The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, January 24, 1936 Page: 4 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 16 x 10 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
(IT
G
TRIDAY, JAN. 24, 1936.
FOUR
p-
$
BULK GARDEN SEED
MAKE THIS A REAL HOME YEAR . . .
a
1
Judiciary Writes Nw Chapter
aging all
other abnormal trade act, known as the 'Guffey bill, in
with belligerent nations, was put the closing days of congress. Coal
field of foreign relations.
belligerent ships entirely at their cies in 1935 were believd to have
And while congress put what own risk.
laid the base for a possible wide-
NOLEN BROTHERS
2
daughter, Billie Ruth, and her
Wot Ads
$
$
music as applied to the layman. son listed in the directory. 4tf.
8’
♦
Mrs. J. C. McNeal of Grand
It
L. 000, compared with $6,267,000 in Saline visited this week with her
ical stability depends almost en- Hopkins to lift the New Deal out 1934.
dilemma. He gave
FRIED CHICKEN
FARM LOANS . . ABSTRACTS
!
)
Mrs E. W.
Mr. Dillop’s Cate
n
3
2
• 3
where Leon Birdwell lived last
year; fifty-two and one-half acres
three and one-half miles northeast
5 to 6.
The basketball girls went
White’s Prairie Friday and 1
defeated.
parents, Mr.
Rusk.
house on the west highway which
was recently vacated when Mr.
and Mrs. Roland Travis moved to
Forney.
1935 Chevrolet Coach
1933 Chevrolet Coach
2 1931 Chevrolet Coupes
1931 Ford Coupe
1931 Ford Sport Coupe
1929 Standard Ford 4-Door
Sedan
1929 Oldsmobile 2-Door
Sedan
1930 Fond Sport Coupe
1929 Chevrolet Pickup
1930 Chevrolet Truck
1934 Ford Truck with new
Reconditioned Motor
1928 Chevrolet Coupe
A. O. LOUGHMILLER,
County Superintendent
RHODES MOTOR CO.
WILLS POINT, TEXAS
| Mrs. Billy Sides is spending this
McClure and Mr. week with friends in Denton. She
The famous Spuare Brand field, flower and garden
seed sold in bulk. You get more and better seed for your
money. Be sure to see the SQUARE BRAND display at—
(Mail Orders Will Be Given Prompt Attention.)
EUBANK BROS.
Willis Terry made a
trip to Dallas Tuesday.
CEDAR GROVE.
The blizzard and snow
DON’T MAKE A MISTAKE!
See us before you purchase
a used car — a used car is
no better than the dealer you
buy it from.
THE CANTON HERAHD,
■ I. .11. ■■■mil
“ I with relatives and friends in Can-
J l ton.
I___
Just the Thing for
Weeping Colds
Call or phone us for a bottle of
Aspironal, the Liquid Cold Remedy
that so quickly checks the excessive
secretion of mucus which makes
your eyes and nose red and keeps
you sneezing and blowing.
Aspironal gives relief from the
weeping, chilly, aching feeling and
opens stuffy heads in just a few
minutes.
Dinner a Sunday Special and Mr. “Dillop’s” new Span-
ish Fried Steaks that are absolutely exclusive are going
over with a “BANG.” Good Vegetable Lunches, Short Or-
ders and no where in the Southland do you find better
Pies and Coffee.
The class meets Sunday morn- Neatness
ing in the Royal Theatre from
and intermediate teachers as well a bargain? We may have in your
as principals. The course may be vicinity in a few days a splendid
counted as three hours of the six upright piano with duet bench to
required in music, advanced edu- match. Also a lovely Baby Grand
Homes can be fixed up — Painted — put in good re-
pair — Remodeled for more comfortable living at a very
small cost. Get your materials including the famous Pitts-
burg Paint at—
T. L. JAMES LUMBER COMPANY
C. D. SWAYZE, Manager
‘"n
1 j
In Annals of Government —tS; “SE —i
.. rm 1 a ed from Wednesday evenings if —AOg , .
Dee Stringer of Tyler was at- such change will make for the FARMS for lease or rent:—109
tending court business in Canton general convenience of the group, acres two and one-half miles
this week. 1 After the first meeting of the northwest of Canton on highway,
--- 1,41 ,,4. , u good house, barn and water; 80
n ( , . class the scheduled time for be- , . 1,
Mrs. B. D. High and Mrs. C. F. . 1 . acres one and one-half miles
........ ginning each evening will be 7:15. . g . ., c .
northeast of Myrtle Springs
and other artificial obstacles to goods industry had failed to show
the free flow of foreign trade. employment gains anticipated.
Administration financial poli-
of Myrtle Springs, fair house
SALESMAN WANTED — Mau
wanted for Rawleigh route of
account of the illness of Mrs.
; to Tunnell’s grandmother,
were
and that the latter cannot be him $4,000,000,000 and instruct-
achieved or maintained without a ions to end direct relief by mak-
and Mrs. A. W.
peatedly declared that world polit- Relief Administrator Harry
tirely upon economic stability, of the relief
F i
If you have a Bild matter of any kind, see us.
d Hej8obanes
- VAN ZANDT COUNTY ABSTRACT COMPANY —
R. E. BLACKWELL, Manager
Office North Side of Court Hotre — Canton, Texas
U. S. Supreme Court and the el in belligerent countries or on
and Mrs. C. T. Girdley were in was accompanied by Misses Lu-
Terrell Tuesday. The former vis- cille Smith and Margaret Marshall
ited her sister, Mrs. H. P. Hamil- and Charlie Smith Wednesday. j
ton. Mr. and Mrs. Girdley visited ---—
their nephew, Harvey Girdley, Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Swayze have
who has been real sick. moved into the A. H. Travis
• 1
Secretary of State Cordell Hull re- President Roosevelt turned to expected to be about $6,800,000,-
----- Those who do the work will find --------------— —------.--------.
Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Tull were themselves able to listen to any BABY CHICKS. Oui hatchery i»
in Dallas Wednesday. ; type of music, from symphony to running at full speed. Custom
I jazn, with intelligence and pleas- hatching $2.00 per tray. Baby
Stovall ure । chicks $6.50 and $7.00 per hun-
0. _ , L . dred at hatchery, fifty cents
I in view of the place that music .„ .. , . . .,
! . I . . , . more if mailed to you. Visit us
is coming to have in the curricu- 1 . c .
business i pr 11,12 when in Canton.—Mitchell s
•—911655 lum of Texas schools, I believe " , ,
.11.1. u i 1. Hatchery. 5fb.
that this would be a worthwhile__________
jg. Deal cemented their friendship
| with passage of legislation long
advocated by organized labor and
with a growing spirit of co-oper-
ation.
I
MUSIC EXTENSION COURSE. 800 families. Write today.—Raw-
______ leigh, Dept. TXA-793-SA, Mem-
Professor T. Smith McCorkle of phis, Tenn. Itl2p
USED CARS
, _ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Levi Shinn,
session for nearvying wnich carried the public debt EU at Ben Wheeler. She also visited
spotlight, centered steadily on into effect. The administration’s producers generally accepted the
congress and the White Housenotice to all American business act, but a few began a fight ex-
during the first two years of the concerns and private citizens that pected to carry the act before the
New Deal, fell in 1935 upon the, they trade with belligerents, trav- supreme court.
_______________________________________ I
Mrs. Carrol Ewing and Mrs.
Mabel Ewing of Dallas and Miss
Janie Weir of Wills Point spent
i Thursday of last week with Mr.
and Mrs. W. B. Rodgers and Miss
Marguerite.
course, particularly for primary, Who wants a beautiful piano at
this task took second place to the The first session of the 74th con- Continued heavy federal spend-
Men’s Friendly Bible Class.
The Men’s Friendly Bible Class where D G Tull lived last year,
showed an increase in attendance also 80 acres joining 2-room
last Sunday. The growth is due house; 80 acres with house in .
to an in eresting attendance con- Clowers community; 90 acres one 1
test captained by Davis Motsen- mile of Colfax.—Hign & West, 1
bocker and Adolph Baker. Much Canton, Texas. 3t2b ;
interest is shown by all members ________________________ «‘
of the class.
A goal of fifty members has' Come to Sunday school Sunday,
been set for the class and every
member of the class is doing his
part in reaching it.
I
Mrs. Gertrude Shinn of Dallas _
spent the past week-end with her
sensational battle being waged be- gress was in s
fore the Supreme Court to estab- eight months. to another record high above $30,-
lish the constitutionality of major Among the legislation passed: 500,000,000 as well as the govern- Rad; Service and Repairing
New Deal enactments . 1. The social security act, lay- ment’s huge gold and silver pur- Au Work Completely Guaranteed.
The Supreme Court thrust sud- ing the groundwork for a potent- ehases in the world markets pro- ayonn Rad MEsSPDSABrore You Pay-
denly into the limelight as it be- ial $5,000,000,000 annual tax and vided basis for possible credit ex- i 0 BELIEVADARE
gan consideration of legislation appropriation program to start pansion. | ’ ‘radiotrican
passed by the New Deal to meet old age and unemployment securi- Fhis problem, together with in- call Clyde Settles, Canton Agent
problems of the emergency, was ty to 25,000,000 Americans. dications of new congressional de- . - ' —— ——==
carried in the course of the year 2. The tax-therrich-bill to mands for monetary inflation and .....
to what may prove a crossroads raise annually $3,000,000 from in- payment of the $2,200,000,000 po A A T
in its history. creased estate taxes, higher in- soldier bonus, faced administra- ——I,
At the beginning o 1935 the come levies placed on wealthy tion fiscal authorities as they MAPPCA"
resources. i shall spent Tuesday in Tyler.
i Cash farm income for 1935 was ------
Southern Methodist University SHOE'REPAIRING
beg ns an extension course in Mus- ,, , j,
• on x , 1. , it .1. . We can add extra wear to the
i ic 89 at Canton school building be- c.., ,11 .
. . ry, • mu- comfort of your old shoes. Let us
i ginning Wednesday evening. This . ......
: G • , xu Ar • re-build them now.
I is what is known as the Music ,
tion fiscal authorities as they A.'HLIVLIVUP I Apprec'ation Course. The content Lt 1 JARVIS
court had under consideration a individuals and corpora ions. mapped their 1936 program. ’ ..........—1 of the course will treat music as HAULING—I am equipped with a
section of the National Recovery o. he uti ity con ro ac —giv- Meanwhile, excess reserves of Mrs. Lula Smith is visiting in literature, in comparison to a nov- new truck and would like to do
Act allowing the President to bar ing the governmen! con ro °Ve the member banks rose well above Wills Point this week. ! el, the drama, the short story, yeur hauling at a very reasonable
shipments of “hot oil in inter- utilities to e poin W ere un- $3,000,000,000 on which it was ------ and poetry. It will treat also the price—Forest Sides. Get me over
state commerce, necessary bo ing companies estimated a credit expansion of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. West spent psychology and philosophy of telephone by calling Ernest Den-
The court outlawed this dele- eventually may be written out of $30,000,000,000 was possible. Wednesday in Dallas,
gation of power as improper but existence, passed after one ’ ’ ’
the defect was partially overcome of the bitterest congressional . eavy 80 an si yer pure lases
. .... - c. ■ . , .1 .. .c in the world markets pushed
in new legislation, flints of the recent years. .
The adverse ruling prompted a 4. The banking act—revamping American holdings of these prec-
flood of suits over other New the federal reserve system so ious metals ’ new recor pea 8 Judge and Mrs E C
Deal laws which reached a ch- that the administration will have silver were in Dalla3 Tuesday,
max in the gold cases. a larger degree of control, and $1,500,000,000. I
After weeks of deliberation, the making credit flow easier.
court upheld the government. It 5. The neutrality act—a tenta- Treasury financing during the
was almost the only victory scor- tive measure making mandatory year resulted in a turnover of bil-
ed by the administration before embargoes on shipment of war ions of dollars. With government Sheriff Ike Allred made a busi-I
the tribunal in the year. materials to belligerent nations expenditures continuing to exceed ness trip to Austin Monday.
The court outlawed the NRA and designed to keep the United outgo, it was necessaryto bor- -----
and all its vast machinery in a states out of war. row approximately 122,000,000,000 Ed Riley and wife and Mrs.
sweeping opinion which seemed 6. The work re- !n new . money.hese borrow- Claude Riley were in Tyler Mon- < • . . . „g
insurmountable in the enactment lier bill turning over to the presi ings pushed the debt above $30,- day • ‘ cation, I graduate work -The in tone manogany. Terms if de-
r ,o0te,+n At the iii 0. :4 500,000,000. During these borrow- - first meeting of this class will be sired. Might take live stock, poul-
of remedial legislation. At the dent broad authority to cope with . .. . 5 , , -- L,1 ,4 +L, c,.+ L1 Iy, . ,
u, Limo ibn ,4 t-Ia +L, r i * ' i. j ings the treasury also refunded I . ... . . I ,, held at the Canton school Wed- try or feed as part payment. Ad-
same time the couit outlawed the the unemployment problem, and J Bonnie High and son, Harold, n.. n;o.. T,. 90 L:, , 1 „ .• 0 A
p,,i.r t m, oru ,+0, i • 14 w • 4 maturing obligations at lower I Tl ’ , nesday evening, Jan. 29, begin- dress at once.—Brook Mays & Co.,
Frazler-lemke tarm mortgage designed to provide sufficient re- , ... " and Ulmer Johnson spent Tuesday „ .Q.AA , — .. r - , I 1: ,, 1 °m „
Moratorium act. licr funds for two years. rates of interest. in Dallas. ning at 8:00 P. m, at which time the Reliable Piano House, Dallas,
The state department finished 7. The Wagner Labor relations Along with these credit and tte meeting period may be chang- Texas. 414
the year with the heaviest load act—called by organized labor its monetary policies, the treasury
of foreign problems handled in Magna Charta and giving a feder- continued it. financial aid for
any year since the World War. al board sweeping powers over cer- banks, business, homes and
During the last quarter of the tain industries to force collective farms. By the end of October
year state department officials bargaining rights. wholly and partly owned govern-
made history. They shattered na- Passage of the $4,000,000,000 ment agencies were lending a tot- Riley were in Dallas Wednesday
tional and international prece- work relief program provided gov- al of $8,317,766,579 • of last week,
dents and pointed the course of ernmental relief agencies with The lives of 3,000,00 American -----
the American nation toward a their greatest task. farmers were affected by Presi- Mr. and Mrs. Davis Motsenbock-
new goal in its relation toward Federal dole costs had mounted dent Roosevelt s announcement er and Miss Carlye Mae Wallace
war, and toward other nations. to $5,000,000-a-day by January this year that agricultural adjust- spent Tuesday in Dallas.
Ji
$;
were generally regarded as the Congress centered attention on spread credit inflation through
finishing touches on the New completing the vast economic and swelling bank deposits and mount-
Deal legislative program, even reform program of the New Deal, ing idle funds of banks.
In point of national and inter- 1935, with 20,500,000 persons de- ment would become permanent. | --
national importance, state depart- pendent on the government for a This he said, woul involve C. T. McCauley and N. C. An-
ment officials consider the follow- livelihood, maintaining and increasing the derson attended the hardware con-
ing were most outstanding: Secretary of the Interior Har- gains already made and broaden- vention in Dallas Wednesday.
1. The administration’s recip- old Ickes’ $3,300,000,000 public ing present operations to give far- -------
rical trade program, aimed at a works program, designed to make mers greater incentives for con- Mrs. L. Kellis, Misses Inez and
general reduction of world tariffs jobs by rejuvenating the heavy servation and efficient use of soil Ophelia Kellis, and Margaret Mar-
9:30 to 10:30. Rev. O. L. Smith1 Good appearance depends on
here Miss Beola Ashworth, teacher is the. teacher and conducts some the neatness of your clothes.
free and unhampered world trade, ing work for 3,500,000 needy. Saturday was real disagreeable. in the Antioch school, spent the very interesting and worthwhile Keep them cleanded and precsod.
2. The administration’s neutral- Hopkins brought his jobs’ drive There were no religious services past week-end with her parents, lessons. Men who are not attend-(
ity policy, designed to keep the to a peak on December 1. • Sunday as the weather was so un- Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Ashworth. ing Sunday school elsewhere are! Hgryrove Tailor
United States out of foreign wars During 1935 labor and the New favorable. i -- cordially invited to attend this X
I The basketball boys went to Mr. and Mrs. Ray Tunnell and class. REPORTER. ।
Cobb and played ball last week children were in Fort Worth sev- ------ --------------—. ... -
and were defeated by a score of eral days last week, being called on mammeazasemmzmararaKmz
1 by forbidding, outright, American
! On the staute books labor lost
1 the NRA and gained the Wagner
Labor Disputes Act and the Soci-
al Security Act.
1 The famous section 7 (A) of
the National Recovery Act was
reborn in the Labor Disputes Act.
Labor forces, with active New
Washington.—The national ।
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Lumpkin, Ila. The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, January 24, 1936, newspaper, January 24, 1936; Canton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1515815/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Van Zandt County Library.