickering 90.03
Kimball 95 00
Starck 195.00
Send for our latest complete
| eccoriJ-hand barguiu list.
Easy Payments
You pay no o;i li dowo, but after 30 days |
of trial, you can paymenf on the low-
est, easiest terms ever suggested by a piano
manufacturer. These terms are arranged to
r.uit your convenience, u:id it is possible for
you io buy a piano for your home, without
mM.1 the money. 8tapck
Pfayor-PSanos
Starck Player-Pianos arc
the best and must beauti-
ful Player Pianos on the
market. You will be de-
lighted with the many ex-
clusive features of these
wonderful instruments, and
will be pleased with the
very low prices at which
they can be secured
Plane Book Free
Send today for our new
beautifully illustrated piano
book which gives you t
largo amount of informa
tion regarding pianos. This
book will interest and
please you. Write today.
1034: Starck I>ldg. CHICAGO |
SMI^.-duri.-a m tW—W""
Kzv.xsrsrtss
(First Publiseed April 17tii 1913t)
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION.
in the Disrrrct Court of Texas County,
Oklahoma-
Zoe D. Harris,
Plaintiff,
VS.
James W. Peters. Alice E. Peters, B.
E. McConnell, W. C. Kandt and E.
E. Biffie,
Defendants.
Said Defendants, James l'eters, Al-
ice E. Peters, B. E. McConnell, W. C.
Kandt and E. E. Bif fie will take not-
ice that they have been sued by above
named Plaintiff, Zeo D. Harris in said
Court for hive Hundren ($500,00) Dol-
lars with 8 per cent interest after June
18th, 1912 with Fifty ($50.00) Dollars
Attorney's fees on a certain note and
mortgage, and the above cause of ac-
tion for foreclosure on a real estate
i^iortgage upon the Southeast quarter
of Section Twenty (20), Township Two
(2), North of Kansje Sixteen (16), E. C.
M. in Texas County, OKlahoma; and
unless Defendants answer the petition
therein by said plaintiff on or before
the 28th, day oi May 1913, said peti-
tion will be taken as true, and Judge-
ment for said plaintiff in said action
for Five Hundred ($50.Oil) Dollars with
8 per cent interest alter June 12th. 1912
with Fifty ($50.00) Dollars Attorney's
fees and all costs, and foreclosure of
said Mortgage on above described
premises, and said land sale thereunder
will be rendered accordingly.
Attest; Geo M. Frittz.
Clerk of said Court.
SEAL
R. S. Anderson ,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
J)
Sot
"Such shipments mean Studehaker
has the confidence of the farmer"
Every year over one Hundred thousand horse-
driven vehicles are sold by Studebaker. Over a million
Studebaker vehicles are always in use. Stop and
think what that means.
This enormous output means that Farmers the
men who know—depend upon Sludebal^cr wagons to
do their work.
And a Studebaker wagon never fails. It is always
ready to do a big day's work—and to keep on doing
it. There are thousands of Studebaker wagons that
-have been in service from 20 to 40 years.
A Studebaker wagon is a real business asset. Wheels, hodyt
frame, axles and running gear have been tested and r®te*t^d
expert/. You can buy cheaper wagons but they re not bludeba^ers,
nor will they last like Studebaker wagons.
Whether in city, town or co untry, for business or pleasure,
there is a Studcbzkcr vehicle to i^ieet your requirements, harm
wagons, trucks, contractors' wagons, buggies, surreys, runabouts,
pony carriages, business and delivery wagons ®afh the best o l a
kind. Studebaker burners also, of every description.
See our Decler or write U3.
STUDEBAKER
South Bend, Ind.
NEW YORK CHICAGO DALLAS KANSAS CITY DENVER
MINNEAPOLIS SALTLAKE CITY LAN FRANCISCO PORTLAND, OK*..
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Buckley, Joe L. Texhoma Argus. (Texhoma, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 1, 1913, newspaper, May 1, 1913; Texhoma, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metapth352149/m1/3/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.