The DeLeon Free Press. (De Leon, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, November 4, 1932 Page: 3 of 10
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FRIDAY NOVEMBER 4, 1932
THE DE LEON FREE PRESS
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ogress, Statistics, the Odd, the Queer,
the Freakish
—
HOUSTON—It was A.
NOVEMBER 4, 1932
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PL'RMMONS DIOTG COMPANY -
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Blocked 50c when brought in with
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your red cross
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CHILD KILLED BY FIRE
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wonders of
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For complete information ask
C. C. MALONE
De Leon, Texas.
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MAN TRAVELS FROM
WISCONSIN IN BUGGY
TO MAKE FORTUNE
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- C'y
FOOTBALL BUS HIT
AND KI! LED HORSES
NEAR WAXAHACHIE
lOUN ; GIRL W VS
SHOT TO DEATH
AT PORT ARTHUR
STUDENT DID NOT
TRAVEL SO FAR TO
ATTEND UNIVERSITY
PRES. WEST TEXAS
C. OF C. SPOKE FOR
ORVILLE BULLINGTON
♦
PI
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VIA
KATY
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El Paso—Site being secured for
Federal building here.
L--
Pioneers Again
(Effective Oct. 30th)
i River
bridge.—Alpine, Avalanche.
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a mete"
Hi'M
Athens
the
struck
>NVENIENT^
4GER
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W*JP. •Ta-J/b.'
DAS'1X? TUDDr
PAGE THREE
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‘Vhe Vegetable TONIC
HERBINE
CORRECTS CONSTIPATION
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SAN ANGELO MEMBER
OF LEGISLATURE IS ]
SHOT BY CO. JUDGE
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Experienced travel-
ers always “go Katy’’
because they know and
appreciate Katy Courtesy,
/ Katy Comforts and Katy
Cooking. And Now ! Added
Katy convenience as a^result of
new, shortened and rearranged
schedules. Remember, these changes
become effective October 30th.
: A PAGE OF TEvw i
The Best of the W.eek’s Happenings, Clipped From Fifty Copies of Texas Dailies and Weeklies—Record of Pr
boa
fest
her
tion
don
nial
ame
ativ
celel
MUI
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Worn
of Fi
terda1
cd bv
More than <250 000 to be expend-
ed by Southern Pacific Railway in
And does things! —Boston Trans- rebuilding Devil’s River railway
ROOF WATCHMAN
NABBED BURGLAR
OF NEARBY STORE
rdw in one <lav. See our new Fall-
-tnck. -
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You are a Guest —Not Merely
a Passenger Aboard the Katy
Railroad* can proiprr only to the extent .ha- they
are able to serve. Prime requiaitea of aervice are
comfort, convenience and courtesy. Every Katy
employee i> trained to serve patrons n a manner
that will mptrti upon them he feet that on the
Katy no one is merely a passenger, but that each
passenger is an honored and appreciated gues'
CitAIKMAM 09 T«B BOMB *WB PMBMMT )
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AUSTIN—When a student travels
from Vienna, Austria, to Austin to
attend the University of Texas there
usually is some reason—so a repre-
sentative of the on-ioorsity daily pub-
find out front
Join
-
Al
■
Superin-
fied public
capita al-
id 1933.
hat anoth-
dey is to
This will
) per pupil
hat he had
me in Vienna
i Waco.
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A watchman employed by a local
t heat co r-n—>- -
>r Monday and Tuesday
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i
A TOAST
to the man
tor. He tutored well.
The defendant appealed to the
Judge tha* he understood no English.
Judge Muse said he ytoke no Spanish
Then the Mexican launched into vol-
uble discussion. ’Ho Ic.-pt at it sever-
al minutes despite numerous unsuc-
cessful interruptions by the Judge.
"Finally, Judge* Muse said, “Oh, yes.
I understand. You mean you want
to get out of here. Well, go on.*’
As he motioned the defendant
away, the Mexican replied:
“Thank you, Judge." — Dallas
News. .
WAXAHACHIE—Wh-n
bus carrying the ' H'lkbnro
School foot hall ♦oanyr fn<m
where they had played
school of that city,
itaotfrvF'
J
ged in <x>t-
rter of a
field estima-
said here he
on yield for
>ed 3,900,000
3,800,000
i weather of
relieved.
the nation,
•op reports
ea, put th?
as compar-
•nt forecast
are from Vien-
in the student
the report-
? climate, the
at was it that
_ • ’ar to school ?”
Yows, “it’s.Jtie
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TY LER —A roof-top nightwatch-
man is something new for this city,
but the innovation already has had
HIGHWAY BODY LET
FIVE MILLION DOLLAR
CONTRACTS, OCTOBER
AUSTIN—Contracts awarded by
the state highway commission for
road and bridge work at their Octo-
ber session will exceed $5,000,000 it
was estimated today.
Hereafter counties will be required
to furnish right-of- way fpr grading
and culverts, the commission declar-
ed in laying down a new road build-
ing policy. Recently. The commission
abandoned the plan, of asking count-
ies to issue bonds to participate in
road construction.
DALLAS—Betty Joseph James, fl-
year-old daughter of Mr. *and Mrs.
L. H. James, who was burned to
death when her clothing was ignited
by matches with which she was play-
ing, will be buried here today.
Lury, and clattered 1
1,700 mile buggy ride i its results.
FORT WORTH—Wilbur C. Hawks
president of West Texas Chamber
of Commerce, will take the stump for
Orville Bullington, candidate for gov- -
ernor, it was announced here.
The Amarillo newspaper publisher
has “determined the time has come
for the election of Mr. Bullington in
the interest of responsibility in gov- ■
ernment" the candidate’s campaign
bureau here announced.
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Here’s
thingsM-
Builds things—makes things;
Who prattles not of
old,
Nor gloat over ancestral gold,
But takes off his coat and takes
hold
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SAN ANGELO—State Rep. G. Y.
Lee was in a hosfutal Irere Tuesday,
suffering from a bullet wound inflict
ed by James M. Simpson, 70, former
( '-oncho county judge.
Lee was shot accidentally, witness-
es said, during an altercation be-
tween Simpson and Carrol Fjilcher
in Lee's office at Eden last night.
Fulcher and Lee are said to have
quarreled over cattle.
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Thd
bad .
School
first t . , „ ,
“Wh„. uiu my nttie daughter t>ail discovered
leem this morning,” asked her fath-
er.
“That I am a child of Satan,” was
the beaming reply.—Epworth Herald
the frog Monday
while fishing in what he calls Wav-
erly Creek, near^ his home, 1212
South Waverly drive. The frog has
the regulation equipment as regards
hind legs and is fitted with two spare
fore legs, both on its’ right side and
originating close together and ad-
joining a larger and stronger right
fore leg tlW. appears to be the prin-
ciple one.
rhrd§..hra
PORT ARTHUR Helen Myers
IS, prominent in Port Arthur’s youmr
Social set, was found dead of gun-
hio-h shot wounds today in her father’s
twa targe suburban home near here.
vxoo'iyear bimn Reliance, 110 feet
long, 40 feet in diameter, 2*10 horse-
power motors, and a seven-place .cab -
in, circled Waco Monday morning, en
route from Fort Worth to San Anto-
nio. F. H. Sheppard was pilot; co-
pilot was Witiam Hutton. The blimp
left Akron two weeks ago ami "has
been at Dallas, Texarkana, Fort
Worth and other points.
HOUST^ON—It was A. H. Hause’s
last chance, so he clucked to his 23- j
vear-old mare
s< uuiward on a
• o Texas, where oil lay underground.
“1’11 be back with $100,001) or I theatre r~u—>- JJfcjUTl-tjr* vz*- , ___ _
DE LEON FREE PRESS
DE LEOS, TEXAS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER t»l
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Scott, R. L. The DeLeon Free Press. (De Leon, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, November 4, 1932, newspaper, November 4, 1932; De Leon, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1278602/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Comanche Public Library.