The Teague Chronicle (Teague, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, March 22, 1935 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Freestone County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Fairfield Library.
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THE CHRONICLE, TEAGUE, TEXAS, »ARCH 22, 193 . __
MAC ARTHUR
. jj.l l v i) a v . . .
. . . Texts *
!to he m7 /W” \
'em l may I
it lore for \ M|f
pdeme im
1 will think-—talk—write . . . T exas •
Centennial- in 1V 16/ This it to be
celebration. In itt achievement l
pise free play to my patriotic lore f
Texajt
Text? heroic past: my con
its glories that are to be
NothwiUtstnndrag .the stagger-
ing .figures of killoft and injured
! in automobile wrecks and traffic
accidents in previous years, and
jihe efforts that have been made
1n the' way of education and warn-
ing and through effords to arouse
public rortafipiMness. the record of
i 193-t is''appalling. The 882,000 ac-
j cidents in the year resulted Ri
. j SiS,(k*» deaths and 994,000 injuries
I Ar.d still many intelligent motor-
THE HOUSE OF HAZARDS
^U.THtTWOCH'cKtSl'^WF
WE IN THE POT-MD WLUEE / ....
t guy THE OTHER \S FOR /
mV bridge club thaj_^|
ONlE
The Teague Chronicle T;£ »£££**S*±ES
Kstabliahd in 1906.
published Every Friday. {he can chew.” They are offered
The.T
Chronicle Buildingw319 Main :St~
Eh
^ublr
'
Wm. J. Stringer,/ Publisher.
Wm.
S . *
Under 61
Under 51
Over 80
Over 60
Subscription Rates: -
Under 50 miles, one. year >1.50
Under 50 miles, six months .75
Over 50 miles, -one. year 2.00
Over -Vi miles, six months
the middle of the double-path high-
way,. neglect to depress their
lights when meeting traffic, pass.,
traffic on hills and aro«t»d cures
and take chances they . would
never 'dare to take in other man- j
, . . ner. The steering wheel is an
to purchase regular government mplemem of dea[h ^ ^ hand?
Jblely for the small investor, for;
thoge who seek a safe place to
invest their spare dollars but who
d</„ not have enough spare ones ]
MEET* HERE TOMORROW
ii|||i|l||!l!!T
_ TThTkhew i waT
[serving the G'Rl^
CHICKEN HE'D 5TART
^"\ONE OF H.tf ECONOMY,
DRIVED A6A1N
0-4
'havea
,L£6,«A?
1
rr
jT-
&
\
4jl
t
.of many indifferent and unthink-
Entere
Teague,
through
rates of
of Cong
Entered at the postoffice at
Teague, Texas, for transmission
through the mails at second-class
rates of postage, under the Act
of Congress of March 3, 1879.
bonds in high denominations. It
may turn out to be a happy idea. ‘'^otorisUslril'Tnomblt among
D has, at least, staned out w1^'tasr__ilh of ^ lanA when
l f';:h,e enthusiastic approval of t^fwill we come to a realisation
—■ ! public, if sales so far are to be
taken as evidence.
C’N I
OH, YES BUT
■ THEN PAtf THE
resolutions, cards of
**i .3
Ohitui
thanks,
usually
pajd to
rates.
Obituarie . . _ _______________
thanks, and other such matter not i changing
Ttruatlv considered news is to be
paid for at regular advertising
rates.
STABILIZING .EASTER.
While the United States has
not approved or disapproved of
the numerous plans offered for
the calendar, it is
that others have rights on the ;
highways and streets, and that
there are Still sane rules of safety :
we could follow and avoid many ;
wrecks that every day are in- j
creasing the._casualtv _lists, and j
propertv damage ?
--—
HAVEA J/1 DOT TO TATHOtn
LE6,MA?W0U KNCW he ALWAYS
DEMANDS A r
drum*
stick!:
Any
the cha
tion of
ration
columns
cheerfu
brought
manage
Any erroneous reflection" upon
the character, standing or reputa-
tion j>f ar y person, f trnf or corpo-
ration which may appear in the
columns of the Chronicle writ be
cheerfully corrected upon being
brought -to the attention of the
management.
understood that steps are being; Some. Teague men who boast a
taken along with 25 other nations j vvoman never made a fool of them
to bring .about fhm stabilization j may be bragging about,thair own
of Easter. This country has in- _r._ . —j
• -» ^ > lit ii. i , ■ i r. — 4 r, V, n vt 1 C* 1_
^Touess pop cant
IriCK about how
CHEAPLY YOU RUN TH
TABLE, EH-MA?_EVEN
BUYIN’3
LE6GED -\TC
CHICKENS S0'S)\
6ET ^
ttORE
titrated its willineness Id partici-
pate in a conference on the sub-
vert, The average Teague citizen,
Giving Grandma and Grandpa
, 5490 a* month under the Town-
hnowmg how difficult -it>s Us\ d aet wj„ ^ on<? problem.
ki ep track of the important , grandchildren won’t be clam-
holiday probably will .see the w»- . „rin)f for jobs
(b in of its stabilization. Practi- |
FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1935.
Jly all other major holidays
re ..fixed, as ..to- date, Easter
pne of the ones most generally
FRIT
Af
As v
dar int
up the
ed at 1
' ...
A “FREAK** WINTER.
^Seeking to explain- why, the
winter now drawing to a close
has been what weatehr men call
a frealt, experts cannot, seem ;« n0w the average citizen cannot
< elebrated is movable, often
occurring as much as three weeks
apart in date in succeeding years.
It is lielieved that a fixed date,
agreed upon by the entire Chris-
tian world, is possible. It would
be generally welcomed, for as it
Cave Man First to Use
“Door” to Entrance Way
The hairy, • -troved < nv.- man
rolled a atone r- the ni>>i:th *>f 1 «
-- ,’ cave to protect himself and M- f.mi-
Vou can't point out one jdnglel11? fromiBESHElilu: atuma^Taalwas
— j. bis door, and pr..l.ably the f:r.-t
league citizen who ever dodgedrr ., . . ,, .
. ■ , , i door, writes Mar.e i.enrcc in the
the worst by sitting down and Ind|,.napoljg Nf,-,vs When his male
hoping for the best. j with a few "ugh-nchs" expressed a
- | feeling of discontent, a feeling that
No wonder Teague _people had., could not be ai. iyed by re-arr'ang:: z
... _ , : . ♦ n o fnenitneft ..
more religion in the old days.
: the liquor people hire so
\ wine testers why can’t the
]>• pie afford to hire a few
smellers?
A
•her trouble with- some
cue people is that they insist
ustitg words much larger than
heir ideas.
Special D.y M|J
Rid of M^y
Prstwc.il by
'**• °t ■AsrteiUiu,';
The open „ ^
on, and right no,
“»ng of the CS
the leading
quality of summer LI
ardous nosiM..
ordous position.
Rooster day, are,J
by farm advUerg ^3
merce. new_ t1'*
merce, newspaper, j
panies In all part,
the result that.m J
°1<L are beimr J
market. Premlna m3
are offered to
their roosters to toWl
days. *■
The colder the weather the eas-
ier it yds to start the horse.
it^ptfs
der
uc the
ho
,he
to do.
It hi
fusing
come t
of All
passed
1
set in.
njng a
1
about ',
* about
||
I
over r
world 1
to th< ; ' T *
previo i :
r
As
seems
* *H
to agree on the cause. Only
tlfti.se citizens who have kept in-
formed through outside weather
reports realize how freakish it
has been. While the southern
states were doctoring frozen
radiators on cars, the Northwest;
ns far up as Seattle was report-
ing 56 above ‘zero, While the
New England states were shovel-
ing 10 inches
and Kansas were ingulfed in dust |
storms.
Now comes the scientists to I
te.ll what date Easter falls on
without consulting an almanac
oi waiting until a new calendar
comes out.
--0-
Sometirries we ‘ suspect that
whoever wrote that poem about
the beautiful now must have been
rather young.
HELPING THE BLIND.
W hat a blessing it would be if
. .. . , ment of
of snow Nebraska I
parts of the land.
gress, known as the Randolph
bill, which deserves the endorse-
all good citizens in all
Drawn by a
blind attorney in Cleveland, Ohio,
it seeks to help the blind. If it
, becomes a law a fund would be
declare that “sun spots are d.- created fropv which small loans
There-is now a bill before Constitution required the kill-
ing of one fool law before anoth-
er fool law could be enacted.
Most people don’t favor child
labor. They oppose the idea that
17-year-oki loafer is a
the furniture every week or so, hp
rubbed his retreating forehead in
thought and shored a brighter
stone up to the entrance.
Later, when man built his home
'n the trees, the better to survive
in a land overrun with dinosaur;*
(or whatever overrun"?:!® land. In
those days), he very likely got cold
and tired of act.ns ns a win H,reflk
for his family. Iri a rehe T-us mood,
he climbed down, slew ,i beast and
hung Its skin tip over his rat-hole
of a doorway.'*-................
Undoubtedly skins were in use for
S long time, being far more service-
able than woven stuffs introduced at
a much later period. Even in •feudal
Never
vet have crooks thrived
a land where nobody would
,e dealings with them.
A l**t- of' men think the world
.yes them a Irving but they are
• lazy-tcPAry a’ld rollect it.
smm»
Majestic •, Crystals, made by open ’
evaporation' of famous mineral
w ater at Marlin. Texas, with noth-
ing added. A dependable remedy
that should ire in every home.
Mrs. W. M. Lindsey, ^Freestone
a big
child.
times, when the do. r ha-1 -grown 1 county representative, phone 438J.
formidable In size and strength, *the ___
sed hy
about-
more ’j
year "*
real i
year
and 1/
ebang.
was r|
llobod
of pe
the 1 Ji
‘Th
- Ill
ey irvlll
out l
today
TKe
citing
a che
and
lot o:
trial,
of N
many
litri
turei
were .g
1934 |
will Jf
.the
P
I
rectly responsible for such freak-
ish weather. Weather experts
differ with them. They claim the
unusual season was due to an ex-
treme lack of moisture through-
out vast areas where the drouth
of the past two years continues
unabated. Forestry experts, con-
tend it was caused by the people
themselves, that they have brought
about “freak” weather by denud-
ing the land of its forest trees
and failing to replant
Summed up, it 'would appear
that one man’s ^uess is as good
' as another’s, and | that all of them
may be right. ^ combination of
“sun spots,” a lack of moisture
and. denuded forests may have
been, responsible'for such a win-
ter as has seldobi been recorded
in this counary. But it is about
over, and weather talk can be re-
sumed along other lines. Right
now the prediction for another
“red hot summer” or the destruc-
tion of the fruit crop will do for
a change.
-0-
sera
lcll
a ir
thin .i
kidr , v
OT ® ■
\
/>e’
^Soi
■ IB
V/ fll
If ■
BABY BONDS.
Beginning Match 1 securities
of the U. S. Govemment went on
sale at all county-ceat postoffices
at $18.76 for a bond which will
have a face value of $25, payable
10 years after date of purchase.
They are called ‘Baby Bonds” be-
cause they are in smaller denomi-
‘'riations than the government has
ever issued. The purchasing power
of $25 ten years hence cannot be
forecasted by anyone. But des-
pite its huge borrowing and heavy
expenses this government’s credit
»od, and the new bonds
like hot cakes in every
section the country. Teague
citizens__who—, possess cash- for
which titey can find no 'invest-
ment that satisfies them as to
safety, would do well to consider
these "Baby Bonds.” V
The interest rate is low, of
course, and the bonds are non-
transferable. But the government
promises to return at least the
principal of the investment, with
m little interest after one year,
on 60 days notice, whenever the
bond buyer demands it. As with
all other issues, the safety and
ultimate value of these eacurities
will depend- to a considerable ex-
•tent upon tlie total amount issued.
But there is no reason to’believe
would ’ be made to blind people,
and' with these loans they Could
purchase newspapers, magazines,
cigars and candies with which to
set themselves up in stands in
the federal buildings and on
piominpnt comers in the cities
and towns. If it works success-
fully" there is no telling to what
extent it may be copied by differ-
ent states. Our acquaintance with
those around Teague Who are
handicapped through loss of sight
leads us to believe they would
welcome an opportunity to become
independent of outside charity—
they would welcome a chance t<S
earn their own way. This bill
«ould provide them that oppor-
tunity.
STILL ANOTHER PANACEA.
Trust California-to bring1 forth
panaceas for our present -unfortu-
nate industrial condition faster
than we can use them, or even
Examine them. , Her latest pro-
posal is known as the “Pep Plan.”
Believing that the only way we
can get back to prosperity is to
spend ourselves there, this plan
would impose an income tax. <rf
95 per cent on every persons’
monthly income, except that
which he spends during the month.
The idea, of course, is to compel
every person to spend every cent
he gets as fist as he gets it.
There would be no more putting
money into banks, or investing it
in stocks and bonds, or even life
insurance. Thrift would be taboo.
It would be replaced by a doc-
trine of live for today only, let
tomorrow take care of itself.
Foolish and un-American? To be
sure it is. But let some fertile
mind conceive the idea of a “Pep
Plan” organization at 25c a head,
and he’ll get a couple of million
subscriptions.
-0-
s’?
An expert suggests that rais-
ing bees will help the farmer.
It’s a good idea. The farmer is
so used to being stung with
everything he tries that a few
more stings won’t make any
difference.
Our advice to all Teague citi-
zens is to so live that when the
minister ends his remarks nobody
will think they have been to the
wrong funeral.
Why doesn’t some bright con-
gressman at Washington conceive
the id«2a of a billion dollar appro-
priation to keep the taxpayers
from going broke?
SUMMYMKKH
LESSON
lryier doorways v*-r<- i
means of heavy Imagines. -
The antique door revolved, being
pivoted in the center. The ■! rs
the Middle aces usually were of ?tb
Id oak planking, get edge to edge
and held together by wrought iron
hands and sturdy, ornamental strap
hlngles. The doors of older castles FEAGLE
were narrow, so as to permit the j--.—.
passage of only one person at s
time. The occupants thus had a de-
cided advantage in times of attacks.
Geppert, Geppert &
Yictery
Attorneys-at Law
Office in Setzer Building
: . : TEXAS
Etel EPP1E
/N0VEN CAN MAKE
UP HER HUJBAND1/
MIND QUICKER THAN
ANY MARRIED WOMAN
I EVER. NEW.
ly R*v Charles E. Dana
Peter Describes the Christian Itife.
Lesson for March 24th. 1 Peter
3:8-111.
C olden Tesrt: 1 Peter 3:15.
The first' letter bf Peter is one of
the most inspired books in the Bible
beautiful in its spirit of whole
hearted devotion. The Christiai
flock is regarded
as the true Israel
of God, scattered
•about in little
groups here and
there as exiles in
the • midsfh of a
harsh, hostile
world.
Indeed we feel,
as we read this
epistle, the impact
of a head-on colli-
sion between the
household of faith
and the pagan em-
pire of Rome. lf fc*. CW A Dun-
was written from Rome under the
stress ot a fierce persecution affect-
ing a large area and continued for a
considerable period. We read of
“the fiery trial which is to try you.”
(chap. 4:12) W’hat is probably re-
ferred to is the organized, official
attack on the Christian Society ear-
ned on in the year 96 A.D. under
the authority of the emperor Domi
tian. If this supposition is correct,
,Tfter- although his name is
attached to the letter, did not really
. *or Ae Perished, according
to tradition, in the earlier massacre
under Nero.
The letter has three main divi-
•*°ns. In the first section, whap. 1:1
writer speaks of thr
blessed hope made available through
ur»e* readers to live -
Tirth'ly1, rt- In the second part,
chap. 2:11 to 4:6, which includes our
eloquimt lesson text, he gives direc
Dons for conduct, and recommend-
patience under suffering The Gold
en Text, a clear call for unhesitating
testimony, is enshrined in this oas-
***?• v** divisioo, chap 4 7
£ ai;
under persecution.
is *°srely letter
is hope. At the very start the
Chnst«n faith i, called a “living
hope (chap 1:3), and this thought
Paint Brings Color to
Live* of the Choctaws
The Choctaw of northern Mani-
toba never laughs and rarely talks, j
T6 the casual observer he is an in- |
sensitive, unobservlng human. Yet, '
observes n writer in the Washington j
.post, there is no sound in his vast ;
Wilderness he doesn’t hear. The [
drummings of the partridge or song j
of the lark hy day; the howl of the |
wolf or the scream of the big cat
by night—all carry their message to
the Choctaw who i# bearing provi-
sions to his family. It's a three or
four-day pack*overland and he Is
not to be divetred.
"Strange.” says a Royal Canadian
policeman, “but In the packs of
most of those fellows you will find
a quart or half-gallon of paint,
nsnnlly of a vivid.,hue. Heavy stuff,
but they will pack it, leaving out
the more essential articles.”
Understandable. It means color in !
the otherwise colorless lives of our |
more northern hoiftewlves.- They
know nothing of the value of patnt
as a preservative of materials, lodge
poles, dog sleds or -wfeaterer the
Northland offers. They demand
patnt because of the color, smell of
cleanliness and the tang of health-
fulness It carries. —
- • . - . the first line of which reads, The Holy Bible,”
_sod which contains Four Great Trea.sures
&-B-H U C-t ^ I UN
' JUDAS MACCABAEUS
JL the S\c^tCABAEUS’ record falls between Old and
which fnrmc i estamems and is told in detail in the books
Biw«»^ ^
Alexander the Great was kind enough to
conquer the world at one of the easiest of all
dates to remember, 333 B. C. When he was
asked,. Io whom do you leave your king-
,,am , he answered, “To the strongest.” In
wh,ch Allowed, Palestine was
under the dommatton of Ptolemy, who ruled
SEff- !e cau^ed the OW Testament-to be
w ilr®4 Greek' 1116 ancient Hebrew
was no T^ge a spoken lan d
of the jews who could read at all read
Brace Bartoa
^bse<fu*n* redistributions of author-
a Urcco-Svrian dvnastv '\hnV?h’d the domination of
«*r u. ii«L «.
is often repeated.’ "fbe*11* thou,?ht
.Td hbn‘is
and happ,n«uw,H come to the loyal
a*
International Date Line
The international date line is for
most of Its length Identical with the
ISOth meridian, and It crosses the
equator at right angles. For con-
venience, however, and to divtdiy
communities a* little as possible, it
has been arbitrarily fixed some dis-
tance either side of the 180th meri-
dian in several places, Just as we
have adjusted the boundaries of our
standard time belts. Thus the date
line passes through the Bering strait
•o that the eastern extremity of Si-
beria will keep' the same day as the
rest of the country. In Bering sea It
swings ten degrees west of the true
line so that th« Aleutian Islands may
have the sam* time as the Alaskan
mainland. In the South Pacific the
date line deviates to the east to
Ivold a division or FIJI and some of
the Island dependencies of New dea-
land.—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
3? S^^i,Uti"e * of emptror-wor-
P'py, indud,"„'g form of
Juchs. FJrarer f„d ,0^“ Ev'e„S°S„J°Ci^ S™°°-
village was not secure from the invtSn S Jk * C°Untry
To h.s horror, the old priest saw one S b? ^ DeW Pa^anism-
come to render the detested wor^^l* ^mmer neighbors
Even old age recoi*J
tect the birds,
In one county a bin,
fourteen years off
the ‘"last roundup* i
Back of these ro_
bratlons Is an almogs
fort to produce by.j
this summer and fan,.
warm months fo-tifei
first to deteridrate, but j
the male birds fro* 1
farmers can take the |
ward Insuring better h
ties In their market^
- Approximately $5,i)g
lieved to have been !y
egg producers In one^
suit of marketing lev |
hat eggs, and to
be laid the blame for ^
tlon of this loss, in t
300 farms made
Illinois, It was fonuTt
cent of the flock owns
ducing fertile eggs dnr
sons. A community |
this practice cannot htd
mlum prices for Its ej
authorities predict I
Fertile eggs should J
duced except forhati *
and even then the 1
be removed from the I
at the end of the
not to be returned
before fertile eggs am
During the fell
mon cause for fertile^
presence of young i
farms. Thus the yw
might well Join their |
mates In the rooster (
Plenty op Good F«
Needed by L
Lata--hatched chicks, I
able, must be given the*
If properly cared
chicks hatched In latej
brought Into laying
for fall production «\
they are six months«
Late hatched chichi
stant supply of froH
water, abundant tender,I
plenty of shade on gooiij
and plenty of good f
things are provided, I
should oe profitable.
A good feed can hi
pounds of cornmesl 131
wheat shorts, ten |
oats, six pojinda of i
pounds of cotton
pounds of dried mllM
of steamed bone :
crushed oyster shell, I
salt
If milk can be gin
weeks old to drink Is I
ter, the dried milk, i
cottonseed meal Mf •
the ration.
Select BreeJmi^
The first point »1
choosing breeding
whether there Is »
blood In the flock,
nite system of bn
established, It Is b«*]
>w blood from a ■
tory source every
new blood Is no1
select the large
tuning and early M
erels from the borne I
that only birds of hit
selected. Select about 5
cockerels as needed, h|
low for late culling.
Poultry
him in the new idolatry Ful^of » a*iPr'e.St leading
both the idolater and old ' “ 5
S‘
oorn me ldolator and the briest anri u *’, , ., 0‘a man killed
and their country, _ at n t0 fighting for God
'£■ e'cTYfatta ^ ^ijUjUy drfm<ted. In
S" high road ,o su“ h' had seen the
*-ff-3j3S£t“Us:
W B. c Jndas
Thr Temple was cleansed and r^Wi l JVanA Jeruilem
of God reestablished. Formorc k dlCLated' a"d the worS
fought their good fight, estabhsW ^ years brother?
in Jerusalem and making it possihU ^ai!^ a dynasty
people who still worshiped tCSi* c'J'™5 to corne l
killed in battle in 161 B P G°d of Abraham. Judas w«
Next Week: John^The Bapti^ __
C°PTTl*ht- »®kU M«ril, Cm.
The total chlckenj
the country 1*
000,000.
• •
City dwellers pur
try and eggs <'ruIB 10
any other state. ^
Repair the pou'ti
other brooding ^
easy to have *
lawn without letting
range.1
Chicks multW
to twelve t
eight or ten wee*1,
la essential to
»paee.
Raising geese
proposition frotn
Bens or ducks. 0
well in conflnec cut
given range over » P1
kind.
' *'
I
life
Cl
H
I
'I
c |
laiidw
like I
IJtennl
Bhli-stl
*r('":ir.|
I voice,
lone anl
R"|ier
■took oil
lot into |
laid.
: the dll
life in
Is you,
le was
Keps.
iurself,’’|
Iv,” Artll
■io i mil
ltd start!
All tf
Belt as
■i stoodl
lake.
I up wit!
hsten.
e liecnni
le was
the door
ax Fishl
i lnwyeif
s wltnel
less thnt|
pier a
let BeH
le turned
eyes.
: one an
and wei
that■!*’ [
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The Teague Chronicle (Teague, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, March 22, 1935, newspaper, March 22, 1935; Teague, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1140967/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fairfield Library.