The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 2, 1932 Page: 6 of 8
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BCS.U.8.PM.OF
MADE WITH WELCH’S GRAPE JUICE W
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“Make it Four9 Father!"
NuGrape Bottling Co., Sherman, Texas
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If you once have a taste of the New NuGrape, you always come
back for more. It’s just that sort of a flavor—a mysterious some-
thing, born of plump Concord grapes and sunshine. There is noth-
", ing anywhere near like it, with its bouquet of dew-ripened grapes,
and its sparkling, dancing life—as of champagne.
Next to impossible to keep the New NuGrape on ice at home—the fam-
ily sneaks in for “just another bottle,” even when a case is purchased at
a time. But since Nature and Science brewed it and brought it to its de-
lightful state of appetizing perfection—you can drink as much as you
please as often as you please.
There is no substitute for the New NuGrape,
Accept none, for it would only mean disap-
pointment, The genuine is sold everywhere
for 5f,
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CLAUD CALLAN SAYS:
man of
the
----Agent Sinclair Refining Company (Inc,).........
B. B. HALL
OUTLAW LEADER,
NOW 84, LONGS
FOR ROAD AGAIN
SUGGEST BRANDEIS BE
DRAFTED FOR PRESIDENT
exercises of the Charitable Irish So-
ciety in the Granary burying ground.
Carney charged “British banking
czars” were resonsible for the finan-
cial condition of this country and
much of the rest of the world. Brit-
ish bankers, he said, started the panic
in 1928 in India.
“They deliberately planned to sack
the people of India of their savings
and stores by destroying the value of
silver,” he said.
He declared the British action in
India originally had been planned for
1926 but was postponed two years
to allow American bankers to unload
Steamers are often followed 1,000
miles from land by seagulls.
securities on the public of the United
States.
BOSTON.—Hugh A. Carney, cor-
poration attorney and author of sev-
eral books on finance, today sug-
gested that Supreme Court Justice
Louis D. Brandeis be drafted for the
presidency to lead the country to fi-
nancial rehabilitation.
“What the world panic needs is a
panic doctor, and I believe the man
best fitted by training and experi-
ence is Justice Brandeis,” Carney
said as he spoke at the Memorial Day
in Goliad, Texas, March 8, 1848, he
was taken to Georgia by his parents
when he was five months old. In
1862 they went to Missouri when the
negroes rebelled.
“The next spring, when I was 15,
I joined Quantrell and stayed to the
end of the war,” said Dalton. “Then
some of us under Joe Shelby went
to Mexico intending to join Maximil-
lian but conditions were not satisfac-
tory and I came back.”
Furnishing buffalo meat to rail-
road camps, several years with the
regular army fighting Indians in the
Black Hills and Texas next furnished
Dalton excitement.
Before leaving the factory, every batch of Sinclair P. D.
must kill 1,000 flies under conditions more severe
than those in your own home. Only strong, healthy flies
from the Sinclair "fly farm” are used in these tests.
member
has be-
of the
NJ
Wed on Credit
LEXINGTON,' Mo.—It is no long-
er* necessary to borrow $2 from the
best man to get married here. Mar-
riage licenses are being issued on
credit. No sooner had County Re-
corder Jeff Wilson announced the
deferred payment plan than he had a
couple of applicants. They promised
to pay within 60 days.
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TROUP.—The restless spirit that
gave him a career as a member of
Quantrell’s fpmous outlaw band—
outlaw, buffalo hunter, Indian fight-
er and soldier—still prods Frank
Dalton to “move on” even at the age
of 84.
“I’m too old to change my habits
and settle down,” declared Dalton,
who claims he is the last survivor of
the followers of that colorful Civil
War character, Quantrell. “As soon
as the weather clears up, I’ll move
on. Roaming is a sort of habit with
me—I like to keep moving.”
The excitement of an oil town at-
tracted him here just to “winter,”
Dalton said, and soon he will be on
the go again. Where, he isn’t cer-
tain, but to some place that will give
relief to his restless spirit.
The days when he was a
of Quantrell’s band, which
come one of the mysteries
Civil War, were recalled by Dalton.
Quantrell’s right name was Charles
Hart, who was a man of education
and exceptional intelligence, Dalton
reminisced.
“He’ was engaged in teaching
school at Lawrence, Kans., when the
Civil War started,” Dalton recalled.
“He advised moderation, as he was a
man of mild and tolerant tempera-
ment. But Lawrence was a hot bed
of unreasoning abolition so they
chased him out after a horse-whip-
ping.
“Some wanted to hang the damn
rebel sympathizer,” but he was re-
leased and Quantrell came to Mis-
souri to organize the 12th Missouri
Cavalry, mostly of boys who were
too young to enlist in the regular
Southern army. Our duties were to
patrol and protect the homes while
the men were away fighting.
“Quantrell’s band was outlawed
after the war because we had never
been regularly enrolled in the Con-
federate army.”
Dalton has had a checkered career
as a pioneer* in the old West. Born
The Government can’t reduce ex-
penses much for the same reason we
can’t clean up our basement. We
tried to clean the basement this
week, but made a failure of it. We
threw out an immense pile of stuff
to be hauled away, but before the
wagon came for it our family began
dragging it back into the basement.
“You are not going to have that
chair hauled away,” our wife said.
'T am going to have that fixed and
put it in my bedroom.” Then
children began rescuing broken arti-
cles and pressing them to their bos-
oms, and finally all the rubbish we
had thrown out was back in the base-
ment. This same thing keeps the
Government from cleaning house.
Everybody favors a general cleaning,
but nobody wants to give up his par-
ticular plunder.
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Flies, Mosquitoes, Moths, Roaches,
Bedhugs, Ants, Fleas, Gnats, etc.
FREAKS OF A TORNADO
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HEADACHES
CASTORIA
Relationships Tangled
As Palmer Man Becomes
Step-Brother of Wife
SIXTY BILLION
CUPS OF COFFEE
MEN AND WOMEN FAIL
—NOT MARRIAGE
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LUBBOCK THEATRES
BADLY DAMAGED BY
BOMB EXPLOSIONS
BL.
LUBBOCK. — Two bombs burst
out in the dead of the morning at 3
a. m. Monday, one at the Palace
theatre and the other at the Lindsey
theatre, causing approximately $5,-
000 damage and making good a
threat made to C. C. Lindsey, man-
ager of the two theatres.
Controversy about two years ago,
which resulted in the employment of
non-union labor, is thought to be the
cause of the attack, Lindsey and
Chief of Police Wiley L. Metcalfe,
have announced.
GERIN, Neb.—Benton Johnson,
16, died without knowing he had
killed his mother. The bullet with
which he committed suicide in the
basement of his home passed through
his body, through the floor of the
room above and struck her.
PALMER.—At the marriage at
Durant, Okla., recently of O. M.
Crowder and Mrs. Della Bonner, both
members of pioneer families of Ellis
County, the family relations became
somewhat entangled.
The son of Mrs. Bonner was al-
ready the son-in-law of Mr. Crowder
and Mrs. Bonner the mother-in-law
of Mr. Crowder’s daughter. Jdr.
Crowder is now the stepfather of his
son-in-law, Robert Bonner; likewise
Mrs. Bonner is the stepmother of her
daughter-in-law. Robert Bonner be-
comes the stepbrother of his wife.
The couple will reside at Palmer.
B A........
When
TEETHING
mates HIM FUSSY
One of the most important things
you can do to make a teething baby
comfortable is to see that little
bowels do their work of carrying off
waste matter promptly and regularly.
For this nothing is better than Cas-
toria, a pure vegetable preparation
specially made for babies and chil-
dren. Castoria acts so gently you can
give it to young infants to relieve
colic. Yet it is always effective, for
older children, too. Remember, Cas-
toria contains no harsh drugs, no
narcotics—is absolutely harmless.
When your baby is fretful with
teething or a food upset, give a cleans-
ing dose of Castoria. Be sure you get
genuine Castoria with the name:
The average person in this country
now drinks more than five hundred
cups of coffee a year which means a
total annual consumption of 60,000,-
000,000 cups. That is a great deal of
coffee, but unfortunately, much of it
is poorly made. It is a strange fact
that in this nation of coffee-lovers,
where nearly every one drinks the
beverage, so many housewives do not
know how to make it properly.
The rules for good coffee are sim-
ple. If carefully observed they will
transform an insipid, cheerless drink
into the fragrant, > appetite-whetting
cup that all enjoy. Here are six rules
■ for good coffee-making:
1. Be sure the coffee has the prop-
er grind. Fine ground coffee (con-
sistency of corn meal) is best for the
drip method, the “steel cut” coarser
grind for percolated or boiled coffee.
2. The coffee must be fresh. After
opening the package the coffee
should be transferred to an air-tight
container, such as a Mason jar.
3. Keep the coffee pot scrupulous-
ly clean, using ammonia and soda to
scour the inside.
4. Carefully measure both coffee
and water, using a heaping table-
spoon of coffee to each cup of water.
5. In brewing do not keep the cof-
fee and water* in contact any longer
than absolutely necessary. Make cof-
fee stronger by using more, not by
longer cooking.
6. Serve coffee immediately after
making.
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Tornadoes are the most freakish
of storms, and those which brought
death to more than 30 victims in
Alabama and other Southern States
recently were no exception. Many
seemingly miraculous escapes occur-
red, as well as odd incidents, such as
the following:
Near Birmingham, a 22-month-old
baby girl, Jewel Butler, was torn
from her mother’s arms and carried
nearly 10 miles, yet was unharmed,
save for a few bruises.
Two little negro boys were blown
across the Warrior River at Demopo-
lis and landed in a field uninjured.
Two persons hurt at Clanton were
taken for treatment to Thorsby,
where another twister struck the
physician’s office just as they ar-
rived, but they were not further in-
jured.
An amusing freak of the storm
was the wrapping of a quilt tightly
around a rooster and depositing the
helpless bird in the limbs of a tree.
A strange phenomenon was seen
when a second tornado struck a sec-
tion of Alabama and for considerable
distance closely followed the path of
the first, which had occurred about a
week before.
The most destructive single torna-
► do in history was that which struck
St. Louis, May 27, 1896, killing 306
persons and destroying 13 million
dollars’ worth of property in half an
hour. The recent series of tornadoes
in the South took a slightly higher
toll of life, in several separate storms
occurring about the same time.—Ex.
A newspaper published in a coun-
try town in Texas brought us the
other day a story that may well be
pondered by those smart writers
whose researches in Hollywood and
observations of the Smart Set have
led them to the conclusion that mar-
riage is a failure. It was short, not
half a column long, but its three
hundred words told the story of two
long lives and revealed to discrim-
inating eyes the secret of a happy
companionship of a man and woman
for more than sixty years.
To the whole town they were
Uncle Ebner and Aunt Jane. They
had celebrated the sixtieth anniver-
sary of their wedding only a few
weeks before the story was told. One
evening Aunt Jane sat beside the
bed on which Uncle Ebner lay, her
trembling hand gently stroking his
forehead on which she saw the death
dew gathering. Her eyes were dry,
but they spoke more clearly than
words the ineffable love that filled
her heart. Sons and daughters were
gathered beside the bed, and the
murmur of their children’s voices
was heard in the next room. It
seemed that each breath that Uncle
Ebner drew would be his last. Sud-
denly he opened his eyes, took the
wife’s hand in his own, and looking
into her eyes he said: “Jane, the
road has been long, but the end is
reached for me. It has been a hap-
py road, though it has sometimes
been rough for us both. Gather the
children now, for I must say good-
bye for the day. They will keep you.
You have been a good wife to me and
a dear mother to them. Life has been
sweet to us.”
That was all. Uncle Ebner was at
rest.
Aunt Jane was white-faced next
day when she returned from the fu-
neral, and her hands trembled a lit-
tle more than usual, but the love-
light had not died from hei* eyes.
Children were never tenderer with a
mother. The oldest daughter helped
her to bed and kissed her tenderly as
she bade her good night.
“Dear,” she said, “try to be to
your husband what I have tried to be
to your father.”
Aunt Jane’s eyes never opened to
another day. In the night she had
been taken to be with Ebner.
Six sons and. daughters had Uncle
Ebner and Aunt Jane reared, and
they had lived to have children of
their own. There was no black sheep
in the flock. There was not one who
ever dreamed that “A career” de-
manded of any that no child should
come to gladden their hearts and
homes. They had been reared in a
happy home, and a happy home was
their greatest desire. They had been
taught to reverence age, to worship
God, to live virtuously, to deny self
for other’s good, to do whatever duty
demanded without murmuring.
That was not all. They had known
their home as a place where any in
sorrow ->or distress or need of advice
found ready listeners and kindly
helpers and wise advisers in Uncle
Ebnei* and Aunt Jane. None ever
applied in vain. In that town there
was scarcely a heart that did not
feel genuine grief when Uncle Eb-
ner and Aunt Jane fell asleep.
Yes, the children knew that men
and women often failed, but it never
once entered their minds that God’s
institution of marriage had failed.
Uncle Ebner and Aunt Jane had con-
vinced them that marriage can be a
success—a glorious adventure in
happiness—and now they are prov-
ing it for themselves. — Bonham
News.
C H I L DRE N CRY FOR IT
“If I have the headache or feel
the need of a purgative, I take
Black-Draught,” says Mr. Edgar
Gamble, of 114 Fowler Ave., Hop-
kinsville, Ky. “It is easy to take
and quick to relieve. I used to have
dull headaches. My eyes would burn
and when I would stoop over I seemed
to turn blind. This isn’t much of a
good feeling when one has to work,
and I have had to work hard in my
time, being'a timber man. This work
takes me from home a good deal and
one never likes to get sick, especially
away from home. I found the best
way to avoid this was to take an
occasional dose of Black-Draught,
and keep the system cleansed.” fha-b
Thedford’s
BLACK-DRAUGHT
For CONSTIPATION,
INDIGESTION, BILIOUSNESS
FOR CHILDREN — and grown-ups
who prefer a liquid—get the new,
pleasant-tasting SYRUP of Thed-
ford’s Black-Draught; 25c and 50c.
A
THE WHITEWRIGHT SUN, WHITEWRIGHT, TEXAS
Thursday, June 2, 1932.
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The Whitewright Sun (Whitewright, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 2, 1932, newspaper, June 2, 1932; Whitewright, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1223718/m1/6/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Whitewright Public Library.