Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. [33], No. 280, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 30, 1938 Page: 1 of 6
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fl
by Carrier
»c Per
ESDAY, AUG. 30, 1938
PRICE FIVE
-aiBaa
INSTRUCTOR ..
r
so
it
r!
t.
Sen
words.
CHICAGO.
f(
Thursday
;V-
iB’i.
MMk
9
1
=?=
— v
X
’>77
Seats Arranged
For Visitors at.
WatflfcCarnival
Valley Faces
Flood Threat
I]
Seniors Will Make
Programs Wednesday
Have You
A •
e I
bler,_
y in
ell
> a
t 1
AMOVING IB ';-
E» IN COMPLAINT
had reached < 27 foot crest and
was rising rapidly
MEXICAN RIVERS
IN FLOOD STAGE
during
Hr Uvea
wee net
the men
t.“ about oil confiscation
tetponement was asked by
mey generate department
t did not haVe all records
• -(Photo by Davis
BEN COOM
cakes
next
•at And that goes for Thomas
R Dewey. Nei York's dtatrtot |
attorney prosecuting the James I
Meeting of Rural
Women Is Planned
AUSTIN-
The 20th annual convention of
the Texas American Legion closed
Ity could have turn a1
1SX 1W.' W®
--sa..ja
hs
■tench Seek Aid
emocratic Powers
--------- v ~
, Ik.
□PLE
By ROY BIVUS
u
<1 I KM Ail
■kr Serf
:>UGLAfi
* Pr*gr«q
' N. t. (J
«■« H
M
—’
Explosions,
Fire Destroy
Oil Refinery
A
111
'• in
XI and Refining Co
nd. both large buyers,
ho out yesterday.
==?==
1 >
ainS i
For<
hPraoited
AXLUemocrais
To Decide On
Smith Today
LATE
FLASHES
and to advance tfia cause of vo-
cational education in agriculture
in the public schools
and cOntair
gasoline Wto
miles The .
destroyed all tablu i
of the refinery rtn
workers automobiles
parked nearby: -a—
The Barnsdall Refinery *m the
Urgent In West Texas. .
Frantic searches were made fobs,
men first believed trapped in
the plant Officiate made a com-
plete check, however and annodne- I
ed that none were lost. Firefight-
ers from here, Big Spring and
other cities were powerless to stop
the fire.
Government To
Lose Through
Export Plan
Live Births . .IpM
Totaled 662 ,
Started itr ion with- Year
wher of Longview, newly
-railroad commissioner
wesent He was report-
way to Austin to "make
■
■
| hM
BfH
AR, NO.
t ,
, In T-cxbi
■ era tost tl
t~lr*h and
I
1
Beau have been arranged within
the pool enclosure so that spectat-
ors will have a better view of
the dives and swimming exhibi-
tions A demonstration on the
use of a diving bell for deep sea
diving wljl be made also As a
climax to "the performance will be
the sensational fire dive by Capt
Johnnie Burna.
Rural Youths
1 Wffl Start To
School Oct. 10
wilt be discussed
, meeting.
F <T ", > ■
i MARKET
FORT WORTH. Tex . Aug 30
(U.fo— (U8DA1 — Livestock Cattle
MOO; calves 2000; steady to 26
higher; steen and yearlings 5-8;
fat cows 4 50-5 60: cutters 3-
4.25; calves 4.35-7.50.
Hogs 1200; mostly steady 8 >®;
top butchers 7 90-8 10; mixed grad-
BROWNSVILLE. Aug 30. (U.ri-
The lower Rio Grande Valley
faced a major flood threat today
M rivers of nprlheast Mexico dis-
gorged waters from cloud bufsta
along the headquarters of the Rio
Grande.
At Rio Grande City where the
Ban Juan River empties into the
ATTENDING CONVENTION
Mr and Mrs. John L McDowell
of 506 North Buffalo are at-
tending the Texas Baby Chick As-
sociation meeting in Fort Worth
thia week
gjjg
omc^l. VOTE COUNT
OUE THIS AFTERNOON
packing sows 8.50- Official count of the Johnson
• - rw—»- • I-' * • • fcfc-S ——I-fc. ™
wUl be made this afternoon. The
souhty committee Will meet with
. F. Seroyer at the
courthouse. AU returns have been
brought tn.
had not
strongly
CHICAGO Aug- 30 W.IO-The
American Medical Association to-
day summoned its house of del-
egates into special session to con-
sider the national health program
outlined recently by a presidential
committee.
•ent. 10.
>t Justice
liar questio/
from Europe?.
here today with P
by Gen Johnson
8. Ben. Tom Oom____
Selection of a convention city
and a' departmental commander
also were to take Place on the
closing session.
BONNEVIU£ BALT FLATS, Utah
John OObb. British fur broker,
made two fast runs over the Balt
Flats here today in hte three-ton
racing car but hte speed was far
below’ the record of 346.48 miles
an hour established by Capt.
George Eyston
AMA To Consider
Health Program
OTTAWA. Ohl. OJ.rn—Male grad-
uates of Canadian universities
outnumber female graduates by a
ratio of nearly 3-1 an educational
survey revealed. Approximately 3
per cent of the youth of Canada
omtain college diplomas, the sur-
vey showed, -'<•
POLITICAL FATE OF
McADOO AT STARE
SAN FRANCWCO. Aug 30 (U.R)
—The prestige of President Roose-
velt and the political fate of Sen.
William Gibbs McAdoo, former
secretary of treasury, were at
stake today in California's bitter
primary election
Mr. Roosevelt endorsed the 74-
/ear-old McAdoo His Democratic
opponents were Sheridan Downey,
an attorney and John Preston,
former California supreme court
justice. ' •
"" —
4
MONTERREY, Metaoo. Aug 30.
(U.P)—Rivers in northeast Mexico
fed by cloudbursts that acoomgian-
led a hurricane Inland from thg
Gulf of Mexico roared out of banks
drowning at toast 10 persons and
leaving doeens of American tour-
iiirtAE-, ■fcrnjyifodj
With all rivers in the area near
flood stage it wns feared that the
death toll would continue U> rise.
Many communities were Isolated.
Burns-Swanson Water Safety Gar-
two herd of baby beeves or portr. niv»l in be hold tontght at-. 5
„ . si --altW| tlt< cuy pass swtmnitAg
pool have been made according to
Park Supervisor Moward W Par-
Half of the proceeds of toe en-
tertainment go to the pArk pool
fund. Tickets are 25 and 15
cents and cgn be purchased at the
High school students will begin
making programs at the 1
school building Wednesday with
an cahdltfrtM for graduation ar-
Ctounty vote In Saturday's primary Dinging programs from < to 12
*■* “ “ Wednesday morning. Thursday
from 8 until 12 all students hav-
ing eight t»- more unite but not
candidates for graduation will
have programs made.
•-UV > " '-k aI- ' ... " ’?
To Buy It
* I
Cleburne? ♦
Lfc. (By United Pres»>
ODESSA-
One man wa» killed and sev-
eral others injured today when a
series of explosions followed by
fire wracked toe Barnsdall Cor- <hs 8400.000 refinery of the
poratlon's 8400.000 gasoline plant *
il£M5--k*9 .
R. H Brook.1, a workman at the
. plant, died oi burns. Two other
?hun were reported missing. Since
company records were destroyed it
definitely known whether
-bad been in the plant.
iscation Suits
Postponed *
IN Te* , Aug - 30 <u.»—
» confiscate East Texas oil
I between 300,000 and 400,-
irels and a countersuit
nttlroad commission Inter-
i were postponed today In
court until Friday Ti
hree confiscation suits were
[ General American Oil
The hearings drew as
b Governor Allred and
j Commissioner Ernest
.....
----- tom. stranded.
nplaint of driving while
ed wax filed in Justice
3erryberry s court Monday
John Williams of Coryell
. The arrest was made
by clt/'rikd county officers
. IHendqrson Street
11. PRICE POSTED
PON Aug. 30 (UF- The
Sited A 51.25 per
ast Tbxas crude
the 10 cent cut
rV
1 0
INTERLUDE IN HINES TRU
3C=|.....11
Central Press Bervi
ij
i Seeking renomination, he was op-
posed by Gov. Olin D Johnston,
an ardent New Dealer
Approximately 340.000 voters were
expected to pass on the Issue, de-
| scribed as "toe H— --------
Smith "
Next meeting of rural women
Interested In a rural homemakers'
market will be held September 24.
Mias Maeona Cox, county home
demonstration agent announced to-
day. Saturday toe group1 met at
the American Legion Hall The
making ot butter cakes was dis-
cussed Rural women who attend
the next meeting will bring butter
cakes with them
Mrs -M A Hedrick of the
Plainview- Club was named chart-
man of the group Fruit
will be discussed at the
HOLLYWOOD-^
| Max Factor, ttsjamous make-up
expert, died M his A<«e here to-
day of a kidney atlntept
new rewuc--'-'—--------
A policeman testified in James
Hlnea trial today that he was d<^
moted after participating in raids
on the lottery racket *toat the
Taminar.y leader allegedly was paid
to protect. t.
•jPFyffir'i1.'.'. ------------ —
Pioneer Resident
Of Grandview To
Be Buried Today
-,v:- -------- '
Funeral services for Mrs. R D.
Rigby, 88. resident- of Grandview
for 50 years, were to have been
held this afternoon at 3 o'clock
at toe Firet Baptist Ghurch of
Grandview Burial was to have
been in toe Antloth Cemetery
Mrs. Rigby died Monday morn-
ing about 7:30 o’clock at her home
in Grandview She la survived by
seven sons and a daughter They
are w B and R. L. Rigby of
Cleburne L. D,. 1> p. and Miss
Mattie Rigby of Grandview. Char-
lie and Homer Rigby of Childress
and John Rigby of Burkburnett
Twelve grandchildren also survive.
7— ■ -r—---------
House Mother Is
Named for Project
Mrs Poole of Grandview has been
named house mother for the NY A
rural girls resident training pro-
ject which begins here Thursday
County Judge J. P. Berover was
notified today. Eighteen girls will
move Into toe house at 417 North
Wflhlte Street Thursday and will
stay two weeks 18 other
girls will move in for a two-
wegk period It te hoped that a
teacher can be seewred for the
project. , •<
wIBbMSS <O C»U rebMUHlDU Vw - wlr
fget that Texas te at last approach-’ j/1".. ----------------
sajgfasr.r.ffy *-n»
nation as • whole had a maternal
mortality - of 83 white Texas’ rate;
was 77; tn 1534 the U B. had
a rate of 59 and Texas 73; in 1936
toe nation came down to 58 and
Texas stayed at the previous year's
73: in 1938 the nation had an
average of 58 and Texas’ was!
89 The national average for 1927
te as yet unavailable but Texas
has come down to 59. The In-
fant mortality table presents a
similar comparison. Advancing
public health practices better pre-
natal and post-natal care, and
better hygienic conditions contrib-
ute to this steadily diminishing
percentage of Texas mother* and
children lost in childbirth,
“Never before in the history
of obstetrics have scientific pre-
cautions against complications been
so advanced and so available as
they are today However, in spite
■of toe Improvement In the tech-
niques involved and the further
development of antiseptic control,
the maternal mortality figures
pathetically indicate that medi-
cal knowledge alone cannot solve
the problem,’’ Dr Cox further
mited. . ' »■! , .-1
Sheep 4000; steady to 26 lower;
spring lambs 4-4 25. mnty comm
Tomopow’s ssUmated receipts: Chairman J.
CatUe 3400; calves 2000; hogs
1100; sheep 2000
■ • -'■■■ - -
. or keep raenrrte or milk Bwhu-u
of a dairy cow
’ ~ Grouped Together ;
All vocational agricultural stu-
dents are grouped together tn a
National Future Farmers organisa-
tion operating for toe purpose of
making farm leaders. Each Fu-
ture Farmer organisation has as- ,P«>1 tonight
Its purposes the following .stan-
dards: to develop competent, Ag-
gressive. rural and agricultural
leadership to strengthen the con-
fidence of the farm boy in him-1
self and hte work; to create
more Interest in the Intelligent
choice of farming occupations; to
create and nurture a love of
country life; to improve the rural
home and its surroundings; to
encourage cooperative effort among
students of' vocational education
in agriculture; to promote thrift
among students of vocational agri-
culture-through the establishment
of savings accounts and Invest-
ments in agricultural enterprises;
I to promote and improve scholar-
ship; to encourage organised re-
creational activities among students
of vocational agriculture; to sup-
plement toe regular systemic in-
struction offered to students of vo-
opera-"* BILL CRANFORD i cational education in agriculture;
BY WINDHAM^-...J. A. ----—
photographing a bevy of
.77 STYRON RAGSDALE
bout an extra good round
Bpr-------—......- tay uriirar Fraas)
,. r11i£ British cabbiet In a momentous session today decided
animously to go "Ute full limit” to prevent Invaslou of
highly reliable sources reported
Ths cabinet was said to bAve given Htlnja Minister Neville Qi
beriin a‘free hand in all future moves
The French cablnej meantime sftught to line up democratic pc
in a determined front to Warn Germany that invasion of Ob
Istoealfta would mean general war. —. ----'
| French ambassadors were expected to inform all friendly got
_ mentl togi EmwsJDtended to comply YltoJiei obligationsJftjj
. QBechoelovakla
' ' , Crowd-j Jam Downing Ntond *
In London, anxious crowds Jammed Downing Street us toe ca
discussed toe advisability of sending another warning to Adolf H
The pound sterling dropped to the lowest price since 1935
were reportedly put aboard British wnrships for maneuvers in
North Bea. but odds in diplomatic circles of 80-50 on wgr *■
todav. fo 10 to 1 atainst war
In Berlin official sources pul on new pressure tor a speedy
tion of the Sudeten German minority demands oq
Neglect Blamed
"OenereUV speaking. Innocent or
wilful neglect te largely responsible
for the preventable maternal
deaths It to to be emphasised
that the proper Ums for expectant
mothers to seek medical attention
te Wnen the expectancy te first
realized
"In other words, science had
done its part, now lhe proxpecUvs
mothers must do theirs.”
w
-
Report S
k -were tn htwpttate frnct SOt-R*- 1)M»4 rj
Twenty-two children were suM-
born giving Johnson Oomity a retej
of 3 3 per 1OT live births Thirty-1
seven children died under one-i
| year of age. a rate of 50 5 PM
1000 live births - >
v Cleburne Births - • •; !
The city of Cleburne had. 334 :?
total live births during the past:
year. 230 white, four Negro . A to-
: tai cf 113 of the infanta wwe
male and 121 female Phyutetans
attended all birth*: 188 of the to- i,
tai births b-ing In hospitals and
120 at home Thirteen children
were stillborn, a rate al 5 8 pw ' v
. ’ITO live births and. 20 chiMre#J Tri*Lfir no W. a. BWL B»«
died under, oqe year of age, a MM
of 85 5 per 1000 live births
Texas Near Average
M7e7al”’hundred'7pectators at to* ^^"TttmtiM^fo”^
--......
^School Agriculture
jS-Course Is Outlined
one point and then ^>*^>**-*»
get t»re nome.j , _________ ..‘yj
. jofolaon County's* many activities for toe advant
i Interests tells year
COLUMBIA. ® C.. Aug. 30 (UlD
-South Carolina Democrats de-
cide in the party primary today
w hether to follow President Roose-
velt's wishes »nd retire Ben Elll-
Ison (Cottdh Bd> Bmith who has
served in ths senate since 1508.
The delegates will meet I
The U 8 IDepartment of
has cliargfd too AMA wito viola-
tion of anti-trust laws In alleged-
ly ols-trucUng efforts toward social-
ized medicine The presidential
ion uniltee i ccomme tided. a. program
Of gl'taiP I . ■ 1 — rr ■■ ---
cost federal and state- govern-
ment S856.000.000 a year.
TOLEDO CHARTER STUDIED
TOLEDO (URV-The tww char-
ter being stexnltted to Mlaneap-
oils voters for study te modeled
alter the Toledo city manager
charter Minneapolis will vote on
a council manager plan of gov-
ernment In November
TORONTO'S DEBT MOUNTS
TORONTO. (U.F — The City M
Toronto's public debt has Increas-
ed by more than fol DOO.(XX) in toe
past 10 years. In 1818 the city’s
gross debt was 5104.118,101. Last
year it stood at 8187.425349
DALLAS- jj, '
Industrial and commercial con-
ditions in the Southwest are im-
proving. toe ' federal reserve bank
reported today. In ite ninthly
business review Ute 11 to district
bang revealed optimistic forecast
lor the agriculture and oil Indus*
tries and retail and Wholesale
trade.
WASHINGTON. Aug 30 (U»-
Agrlculture department officials es-
timated today that the government
would lose up to 812,500,000 through
Its new wheat export subsidy plan
This was revealed as the depart-
ment Initiated the broadest sub-
sidy program ever undertaken tty
offering exporters 100.000.000 bush-
els of wheat for sale abroad st
competitive world prices The de-
partment will absorb all losses on
the transaction
F R. Wilcox, who will direct
the wheat subsidy program said
that he would emphasise very
much the export of flour." He
said that suggestions that export
subsidies be confined to flour,
however, were absurd since many
foreign countries have their own
mills and would not buy flour. ’
The Federal Surplus Commod-
ities Corporation has begun the
r rroorowmwu.. *nd Hour at
medical card which would Prevailing market prices, for n*.
medical care wnton wnurn #t #
will enable them to dispose of it
abroad In competition with Can-
ada. toe Argentine and Australia
ttoesea sustained by tlie FBW
will be made up from Section 32A
of the AAA Act, which set ».M<»
30 per cent of custom receipts for
disposal of agricultural surplufok-
The FSCC has borrowed 330.000.-
000 from the Reconstruction Fi-
nance Corporation to finance when*,
purchases.
A six-hour conference beMV^KM
agriculture officials and 20 prom- '
inent grain dealers and exportar* /
preceded the announcement of. tka
subsidy program Hie conf<pwn8a., i
was reported to hare developed
, for an intensive skies cainpalMf^
high ()ITMMBER^<AN ADI AN CO-EDN , ftbroad for American wheat
WPA TRAPS BEETKH
DELMAR Det. (UJO- Mere toMH
400.000 Japanese beetles have baste ;
caught in traps near here. acccrtS"'
tag to Henry Mltoheil. WPA coun-
ty director in risaras of toe driw. '
against the hanftful Insects. *]
irpnz~fc
An ke Box!
JUNEAU. Alaska. Aug 30 (WO
—Charlie ’“Pastollk. an Eskimo
from St Michaels island start-
ed home today with a gift for
toe wife and kiddie* It was
an ice bog,
James Moran a salesman of
Washington. D C., modestly re-
corded the transaction a*
“merely part of a day’s busi-
ness."
"I drove home selling point
after selling pdlnt* until Char-
lie's resistance melted.’’ Moran
■aid -‘‘He -gave me 50 silver
dollar* *nd a hundred dollars
worth of furs, Ivory, and ‘heir-
looms' in payment ’’
The Ehkhno said he intended
to fill the shelves of toe re-
frigerator with reindeer meat
whale blubber ‘‘squawberry" uie
and seal oil . !
The 1938-39 rural school pro-
gram will begin October )0. it was
decided at a meeting of the John-
son County school board here
Monday
Routing of school buses and ap-
pointment ot trustees to serve In
vacancies created by resignations
include business cf the group
A. D. McBSroy was appointed
trustee of the Iterryvllle District,
NO 71 Jim ITSelton was named
to succeed S. V. Bells who re-
signed as a- trustee of the Lone
Star district O. K.r Robinson
was named trustee to succeed W
T. Lain, of Braaos Valley, who
resigned Leonard Chambers was
named to succeed J. E Smith.
Lone Star, resigned
Leon Lain was appointed driv-
er of toe Brasos Valley bus iXr.
D Hom was named driver of the
- - . — Friendship bus. Friendship offlc-
Rto Grande, toe Mexican streanr 4ate-were authorised to trade for
' *> ' a new bus.
, The Pecan Grove, Meredith,
Fairview. West Fork, West Liberty
buses were routed the same as
last year. The Rio Vista and
Bono buses were routed toe same
as last year,. subject to change.
The Bethany and Mount Carmel
bus was routed -the same as last
year with one exception It will
travel by toe Stephen s place
The Joshua bus was routed the
same except toe Joshua-Rock
Creek passage will bo made by
the .Evans place In Inelement
weather and by the old route in
fair weather
SATURDAY CUMING
OF OIL PIELDg ADDED
AUSTIN, Atig. 30. (W—Saturday
closing of Texas Oil fields will be
added to Bunday shutdowns in
September tn ate «Ctort to balance
; BPOductlon and consumption
An order reinstating two day
shutdowns abandoned July I VM
issued last night by toe Texas
Rnilrrewi Commission < ’ommisstote-
er Ion A. Smith refused to sign
Tbeams Deway( oMrtor, la foreground
L J. Hines policy racket case
' Dewey is shimn going to lunch
during a day’s session, watched
• by a urge crowd. Dewey is in
center, -foieground. '
____________’
ENB ARE HATCHED
jte nhoned in toe .
kwesu giggle- informed ihi1-
that a chicken is hattoed
it born as we had atntod.
sally speaking toe lady te
but well - wager everyone
nod that toe little fowl pip-
l way into tote world And
i'MM before he had four
1 w w tuemuun! wrocnrwr-1
nieture drum sticks?
:t Companion
soldier boy* who recently
d toe war games at damp
•particularly the boys who
orwwl on the ground and
■nmunlcailon lines, are still
about the slas, friendliness
fifoslveneM of the ticks,
foger, however, tost if Ms-
■ Carlton Honea was bon-
ito such a visit it was when
the critters fell on his cot
ihade tree!
B ON THE CUFF: Ole-
new manager of the Yale
dace meater* has arrived
FRANK AYDELOTTE and
jaklng the rounds with
EE LIMhriCK this mom-
appearance Frank can
Is own with Georgle All
• tea Jim Farley haircut
(Semiring waistline Via-
Cleburne today: • Former j
W W F. HOBBY
I over toe situation:" J. J.
I and FRED ALEXANDER
ppular question What’s
Wln-
I
one year cf age
— were stillborn Itvra
eenre particularly disti
It is realised that at
third* of thi* mothert
Uy. codto h-"- •“
E ~ w _________
Hr- Jnhnron County lied 4
i [live births during 1987. c
831 were whits, and 31 -Nf
' of the infanta were mate
female .Physicians stten
birth* rf 338 Infanta. 1
323 and three births w
New Deal versus
Not First Test
It was not the first test of lhe
Now Deal in the south this year,
but it was the tint test since
President Roosevelt announced hte
Intention of intervening in state
primaries against Democratic can-
didates who had opposed his
New Deal program
President Roosevelt
committed himself as
against Smith as he had against
- Ben Walter F. George of Georgia.
whom he denounced by name and
to hte face, but he had left no
doiibt on ho* he stood and how he
considered Sen. Smith;
Issue Drawn
’ First, from the rear platform of
1 his special train, he had'reminded
. Soutli Carollite voter* that Smith
I had once remarked in toe sen-
ate Hiat a mall dFX family could
live on 60 cents a day; then, later.
In a summer White House state-
ment he had said that the South
Carolina issue had been clearly
drawn—the Ne«i Deal, represent-
ed by Johnston, against the old
order of the south, represented by
Smith
in Johnson Comty
»on Notes 7;
folks know a vacatiuu
vent w'herre they drive 1
ytaui
te nek to ! baric home.
r, HolX'T"''1* Johnson County s" many activities for the advanoenlMjt of farm
L Mio Lerna Merle re- ; interests tote year will include vocational ajrtculture In ^leb<
j^t week tant—HMv Sr^iool Farm boy; that have acceee to Project matsrisl*^
Lvisit* to Aritepsaa, Mia- iliake, to* eourea. -
““0 .O*1*1’-’®11' . ~r*~ Ben Cook, former superintendent pf *chool* at TolSJ will to
W r toe£ mrtructor Vocational agriculture 1W. high sehools^tartsd 10 1911 i
Ebuim ■ Ju tit inter- [ thF^Etoith-Hughes Act. T*1****'
m. arid took toetr time rank* high-In this work having
Lg W b Wm-fci .mirt fam- 20.0C0 boys during toe year. 1MT-
■■Rtetcn . ore . vjcationinj <8 ;rj
Aransn,. BUI is after some departinsnt wUl taka au_atr_.J
Ing he has missed the past i five part in community acVvitles
®
I f^kis-lron interested, and fairs, i
T„V>n,TKen „ , ' Bcy'r product* wUl be exhibited
editor of the Burleson 1 lp Farmer shows when the 41
tatae w haw Jar » ! number qf livestock and crops |
»rt n- c ^Hta* 'rcactl • bl«h number
E* rLnjiuR Mr m worthy of display Active'interest
Erifrev^ r' ' ^nd wlU ** teken ,n demonstrating to
(Ky*- micp Wiltolre’ Mis' farmers such skills as terracing,
fcrv ^id M^ 6 B cwPPi**- budding. tesUiig
to Celeste to cele-1 Ior butterfat. contouring aqd
re tt^lhday of George cL j seeding pasture*, feedtag livestock ,
he -former Burleson K«ty *nd other.
uw u auitoiueu tottg. -----------Bsolbf .jEhwfo.-------- J
fcs°U1 fecV“ Boys.-taklug tola course iu .toe| |
■waking of ministers, the
-Vwhteng postcards
'postal) us from Mexico,
jerful^trfo The beautiful
on toe card is of the lobby
1 Majestic. It looks like the-
of a cA&hednd.
to fried chicken. Why do
ict as U ministers had a
Uy on this precious dish? I
I could cat mflm. rnlnlsters s
toe table” when it comes
My fixed fowl ”
FIVE TAX 8UITH FILED
Five suite (or the collection of
delinquent, state taxes were filed
Monday in 18to District Court
science had
-----BsoliM,J2feWS_____
.........—■ AML-fc^JJBW.
regular school MMioh will be in
regular class just like any other
subject, but will have a double
period every day covering instruc-
tion on toe many farm enterprise*
and skills actually on local farms.
Bach boy will be expected to
carry three projects tf possible ta
I addition to regular classes.. By
' carrying projects is meant grow-
| ing poultry, feeding a calf, or
' pig, or cultivating a field crop.
I These project* are to be produced
under improved. practical and
profitable methods A detailed,
: complete record is kept on toe en-
i tire project Some of toe flve-
acre projects carried are cotton,
com and grain sorghum Ten
acre projects include oata. wheat,
or barley Two acre project* in- Beating arrangamenta to care for
elude watermelons snd baalpfonb- • ------- *
e«. Student can also feed one
ODESSA, Tex.. Aug
Explosions and fire
dall OU CO , five mUss from here
today.
Three men were Injured critically
snd another suffered shock Com-
pany officials said that an W
man employed ta the plant were
at'i’OUllUKi MNT> ** ■
An sxploeion oTla butane (M
tank started 'a series of *xpfo-
tiions followed by fire. The in-
jured man were r H Brooks,
Glen Carlton and George Boott
They were caught when tank* near
them exploded, as a nmow wqrk-
■m rrtetf- ................. to '■Ml
them
Witnesses said that the force “of
Jhc expioston was almost untoBm
able One tank weighing 18 tone
ilng 20.000 gallon* Of
blown one and a half
mcploslon* and fins
and separatora
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Bacus, Roy. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. [33], No. 280, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 30, 1938, newspaper, August 30, 1938; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1306879/m1/1/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.