The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, January 9, 1931 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Van Zandt County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Van Zandt County Library.
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«T
I
miemmnes.aatmbudt
FRIDAY JANUARY 9, 1931
THE CANTON HERALD
A'
WARNS PUBLIC
4
•4
‘Ym k y.
2
KATHLEEN NORR1508
EN 6 1
back on the wave of cold air that she had entered it.
way.
“me
stomach
all kinds of nervous
R. v McClain,
p. m., by virtue of said levy and i
It is modern, fireproof
what?’ I asked one of them. ‘A
asked with quiet menace.
of
RESOURCES
2
112.93
80 per
«W,
\
TOTAL....
$568,170.34
LIABILITIES
):
TOTAL.
. $568,170.34
THOSE NEW RESOLUTIONS.
Van Zandt County, Texas.
Directors.
Keep your resolutions, after you P. Nixon, as sheriff of Van Zandt
course,”
To be a better citizen, more help-
ty betterment outside of that for
—। it
merely for pay but for the real
434
$
To see the bright side of every
situation as nearly as possible.
—o-
-o
1,
tented, like her mother, and poor
0-
r ♦
0
=m
-0-
G
0-
0-
be
EUBANK BROS.
SEE US! .
WILLS POINT
KEMP
CANTON
„pe
N
A A J
A
18
Ben Clark, just south of Can-
ton, sold a 25-months old heifer.
before it!"
For, as she
15,375.20
501.047.11
500.00
150.00
bent, meek little figure of Len
Johnson, postman, chattering, with
face, and she said in consterna-
tion:
$ 40.000.00
1,748.03
.10,000 00
Lots of folks wonder how we can afford
to carry such a large stock of repairs the
year around. Well, it is expensive business,
but we feel it is our responsibility to fur-
nish genuine I H C repairs on short notice
no matter when our customers need them.
That’s part of the farm machine service
we offer you. Play safe; buy McCormick-
Deering Machines—and buy them here.
the
tin
Aal
Who indeed could have dreamed
that that gasping mite, that little
"drowned rat," was going to turn
in a few years to definite, corn-
ed
er
in resentment.
“Well, she don’t
velocity of a little dynamo.
The sense of beauty and adven-
ture was still strong upon her as
Page Three
breaks!” Elizabeth repeated
sently.
Elizabeth came
defence.
of his family to properly curb his
well, we will chlorinate the water
supply for him.
"The third project will be the
matter of sanitary waste disposal.
We can show the farmer how to
build a sanitary pit-type toilet for
the protection of his family from
waste-borne and filth-borne diseas-
es, such as typhoid fever, dysen-
tery and hookworm,”
Among many that you might
make are these.
To attend to your own business.
cally stirring her coffee and reach- her mother asked, rattling sheets
ing for the sugar and cream, nover of newspaper.
"Oh, poor kid, she doesn’t get
many breaks!”
for Stomach Trouble Crazy
Water Has No Equal.
Ticket Seller: You can’t take that girl
in on a child’s ticket.
Fraud: Why not? She’s some baby!
U. S. Treasurer
Other assets _______
own head in the world.
(Continued Next Week)
•(2
Bhe >
Capital stock paid in________________________
Undivided profits—— net ________________________
( Circulating notes outstanding __________________ _____
Due to banks, including certified and cashiers’
checks outstanding ____________________________
Demand deposits _______________________________, ..........
“Is she fast?"
“Say, she’s so fast she whistles when
she talks.”
it milk and cream, and fled
che neglected kitchen.
rodhheverytning, domestic-
mg, to be done in the
At nobody in Maggie's
WACO DISTRICT
CLERK PRAISES
CRAZY WATER
Subscribed and sworn to before
me this 6th day of January, 1930.?
J. T. BEARD. ||
Notary Public ||
court house door of Van Zandt!
county, in the state of Texas, be- District Clerk Past Thirty Years,
tween the hours of 10 a. m. and 4 Waco, Texas.
joy of doing good.
Not to be content with merely
being good—to be good for some-
thing.
To meet more fully obligations
of every sort. Keeping the faith
is a great thing.
To identify myself with some
Talk to us ahout your implement wants
for 1931. We can talk cash, part cash or
terms. Don’t be afraid we are not, for wher
we lose faith in the farmer then we will
quit.
4
ir
c
DR. T. R. KEAHEY
DENTIST
Office Over First National Bank
Canton, Texas
DR. GRACE KIRKLAND,
M. D-, well known woman
doctor, warns against contin-
ued use of drastic purgatives.
Poij,
" 30
I, W. B. Rodgers, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly
swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge
and belief. W B. RODGERS, Cashier.
CORRECT —ATTEST:
M. L. COX
W. L. STEED
E. O. HEARD
acres of the F M. Farley survey, |
beginning at the N W corner of Says
Block No. 3, it being the S. W. 1
corner of Block No. 4, P. O. 6 in. i
l
a
4
I
'___________ -
If you want real strength and stability
in a plow, ask us for the McCormick-Deer-
ing No. 12 Success Sulky. It is built almost
entirely of steel.
i
0
I
ing from functional debility as in- H. H. Seike in and to said prop-
dicated by pasty complexion, faulty erty.
digestion, poor assimilation, occa- And in compliance with law, I
sional or chronic constipation, acid- give this notice by publication, in
ity, gas, unrefreshing sleep, nerv- the English language, once a week
ousness, bilousness and toxic head- for three consecutive weeks im-
aches, should shun the frequent mediately preceding said day of
use of calomel, salts, oils or other sale, in the Canton Herald, a news-
He locked his ignition, his steering wheel,
his gearshift and the door to his ear-
then lost his keys.
“I—a Petheridge—eatin‛ in my kitchen! And waitin’ on me—is my
daughter!”
Maaaxaxnanuannnzmmsunannnnsnrenannnnunnunnmn
- ' 1 . । ■ e. < e
This program of rural sanita-1
tion has the approval, support and
co-operation of the United States
public health service and the Tex-
as state department of health.
--- - - Pu blished. by--—bg
Canton Lumber Co. ad
WILLS POINT AND CANTON -a
Wills Point, Implements Only—Canton, Lumber and Implements 2,,
nd damp and neat across
(8 bald dome of his
didn’t care!” Maggie shav-
. words, with her lips, rath-
' t said them.
Johnson, lured by the ap-
A odors, kitchen-ward, ap-
new treatment.”
Dr. Kirkland is a resident
Atlanta, Ga.
Sold by Palace Drug Store
“Girls were harder to kiss in your day,
weren’t they, Grandpa?” asked Dick Becker.
"Mebbe," was the response. “But it was
not so blamed dangerous in them days—the
old parlor sofa wouldn’t smash into a tree
just about that time.”
Texas chamber of commerce has
announced a three-way program
GOOD STOCK PAYS.
A worn and spotted kimono wan wag admitted by the opening of
wrapped about her, her rich dark the kitchen door.
I sentery. | without calf, this week for the
“The second project will be the sum of $55. Thia is mentioned for
purification of the water supply. | the reason that it clearly shows
Laboratory tests show that at least that it pays to raise good stock,
cent of the water supply It may be appropriately said that
io matter what low levels ordinary
the best
indifferently to her practical, 'their feet on the earth,
so to speak.
We are glad to report that we have just
received a new shipment of McCormick-
Deering Peg-Tooth Harrows of the kind
most popular locally.
I
I
v
I
666
is a doctor’s Prescription for
COLDS and HEADACHES
It is the most speedy remedy
known.
666 Also In Tablets
“Poverty is a curse, all right!”
Sunshine is the greatest germ killer known to man.
That’s why we keep our ambulance at our home, where we
eun the matresses and blankets every time they are used.
That's worth considering when you call an ambulance
for the sick or injured.
The poor and rich look alike to us.
Notice of Sheriffs Sale.
(Real Estate.)
The State of Texas, County of
Van Zandt.
Notice is hereby given that by
virtue of a certain execution and
fee bill issued out of the honorable
Justice Court of Van Zandt Coun-
ty, on the 5th day of January,
i 1931, by R. E. High, Justice of
offer for sale and sel] at public Texas, covers an entire block of
vendue, for cash, to the highest ground. F _
in
"azaQ
8
"TVasked, without sound.
gW Jdown her glass, look-
aigr.“t him, looked at the
m door, and shook her head.
wakln’ her up —" Un
n breathed almost inaudi-
to
W t
ent Hotel; yet you can enjoy its
genuine hospitality, pleasing ser-
vice and receive the benefits of
the Crazy Mineral Water Treat-
ment at very reasonable rates.
Write them for full and complete
information.
’ * L iu.,___I The new, million dollar, Crazy
said execution and fee bill, I will Water Hotel at Mineral Wells,
poured her father, who came no Se-
lessly out in his postman’s gray, a
cup of smoking coffee, poured her-
self a glass of milk, and put the
toat and butter between them.
Ln Johnson sat down cautious
’v, lent an interrogative glance to
bedroom door. He was a small.
d ma, with strands of silky
all ”'
Maggie, too well accustomed to
these ♦ambling dissertations to
waste time in listening to them,
had returned to the kitchen. She
much of a match when she had
chosen Leonard Johnson, and she
had never let him forget it. They
had had a few years of real un-
happiness. I
Leonard junior had died, ‘Liza-
both had been critically ill for,
Maggie?
After the general collapse of the
family fortunes and the loss of
. . her only son, Mrs. Johnson had!
monstrated” a complexion cream, j made no further efforts to plant
and foster her husband’s business i
and ambitions, or to hold up her
she caught up the bottles that
supglied the Johnsons with their
breah4gst
bak
the Peace of said Van Zandt
county for the sum of Two Hun-
dred, thirty-one and 25-100 ($231.25)
dollars and costs of suit, under a
judgment in favor of S. E. Cox
in a certain cause in said court,
No. 968, and styled S. E. Cox vs.
G. H. Seike and H. H. Seike, plac-
ed in my hands for service, I, W.
at half-past seven!”
"For heaven's sake, what it it,
Maggie?” Mrs. Johnson screamed
agitatedly a moment later, ‘Don't
come flying out of rooms that
way -youll have me in a faint on
the floor. What’s happened! What
is it!”
Introduce in the seventy-one coun-
ties served.
The towns of East Texas have
been doing splendid work in pro-
motion of sanitation, according to
Henry W. Stanley, manager of the
department
He says: "The urban dweller
as —........—.....................* 71264-99
United States Government secutities owned__________ 10 000 00
Other bonds, stocks, and securities owned ....................191371 87
Banking House ---------------------------------------------000.00
1 Furniture and fixtures ........... 5,000.00—20,000.00
Heal estate owned other than banking house....... . 8,200.00
Reserve with Federal Reserve Bank ............ ' _ 37 082 74
i Cash and due from banks ___________________________ 228 986 75
Outside checks and other cash items ______________________________
Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer and due from
hung there, tranced,
and nearby
Bfore seven
that’s the truth!”
But fortunately for Maggie, it
was only on rare and terrible oc-
casions that her mother and aister '
vrs. to_a stake and P. O, 10 in.
dla. brs. 73 W. 3.7 vrs., B. J. 8 in.
dia. brs. N. 39 E. 6 4 vrs ; thence '
W. 506 vrs. stake S. G 14 in. brs. ;
65 E. 7.2 vrs. S. 9 6 in N 66 W fore me - - .
8 vrs.; thence N. 890 vrs. to the,, . .
place of beginning, being 80 acres Ihavesbeen coming back to Min-
more or less eral Wells every year since then.
And levied upon as the property and regard Crazy Water at Min-
of G. H. Seike and H H
and that on the first Tuesday in Wm, I Q ,
February, 1931, the same beingthetrouhle and
3rd day of said month, at the l
7,0
1. . > ,‛«e
moved her gaze from him. | "Time of my life. Oh, Lord, I
"I could laugh at this,” she said am dead. I got a cold, anyway. . , .... .
presently, in a clear, rich, rolling Helen’s got her death of cold, of rural sanitation it proposes to
voice, every word enunciated. “I-a Chess Rivers was just in from
Petheridge eatln’ in my kitchen! Denver, and he’s just about dead!”
And waitin’ on me—is my daugh- Elizabeth said simply, obviously
ter! This don't seem funny to undisturbed by these mortuary de-
Maggie. Len, but considering the tails.”
Texas, as
earth for
r / ears had ever done it, I
v a 4 dlf done it, and the wild
disoraar troubled her not at all.
At seventeen, a peculiarly youthful
and innocent seventeen, she was
not analytical. She had spent every <
night of her life under this low,
old-fashioned cottage roof and the •
dirt and disorder that Ma and Liz
created in their wake and spread ]
about them instantly were one of
’he simple and unavoidable con-
ditions of her life.
Maggie had to psh aside the
sugar bowl and the blue plate of
stale and broken soda crackers,
to find room on the cluttered ta-
ble to cut the fresh loaf; she had
to unearth the coffee-pot from
the confusion of the sink and rinse
away the cuff of black ground
from its spout before she could
mix fresh coffee and set it on the
stove to boil.
This done, she seized an instant
to run into the adjoining bed,
room and whisper into the car of
the man who lay asleep there.
"Seven, Pop! Lissen — seven
o’clock!”
The man, a small, huddled, in-
significant figure in the close
gloom of the ugly little room,
roused himself alertly. The dou-
ble bed's other occupant also
loused, groaned, and Maggie S
mother stirred reluctantly and
asked anxiously, apparently out of
REPORT OF THE^CONdUiON OF THE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
At . Canton, in the State of Texas, at the close of business, on
December 31, 1930.
Mrs. Johnson presently responded ty betterment outsde 01 mat iw
vaguely. But her daughter had which you draw pay. Do good not
“Considerin’ that your sister is few dishes,’ I said, and to sweep
entirely beyond our control, and a cottage of five rooms—why,’ I
don’t pay no more attention to the said, 'it’s child’a play. When I
father and mother that bore her first was married,’ I told him,
than the babe unborn—considerin’ ‘I could get a girl for fifty cents
that you are slavin’ the best part a day!”
of your life in a five-and-ten-cent "It seems like Maggie thinks of
istore," Mrs. Johnson took up the nobody but herself,” her mother
challenge with deadly readiness, said, out of a long pause, “and
home you took me from, and the i wr. . ..L. +, .. „
way things was there. I should Ma,,y™ oughta.Jap
think UM seem .funny to you! inhere.,This place k
Don't it?” ng u
Len Johnson started nervously The older woman continued to
as the last word was shot at him. crunch and read, unruffled. Her
"Indeed it don’t my dear! You firstborn could do no wrong. ,
are quite right, I think we get "I know ’Lizabeth. But two dol-
along reel wen— considerin’." lars, a day! My God, you wonder
“Considerin' what?” the woman what next! "Two dollars a day for
drastic habit-forming purgative paper published in Van Zandt
drugs. county.
“After observing the action of Witness my hand, this 5th day
Sargon and Sargon Soft Mass Pills of January, 1931. W P. NIXON,
in a great many cases I feel free ‘ her if,Van Zandt County, Texas
to say I have never seen a for- Y IRA BURNETT, Deputy.
agreed In criticizing her. Now । have made them, and make them
Which do you prefer, a rider or a walk-
er? We can provide you with a McCormick-
Deering Spring-Tooth Harrow in either
style. We aim to please.
“You'd stand up for tar of , . .
Mrs. Johnson commented People have been known 0 ge
rich that way.
whistles far away ai
shrilled the quarter L,
o’clock, and the early workers in
factories and in the big machine
shops began to gather visibly in
the streets. For a few minutes,
their shadows moved, long and
red, ahead of them. Then it was
day, ordinary, commonplace, work-
time again, and Maggie, rousing
heraelf with a guilty start from
the luxury of dreaming, returned
to her household cares with the
, too soon, and promising to quit
peared majestically in the door- Maggie called, her voice coming। the world ag unceremoniously as
it heard this remark so often that
it made no impression, except, per-
haps that of deepening the form-
less discontent that was one of
Liz’a most marked characteristics.
Maggie had danced along the
frosty winter street beside the
mgm
N9
on the farm is polluted. Methods
of purification and well-curbing grades of cattle may reach, there
will be introduced. If the farmer is always a lucrative demand for
La enough interested in the health thoroughbred stock.
680(90
my “DP E •
KAMLeEN NORRI »— Ma
» mikoao 1». VeN
VAIRAMK3-1927, VV "A
in narticular lit. In this way 1 am helping to
Len Johnson made almost no! create influences for gpod..not
response. She wag always like this, merely enjoy the work of another:
her eyes, her voice, her feet eager
in the rush of joyous vitality that
marked for Maggie the rise of ev-
ery new day.
“Ten years medical practice has bidder, all the right, title and in- and complete in every detail. It is
convinced me that persons suffer- terest of the said G. H. Seike and natural to think it would be ex-
” ” " ” ’ ‘ ‘ pensive to stop at this magnifici-
Lonview, Jan. 5. — The public
health department of the East
county, Texas, did, on the 5th day
of January. 1931, levy on certain
real estate, situated in Van Zandt
county, Texas, described as follows, |
to-wit:
Being a two-fifth interest in 80
leaped to her feet and as her to punch time clocks at half-past
mother, who waa an enormous wo- eight. But Elizabeth, the older
man, sank heavily into the, vacat- daughter, could saunter down to
ed chair, she busied herself with the beauty parlor where she ade-
the coffee-pot and sacrificed, with-
out a second’s hesitation, the toast at any time before ten. ’
she had made for herself. ...
wWil. en. , 1 „ She came out now, tousled and
..W hileshespread fresh slices.on sleepy as her mother had been,
the,, she, watched and wrapped like her mother in
both parents uneasily Her father, a soiled kimono.
pretending to eat and to act natur- .0, _ 1 , ,
ally, was smitten as a mouse Oh, Lord, Im dead, she said
might have been under the eyes simply.
of a cat; her mother, automati- “Have good time last night?"
Minnie- well, she hadn’t made
months, bills from doctors, under-
takers, nurses, hospitals had ac-
cumulated like autumn leaves, and
poor Minnie’s anger that there
was to be a third child had add-1
ed the last touch to her husband’s 1
despair.
In that same dark, tumbled bed-
room off the kitchen from which
she had impressively emerged this
morning, Minnie had quite unex-
pectedly brought a second daugh-
ter into the world, a tiny girl, born
PBBDNMMW 1! 1′1!
MSCORMICH DEERING NEWS
E—-— - W,a "Good equipment makes a good farmer better »=- --- —-a
panlonable, loving, eager little
ly as a matter of course. 'Liza-;
ho+h yag 4ha farnilv honi+r nyiqtn. '
,-aa or "Oh, heavenly day! It’s five past cratic and exacting and^ dlseon-
should," Mrs. Johnson aid.. P,r l eight, and Liz says to wake her
functorily, "Is ‘Lizabeth up?’ she
asked. “You make her do her
share! ho worst of housekeeping.
NMrs.ahnson, who had a very
sfgh acquaintance with the sub-
ject, resumed, sighing, "is dividing
up the work so one don t ge
One horse or one mule and a driver can
do a mighty nice job of planting with a
McCormick-Deering One-Row Planter.
“and considering that your father, ■
who was supposed to have a fine !
future in a bank when I married
him, as God is my judge, and as '
I set here this minute—Maggie,”
she broke off the automatic and
quite unattend tirade to ask sud-
denly, “what are them cotton
gloves like, at the Mack?”
“I didn't hear you, Ma, I was
talking to Pa,” Maggie said.
"Pop, I’m working tonight. It’s
Saturday. Are you on late?" It
was hardly above a murmur, it
did not in the least interfere with
the majestic monologue of the I
lady of the house.
“Shall I wait for you like I
useter, dearie?”
“No, you get comfortable and
read your paper after dinner.
Murphy comes right to this com-
er—it ain’t so far, anyway. You’ll
be on for the Christmas rush next
week, anyway.”
Maggie washed her hands at
the faucet with a piece of yellow
isoap, pulled a small and shabby
hat, once here older sister’s, tight-
ly down over her thickly oiled
hair, and hung up her disreput-
able apron. She was slipping her
arms into a thick, clumsy coat-
also a discard from her sister-
when, reminded perhaps by the
garment of its important first
owner, a change came over her
has pure water furnished by his
city, his milk supply is guarded by
ordinance, the waste disposal is
cared for through modern sewer
system. The average farm home
has none of these protections. We
propose a th req-way program that
will give the farmer a similar op-
portunity for life and health con-
servation.
“The first project will be a sec-
tion-wide home screening cam-
paign, With properly-screened
homes, we can reduce the menace
of malaria at least 30 per cent.
Screening not only protects the
farmer’s family for the anopheles,
the malaria-carrying mosquito, but
from the hazard of fly-borne di-
sease, such as typhoid and dy-'
mula as uniformly effective as
the Sargon treatment for the
disorders mentioned above. I have
seen countless cases of wonderful
results from the use of Sargon,
and I consider it a real privilege
to recommend this remarkable
What are you blushing about, little
girl?”
I was born over a fire house.”
STATE OF TEXAS, COUNTY OF VAN ZANDT, m:
James A. Flanagan checked in
But even he took Maggie large- as postmaster at Mabank January
1, succeeding Lee Gray, resigned.
FIRST INSTALLMENT
“Gee, that is pretty!” said Mary
Margaret Pethridge Johnson, in an
, awed whisper. Small, shabby, alone,
y and shuddering with pleasurable
y *pxcitement and chill, she hung up-
1h the gate of the paternal resi-
1 $ yce and paid to the miracle of
M * Ing and brightening lights and
"QAours in the gray world about
"Ker an involuntary tribute of de-
light and reverence.
Behind her shabby little back,
and the draggled strings of her
shabby little kitchen apron, and
the carelessly massed ringlets and
her tousled little head, the sun
was rising.
The Johnson cottage stood at
the very top of a steep city block.
It was a meek, self-effacing little
dwelling, disreputable, lacking
paint. Behind the cottage was a
low row of miserable outbuildings,
none able to stand alone, each
one yet managing to afford a
wretched support to its neighbor.
On this cool winter morning, a
light from the kitchen window lay
warm and yellow across the
brightening yard, and a cat, hud-
dled disgustedly aainst the closed
kitchen door, mewed occasionally
in a protesting and affronted
fashion.
The two figures that were at
the street gate, however, saw and
heard nothing of this. One of them
was a small cur dog. The other
figure was that of Maggie John-
son.
“It’s pretty,” she said aloud, in
a dreamy voice, as the gold flash-
ed on distant windows and dripPd
through trees, and the familiar sil-
houette of the city grew more and
more recognizable. “It’s like it was
a big tide—washin’ everyone along
dia. 8. 20 W. 9.3 vrs B. J. 7 in. j I first started using Crazy Water
dia. brs. W. 4.7 vrs.; thence east thirty years ago for stomach
506 yrs, a stake for cor. hick. 10 'trouble and in a short time I found
in. bra. N. 20 32 vrs. do. 18 in. my trouble gone.
brs. 79 W. 10.3 vrs.; thence 8. 890 w... t .. 1
When I first came to Mineral
Wells, I could eat nothing contain-
ing eggs, sweet milk, and a few
other foods but after being here
a week, I ate anything placed be-
eep slumber:
’ “Maggie, how’s the Mayor.
"I didn't have time to look, Ma.
But don’t get up,” the girl urged
her, concernedly. "1’11 bring you in
some breakfast, and the paper
too!"
"It don’t seem right you
get many ful, less critical. That’s the way
good towns are made better.
To do something for communi-
t
"What's haprened is that Liz
Johnson and all her bedclothes are
down on the floor!" Maggie an-
swered. voice tearful with rage.
"And the next time she wears only
my silk stockings, I'll have her
arrested -that’s what is the mat-
ter! I went without lunches four
days for those stockings, and she’s
got ’em full of runs, and I want
to tell you -where's Pop?” She in-
terrupted herself, suddenly calm-
ing. "Has Pon gone?” she de-
manded blankly, her angry face
taking on an almost ludicrous look
of concern and disappointment.
“Maggie, I wish you wouldn’t be
so sham with ’Lizabeth," her mo-
ther said protestingly; “It’s com-
mon to have two sisters always
squabbling. If she borrowed your
stockings-"
“Borrowed! You might as well
borrow a ‘waffle,” Maggie burst
forth scornfully. "You might as
well borrow a bath! How long ago
did Pop go?”
"I can catch him - goodbye. Ma!’1
Mi
bl J
.T
THREE-WAY PROGRAM
OF RURAL SANITATION
N
EK, N
1 (028?-)
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Lively, A. G. The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, January 9, 1931, newspaper, January 9, 1931; Canton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1515511/m1/3/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Van Zandt County Library.