The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, July 14, 1933 Page: 3 of 8
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FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1933.
THE CANTON HERALD
PAGE THREE
2 Dead and 3 Hurt in Freight Train Wreck
HIGH COTTON ESTIMATES
Mysteriously Killed
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53
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county, and is wel] informed
a
on present crop conditions.
1 A
presented
Mvrtle
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SUMMER CLOTHES
MEN’S SUMMER SUITS, Crash or Irish Linen
Ca
At only ..........
3.45
38
8 8"
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HAVE YOU TRIED OUR 50c DRESS SHIRTS?
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59
35
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3388
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£233288
V.
Mayfield Dry Goods Co.
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NO CHANGE IN PRICE OF ANY OF OUR WORK
SHIRTS, BUT SUPPLY WILL NOT LAST LONG
TURKISH TOWELS, about one week’s supply of
20x40 colored border, while they last, 5 for.... 50c4
ARE BEING CHECKED
While the great majority
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SALARY SCHEDULE FOR
STATE AID SCHOOLS
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Card of Thanks.
May God’s richest blessings
rest upon each of you that
ea, -
Wills Point, Txas
BECAUSE WE ARE NOT IN A POSITION TO DO
A FALL CREDIT BUSINESS IS NO REFLEC-
TION ON ANY ONE. PLEASE DO NOT ASK
FOR CREDITS, CIRCUMSTANCES WOULD
FORCE US TO REFUSE IT.
OlD m9M Ti<PPs Bo
G05H Bur HE5 4s
F9r As A DaBy
ELEPHUht - wHAr
e
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• (Souee HEeE
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"The Best Place to Trade After All."
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Lee Hamilton, an Athens farmer, and Jim Merrell, a Corsicana
painter, were killed and three other men were injured when a Cotton
Belt train was derailed on a long trestle one mile east of Trinidad
Friday. The trestle was torn up for 500 feet and thirtee freight
cars were scattered over Cedar Creek bottoms. Sixty men were rid-
ing in the cars when the wreck occurred, twenty-seven being in the
last car that rode safely over the trestle. A hot-box, which locked
the wheels, caused the wreck.
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The Dawson P.-T. A.
The Dawson P.-T. A. will
have a regular meeting Fri-
day evening, July 21. Every
•member be sure and come as
/
Cabble’s husband is a private sol- .. , . , , , ...
dier at Kelly Field. Her body was 'Springs high school anditori-
hot found until several days after um Friday night of this
the brutual murder. week. Admission 5c and 10c.
that he read Mrs. Cabble’s adver- j
tisement for employment in a
Bo
0 !
KEEP UP THE LIVING
AT HOME ACTIVITIES
There should be no let-up
in living at home activities
now that quick cotton money
is in sight, points out Mildred
Horton, state home demon-
stration agent and H. H.
Williamson, vice-director and
state agent of the extension
service in a joint statement
to farm families and to coun-
ty farm and home demonstra-
tion agents. •
'estimated cotton yields in the
acreage reduction campaign
are conservative, unusually
high estimates in some in-
(stances suggest that mistakes
may have been made in pre-
liminary estimates. The gov-
ernment is offering the cot-
ton farmer a square deal and
is demanding a square deal
in return. No farmer is asked
to claim a lower yield for his
retired cotton acres than
.present prospects justify. It
is well known that yields of
■
HE OUGHT To Go
/Nto THE MOvtEi
AND C4s IN On
H‘S wEIGHT- lxE
Frry AR Buckle
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newspaper and telephoned her to
come to the vacant apartment for
the desired position. He said a
white man planned the murder
and helped him kill the woman, but
detectives think the story about
a n assistant is fictitious. Mrs.
Farmers’ Field Day program at the Feeding and Breeding Station, one mile north of the A. and M i
College last,week. Mrs. L O. Bowling, a farm wife of Gause, Texas, (upper photograph) is speaking
coilecnengbbostatinrgopBrmtlnggon 2 & so rhenentirseraudigncgraok £ and ?
Dr. E. E. Reynolds tell about fertilizer experiments. The crowd was divided into rowdislistening.to
over the field and through the barns to view the experimental workin progress. P and piloted
L906
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03
WASH DRESSES, plenty, new styles, real
values, Price range from 49c to................... 98
some farmers are higher than
The confession of a negro sus-those of others, but where
pecthas solved.the.mysterious the difference is very great
murder of Mrs. Alma Dell Cabble, . c1° 115
whose dead body was found last the government feels that a
week in an unoccupied apartment careful check should be made
in San Antonio. The negro, June to remove all doubt. The
Wollfolke.ianitorofthe.fashion- ; government has accurate pro-
able apartment house, told police ,
--- —‘ns- - duction records in every
ORGANDY, Flowered and Embroidered, permanent
finish, former price 89c a yard, now a yard 496
-_____BY LOUIS MCHARg
HE 95PRs)
To BE A I
H AMm OCk I
TE5rr I
700 Study Feeding a 1 reeding Near A. & N
in this paper last Friday. . , ,
. The state aid schools are not We have several plans inview
prohibited from paying teach-1*01 future entertainment and.
ers above this schedule, butWe want to get together and ministered unto us in the
such excess over the state see what we can do. All visit- sickness and death of our
schedule must be paid from ors welcome. Let’s all try to ’mother and sister. Mrs. Ann
the local maintenance fund of .make our P.-T. A. better and Travis.—The children and
the district. better. REPORTER. Mrs. Effie Overturf.
“All that may be gained
by cash cotton rentals this
summer may be lost this fall
and winter unless all the
feed and food that can pos-
sibly' be raised to advantage
on the farm is put into store-
house and pantry,” they say.
“Texas farm families saved
themselves the last three
years by making their farms
'almost self sustaining as far
as feed and food are con rei n-
ed. There is no reason now
to stop feeding the*hogs and
beeves for winter killing, or
to sell off most of the poul-
try flock, or to give up plans
for a fall garden, or to give
away the steam pressure
cooker and sealer. Texas cot-
ton farmers have gotten a
‘break.’ If they hang on to
their depression life saver
living at home they have a'
good chance to turn this
‘break’ into a permanently
better future.”
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“Fools Holiday,” a rural
drama in three acts, will be
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Key, Herbert S. The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, July 14, 1933, newspaper, July 14, 1933; Canton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1515639/m1/3/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Van Zandt County Library.