The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 30, 1949 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE TWO
THE CANTON HERALD
THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1949
Tough Hike, and It's Not Over Yet
heat contracts with cold; if forc-
because
iced tea or coffee in glass, pour it needs clean suds with no trace
8203.2
• *
.S.
or- more safely—make the bev-
watched Lucille Downey of Kirk-
N
phene will be sufficient.
A
A
mats for the bottom of the sink
l
Charlie Wilson of the Fairview
or dishpan,
or for the counters
rubber-covered dish drainers also you home at a reasonable hour.
treated. A strip seven steps wide
■n
the field and 700 steps
•))
1776
GET SET FOR
fl
"eesn
WRITING
Two Van Zandt
unith
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PLEASURE
.1
2
2*,
TEST YOUR I. Q.
9)0
AMERICA’S FAVORITE BUSINESS PEN
STRICTLY FRESH
tered stock brings a divident in1 I
comparison with grade stock, |
An Ideal student
t
\
I
G.
value of cotton when it’s identi-
~)1‘3 ’
wad
O
s
tioned to the adult class, and also
CHOOSETHE RIGHT
swine, poultry and cattle. Regis- person who’s slenderizing.
Here’s the Answer
TRAIN ENGINE
§
Ticklers
By George
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FIVE MAGAZINE SPECIAL
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27
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34
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□ Mother’s Home Life..
.1 Yr.
□ National Livestock Producer . 1 yr.
46
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50
54
55
UP MD 60HE- LONS AOO!
ANY MAGAZINE LISTED AND THIS NEWSPAPER,
BOTH FOR PRICE SHOWN
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GOLLY, THIS ) JUST SIT DOWN
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Youth Is Dress
Revue Winner
POINT V 3
Jo ike watf ifou white
thought the seven steps wide will
be sufficient.
28 Grain
29 Ground
Las Vegas, Nev., gambling house
workers want to be unionized. It
42 Hoarder
44 Myself
45 Father
water, and used as a spray, but
will not stay on plants as long as
and
rifle
no
and
around
long is
K IT SEEMS
LIKE RIGHT
BEFORE
CHKI5TMA5.’
/19UPsEI‘ALL
VERY LOGICAL, BUT
- I DON'T (GET IT.
THIS IS SUMMEZ VACA-
TION, KEMEMBEZ
9 Gorilla
10 It runs on
YOU A
PIECE.'
BOYE? BREAKFAST Z
YOU MEAN PEGGY'G
UP ALREADY Z ——
32 Hesitate
33 Literary
collection
3G Wood sorrel
HAS BEEN
A TOUGH I
DAY:’
11 Predatory
bird’s nest
17 Stretched
above
/AND KEST, PAW!
ILL FETCH YOUR
- PIPE AND —
\ SLIPPERs.’/
37 Mental state
38 Jump '
40 Some are —
driven
so farmers will get both benefits
on cotton ginned early.
an expensive duster.
How much per acre? Ane quart
of 45 per cent chlordane emulsion,
that happens, those crowds around
the dice tables may be picket lines.
• * •
Even if drought should burn up
Iowa farms this summer, we can
always count on a bumper corn
crop from Hollywood.
• • •
June always was a busy month
—thousands of college students
getting their bachelors’, thousands
of young women getting theirs.
o
‘a
48 Folding bed
49 Abstract being
51 Exist
52 Perform
43
acre to 10 or 15 pounds depending
on the size of plants.
These preparations, while rec-
Some school teachers are being
required to take anti-Communist
oaths. This will insure that, while
they may continue to bore, it
won’t be from within.
which John L. McCollum is man-
ager.
Applications are due now from
CV
7,
X 332
{ v
ALL OFFERS ARE
POSITIVELY
GUARANTEED
is
2
0
" I
>32
.A A
SORRY, PEAft, HOMORE E665?
SOME OF PE6GYԤ FRIENDS
WERE HERE FOR BREALFAST...
MY, HOW THOSE
—7 BOYS EAT' )KF
EMPry!
I CANT
BELIEVE 1
T! P
3
8-
♦
-6 Mo.
-1 Yr.
-2 Yr.
-J Yr.
..6 Mo.
<1
rj
6~*e
1550
pen with a point
for every writing
task.
F
1
by Diesel---
VERTICAL
1 They draw
--- and ex-
press trains
2 Speaker
3 Upon
4 Insane
,5 Unfastens
6 Anger f ~
7 Virginia
(abbr.)
S3
---- 3.25
---- 3.00
---- 8.00
---- 3.75
----- 3.00
---- 3.00
---- 4.00
--4.25
--- 4.75
---- 4.00
---- 8.00
--- 4.00
--- 4.00
--- 8.60
--- 3.00
--- 3.25
--- 4.50
— 8.60
36
5i
-.$3.00
_ 8.90
_ 5.00
_ 3.35
_ 8.60
_ 8.60
6.00
_ 4.00
_ 5.50
- 8.00
- 8.00
_ 3.60
.. 5.50
- 8.60
_ 5.00
_ 5.50
_ 4.50
- 3.25
Redland Adult
Class Purchases
Registered Gilts
in order that the swine of Red-
%
I '
' 1i
-
32
\)
LOOK
AT THESE
BARGAINS!
A
4
41
A
28'
w
sugar—25,000, 500,000, or 2,000,-
000?
4. What country is known as
the "Hermit Kingdom”?
5. How long after the battle ol
Gettysburg was Lincoln’s famous
address given?
nei3 It costs something to reach for
The I the check and pay it, but it gets
PLEASE ALLOW 4 TO 6
WEEKS FOR FIRST COPIES
OF MAGAZINES TO
ARRIVE!
---EXTRA VALUE OFFER---
THIS NEWSPAPER, 1 Yr.
AND 3 BIG MAGAZINES
“Go ahead and travel. ... Be a Rover boy. Nobody’s
stopping yah!”
_____________3 and Billy G. j west area’s cotton branch of
Wallace. David Baxter secured the1 USDA s Production and Market-
ing Administration, Dallas, of
1 Pictured train
engine
9 Dined
12 Either
13 Short sleep
14 Male sheep
15 Inspect
16 House pet
118 Remove 3 --
20 12 months
21 Particle
23 Negative
24 Dessert
26 101 (Roman)
27 Reduces
29 Parcel of land
30 Ukulele
(abbr.)
31 Trust
32 Mass
33 Donkey
34 Species of
deer
35 Any
36 Unit
37 Males
38 Concealed
39 It draws a
train of ----
40 Earth
41 Obtained
42 Mother
43 Transpose
(abbr.)
44 Floor washer
45 3 1416
46 Facility
48 Lawsuit
50 Beverage
51 Bustle
53 Half an em
54 Greeted
FILL OUT AND MAIL COUPON TO
THIS NEWSPAPER TODAYI
□ MODERN SCREEN
□ OPEN ROAD (Boys)
□ OUTDOORS ................
□ PARENTS’ MAGAZINE _____
□ PATHFINDER (26 issues)
□ PHOTOPLAY ......
□ POPULAR MECHANICS
□ POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY
□ READER’S DIGEST
□ REDBOOK MAGAZINE ““
□ SATURDAY EVENING POST
□ SPORT ............ ........
□ SPORTS AFIELD ~
□ THE WOMAN ........
□ TRUE ROMANCE
□ TRUE STORY ..................... ~
□ WOMAN’S HOME COMPANION
□ YOUR LIFE ............................
a E
Wy
Does anybody read the ads on
paper match books except wives
who are curious about their hus-
bands’ meanderings!
53 r
-69 19°
/ -.8
□ AMERICAN GIRL . ______
□ AMERICAN HOME__
□ AMERICAN MAGAZINE _____
□ CALLING ALL GIRLS _______
□ CHILD LIFE____________
□ CHRISTIAN HERALD__
□ COLLIER’S__
□ CORONET____
□ COSMOPOLITAN_____
□ COUNTRY GENTLEMAN (5 Yrs.)
□ ESQUIRE ...............................'___
□ FRONT PAGE DETECTIVE__
□ GOOD HOUSEKEEPING _____
□ INSIDE DETECTIVE_______
□ LADIES’ HOME JOURNAL
□ LOOK _________ _________
□ MCCALL’S .......-___________
□ MODERN ROMANCES__
□ Pathfinder (13 Issues).
□ Poultry Tribune_____
□ Progressive Fanner __
□ Southern Agriculturist
□ True Love & Romance.
F TMAT^ WHAT I 2
1 CALL 6TAgTlN6 THE
DAY OUT ZI6HT! rTE
BEEN MONTHS SINCE
IVE BEATEN PEGGY
TO THE BATHROOM!
Cndoved y Cducalou
ot School Mie
*7./
NEWSPAPER AND MAGAZINES 1 YEAR, UNLESS TERM SHOWN
THE crossword puzzle fan is the
- only person who can cheat and
still be on the square.
50" >
,3
. 2
---
HORIZONTAL 55 Some are run
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S2.25 up
nvl
Green Card"
She suggests that in making “Glass gets first place
on either side of the sink.
-8j0_
8893-
a farmers acre. It is
before the summer is over.
Sudden changes in temperature
are responsible for the untimely
X
registered male for services of
’ 'l
k
For Newspaper S@0e
and Magazines •)
□ American Fruit Grower________1 Yr.
□ American Poultry Journal__1 Yr.
□ Breeder*! Gazette___6 Mo.
□ Fann Journal & Farmer’s Wife.1 Yr.
21
V•
necessary that registered stock be -- —. b ..... -yJ-
placed in the community. From purchased pigs: Rudolph Hallman,
time to time, this matter was men- Bobby Joe Curtis r J T "
ya.
(
which consumes just as much
time, labor, land, feed, and equip-
ment. A seven week old grade pig
is worth from $6 to $8 and a
seven week old registered pig is
worth $15 to $20.
Six gilts and one male were
w
15/
H3
}
1. What is the official currency
(money) of Liberia?
2. Does an oyster have a heart?
3. About how many grains are
there in a pound of granulated
}4$200Q0,
- te °) %
1. United States dollars, in ad-
dition, Liberia has its own coin-
age in silver and copper.
2. According to a U S. fishery
expert, oysters have three hearts
3. There are over 2,000,000
grains of sugar in a pound. If you
don’t believe it, count ’em.
i 4. Korea.
5. Four and a half months. The
battle was fought July 1 to 3. 1863.
and Lincoln’s address was given
November 19, 1863.
dampLefls ‘
the emulsion. The powder is sim- e, ■ _ A A .
ply used as a dust, with any- \indlentc Maka
thing from a thin cloth sack to, -Me* ■ Iume
522
or 2 pounds of 50 per cent wetta-!
ble powder. When using toxa-]
phene one quart of 55 per cent
emulsion or 4 pounds of 40 per
cent wettable powder is required
per acre. With either of the
above this amount of poison is/
sufficient per acre, and should be
mixed with enough water to cover
this area. This will usually be
about 50 gallons.
When using dust 18 or 20
pounds per acre of either 10 per
cent toxaphene or chlordane or
10 pounds of 20 per cent toxa-
ester grade average of better
than B.
Texas 4-H Rifle
Club Is Formed
College Station—Coaches
instructors of 4-H junior
Cotton Insects
Controlled By
Sulphur Mixture
All insects that damage cotton
can be controlled by a 3-5-40 mix-
ture, if applied at the proper
time, according to latest recom-
menations from entomologists. The
3-5-4 mixture is made up of 3 per
cent gamma benzene hexachloride,
5 per cent DD Tand 40 per cent
sulphur with enough filler to
round out to 100 per cent.
Another mixture containing 20
per cent chlorinated camphene and
40 per cent sulphur will also do
the job. Regardless of the prep-
aration considered, use 7 to 10
NEW BARGAIN OFFERS
MAKE BIG SAVINGS ON THIS NEWSPAPER
AND YOUR CHOICE OF FAMOUS MAGAZINES!
Through special arrangements with the publishers, ire have
combined our newspaper with America’s finest farm and fiction
magazines. Make your selection now and enjoy real savings!
Sotevbtook
RENEW-pon
FOUNTAIN PIN
(<n
iy j
• 3
\ w
county agents and ginners.
Latest date applications may be
received by the Dallas area office
is August 1 for all East Texas
counties and August 15 for West
Texas. After they reach the Dal-
las office it takes about 15 days
to process them and get sampling
supplies to the field. For these
reasons McCollum pointed out,
8410X280
joiuENaE—
tL
land, Hardeman county, walk
away with top honors at the State
4-H Dress Revue at Texas A&M
College June 15. The revue was
the concluding event of the an-
nual 4-H Round-Up.
Miss Downey, 16-year-old blonde
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Downey, wore a bluegrey irrides-
cent chambray and navy acces-
sories. She was awarded an all-
78
WN
f 15
( SPIFFANY HAVING
\ A DRE5S SALE
\ TOMOKROW?
organized cotton improvement casualty list is likely to be heavy
■ , .. . groups, McCollum explained. They
is asyntheticpro- may be sent to cotton classing
n be en e offices at Corpus Christi, Austin,
Yon or ny- Galveston, Lubbock, Abilene or
fabrics more Dallas, or county PMA offices.
E.
V7
overlap. , cnarne wison oi me rarvew
Remember, either Chlordane or community says these poisons
oxaphene will kill grasshoppers, sure do stop the grasshoppers, if
.ach of these can be used as an only the borders of fields are
emulsion, as a wettable powder ...
or as a dust. The emulsion (liquid)
is best and ready to use by sim-
ply mixing with water. It sticks
“The time-honored dishwashing
ed to do either too suddenly, it rule is ‘glass first, silver, second,
often cracks or breaks.” ‘..... -
UFa
-e2)
dishwater; neither should jars of
applications should be filed early food, hot from the canner, stand
in a breeze to cool,” Mrs Clay-
College Station—A capacity_________ ______ g....... po..
crowd of more than 2,000 4-H the hot beverage slowly onto the of grea.se to come out clear and
club girls and boys, adult leaders ice rather than against the glass, shining."
and county extension agents, Or—more safely—make the bev- Last but not least, save glass-
erage in a china or pottery pitch- ware with convenient, safe Stor-
er and then pour into the glasses, age arrangements. Narrow shelves
To save glass from taking a for tumblers allow each to stand
rap in dishwashing, there are cir-] separately with no stacking or
curlar rubber gadgets which fi , doubling up, and no reaching be-
over the end of faucets; rubber hind, the specialist concluded.
disadvantages of grade, or scrub! Cottonseed, used mainly for oil
stock, the farmers began to real-'and livestock feed, now has an-
ize the importance of swine im-' other use. It i
provement as well as livestock in tein fiber, and c.
general. This type of farming is ] with cotton, wool,
encouraged by Sears, Roebuck Ion to give mixed
and Co., the East Texas Fair and softness or elasticity.
Texas State Fair. Very handsome'---
premiums are paid for outstanding Everything tastes delicious to a
water.
"Glass should not go directly
from the refrigerator to warm
china third’,” Mrs. Claytor said.
HO
19 Behold! '
20 Biblical
F pronoun
22 Fruit .
057 -1
to
pounds of dust per acre every
seven days until cotton starts to plants better than any other
blooming, then dust every fiveform of either poison. The wet-
days, increasing the amount per table powder is also mixed with
z,71‛
2
238
Dean's Honor Roll
Commerce—Two Van Zandt
county students at East Texas
State Teachers College have been
named to the Dean’s list for the
1949 spring semester. This an-
nouncement was made by Dr. C.
B. Wright, chairman of the schol-
arship committee.
They are Kenneth Ray McCord,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Mc-
Cord of Canton, and Richard
Wayne Ice, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Ice of Van.
Answers to
TEST YOUR I. Q.
eggde
Tips On Care Of
Glassware Given
College Station — Summer,
months call for heavy use of
glassware for cool drinks and
chilled desserts. The glassware
H ME
—31 ill
I ■ It --------HI
/AN I
d,
g(,$
2%
(8
1
) 1
080
A 1afa
12483,
5°F 5 ° 1V
ommended as a bollworm killer,
may increase this pest, by killing
enemy insects of the bollworm.
So if there is a threat of boll-
worm it may pay to stop dusting
until the threat is over.
Dust applications should be
made when the air is calm or
nearly so. The presence of dew is
not necessary. Repeat applica-
tion, if washed off within 24
hours.
When using ground machines
set nozzles 6 to 8 inches above the
tops of plants; when using air-
planes be sure the dust swaths
vocational agriculture young men.
After hiving pointed out the ad- various communities,
vantages of purebred stock and; ------------
e
X-
.2035
(tdudwU
clubs in Texas formed the Texas
State 4-H Junior Rifle Club at
a meeting held during the annual
4-H Round-Up on June 15. All
4-H junior rifle clubs that are
affiliated with the National Rifle
Association are eligible for mem-
bership.
The purpose of the new organi-
zation is to unify the procedures
and methods used in training and
conducting rifle matches on the
county, district and state levels.
Representatives from 16 coun-
ties attended the organizational
meeting. State directors elected
were D. F. Eaton, Jr., Lamb coun-
ty; C. W. Wilhoit, Archer; B. F.
LaRue, Anderson; Wesley Sher-
rill, Washington; Bob Lilly, Cal-
houn; W. E. A. Meinscher, Aus-
tin, and J. H. Rothe, Brown. R.
E. Callender, extension specialist
in wildlife conseravtion. College]
Station, was named an advisor to
the board of directors All mem-
bers of the board are either coun-
ty agricultural agents or assis-
tants.
W. E. A. Meincher was named
chairman, Wesley Sherrill, vice
chairman, and Bobby Lilly sec-
retary-treasurer of the organiza-
tion. Meinscher is also a member
of the National Junior Advisory
Committee of the National Rifle
Asociation.
Rifle shooting has been con-
ducted in Texas as a regular part
of the camping program for 4-H
boys for ten years and state
matches have been fired for al-
most as many years. The program
started to teach the young farm
boys how to handle and use fire-
arms safely, and this is still a
prime objective of the program.
So far as is known, no boy who
has been trained in this program
has ever had a fatal accident
with a rifle.
pense trip to the National 4-H
Club Congress in Chicago, where
she will icpresent Texas in the
National revue.
Joyce Ann Marek of Victoria
won first in the best dress class and;
Thelma Peacock of Graham, first
in the school dress class. Each
girl received a console electric
sewing machine. Ouida Spencer
of Freeport, first place winner of
the tailored class, was awarded a
$100 Savings Bond.
Judges for the Revue were
Alice Linn, clothing specialist, Ex-
tension Service, Washington, D.
C., Mrs. Nanalie Clayton, home-
making educational division of the
state board of vocational educa-
tion, and Mrs. Lera D. Hancock,
head of the home economics de-
partment, North Texas Agricul-
tural College. Miss Linn also act-
ed as commentator during the
revue.
“The 128 entries reperestned
more than 9,000 4-H club girls
who entered 151 county revues,”
Mary Routh, extension clothing
specialist of Texas A&M College,
said. "Each girl either selected
or designed her pattern, picked
out the material and accessories
and made the dress. In many in-
stances, hats, gloves and bags
were made at home, also.” Miss
Routh and Nena Roberson, asso-
ciate clothing specialist, arranged
and presented the revue.
Ree
x.
Serves As Cotton
Identification
College Station—There’s
doubt about grades, staple
.29 - ’ ,
I
. .,U j
Cipont ot magazines after checking ones desired and enclose with
Saazma'syem: tgaanahamasm me d one
NAME______
STREET OR R.F.D.________________
POSTOFFICE____________
534
9)
end of much glassware, Mrs.
Bernice Claytor, extension home
management specialist of Texas
A&M Colege, points out. That is
why hot water should not be
poured over glass in washing or
rinsing, but instead, the glass
should be laid gently into the
tor said. “Glass expands with give protection.
oX om—_f
03
)-
,_(-999
F -
SINGING AT PHALBA
There will be singing at Phal-
ba next Saturday night and Sun-
day. Some good quartets will be
there, according to Jesse Groom,
president.
Lunch will be served at the
noon hour. Everyone is cordially
invited to attend.
grade pigs at seven weeks could fied with a "green card» Texas
have been bought for the same farmers were reminded this week,
amount. Now, the thing that is' r, „ , 11
being tried to be put over to the' Thegr een card means the cot-
farmers is, why not clean out to as been classed by a U. S.
farms of grade stock and purchase Department of Agriculture cotton
purebred and registered stock.' classer who certificies the grade
Registered stock pays dividends ' "
and grade stock consumes the' Farmers belonging to Smith-
dividend. Doxey cotton improvement groups
The following adult farmers receive this classification without
land community be improved from purchased pigs: Ben Curtis, Troycharge: .Also they receive daily
year to year it was urgent and Kennedy, Hallman Love, David market news service to keep them
। Baxter. The following NFA boys posted on day to day prices.
■ ■ - - - ---- । Both services come from south-
a
e
,'0g1
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8-,gp-
A.
Hs?a Student must have a"sem-soauredobygEedlandn communitn
33
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(2,°
E
THIS NEWSPAPER, 1 YR. AND
FIVE FAMOUS MAGAZINES
For Newspaper and Q A Ag
Five Magazines •KEVU
True Story, I Yr.
Pathfinder (26 Issues), 1 Yr.
Progressive Farmer, 2 Yr.
Farm Journal Sc Farmer’s Wife, I Yr.
Mother’s Home Life, 1 Yr.
Or imn7.^ej one 0f *he f°u^t magazines in
place of Pathfinder. If yoH want on^ gf these,
mark an ”Xn before ywnr choice.
• True Romance 1 Yr. • Open Road (Boy_1 yr
□ Photoplay 1 Yr. 5 Sports Afield 6 Mo.
= American Girl--1 Yr. • Country Gentleman 5 Yr.
□ Outdoor,--------lYr. D Parent,* Magazine.M..
WEEKLY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
I------- ---------------........' ......-........—
I BAKED YOUR (SH.’
FAVORITE CAKE,ALL THIS
TOO...ILL BRINGJSERVICE. .
/49
4/
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492"
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The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 30, 1949, newspaper, June 30, 1949; Canton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1585564/m1/2/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Van Zandt County Library.