The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex), Vol. 46, No. 34, Ed. 1, Thursday, August 20, 1953 Page: 1
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Tocker Foundation Grant and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Swisher County Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I
r
LLAN ENGLEMAN publish
and Colorado via Tulla He writes
in his column Along Allans AlleyWe saw a city with streets that
should have bern alleys and a
city with alleys that should have
been streets Santa Fe as most
of you know has one street the
highway to Albuquerque and the
rest of the time one wanders around
town on what looks like alleysThe old Panhandle home town
of Tulla though has recently put
on a cleanup campaign that left
every house with commonsized
garbage cans In alleys smoothly
graded to their full width Standing
at one end of town the alleys
arc slick as a whistle as far as one
can see It was a beautiful sight
P S Polio incidence there Is
practically nonexlstant now and
dysentery almost unheard of
er of The Edinburg Dally
Review has Just returned to his
home after a trip to New Mexico
TOWN TOPICS
ADILLAC driving farmers
and cattlemen these days
have had to take a lot of ribbing
via the press and radio They areas
much in the spotlight as a
Washington purchasing agent
wearing a mink coat
Personally wed much prefer
seeing a farmer in a Cadillac than
in the dilapidated Model T which
he was driving 20 years ago if he
could sell enough eggs and butter
to buy the gasoline Wed rather
see him in a modern brick home
with four bedrooms and two garages
than in one of the unpainted
frame shanties which graced many
Swisher farms a generation ago
nd were not making these assertions
as goodwill gestures to
our farm readers They are made
from a mercenaryminded businessman
Interested primarily in
his own business Activities
This newspaper prospers in direct
proportion to farm prosperity
When the farmer drives a Cadillac
or Buick we drive a late model
Chevrolet When the farmer
drives a dilapidated 10yearold
Ford we walk
Wed rather drive a Chevrolet
than walk
TOWN TOPICS
EVER HAVE wo begrudged a
farmer anything he can
buy Farm subsidies which have
been largely if not totally responsible
for farm prosperity are undesirable
But we must remember
that big business has been subsidized
for years by high tariffs
American big business would go
with
broke If it had to compete
foreign made products on which1
there were no tariffs or else our
living standards would go into a
tailspin Consequently the federal
government sets up protective
tariffs Many other concessions
have been given big business during
the past 10 years in the way
of Income tax adjustments and
guarantees In the first place If
the government is going to protect
one group it is duty bound
to protect other groups Did not
the Democrats advocate 90 percent
of parity Old not the Republicans
go a step further and promise
100 per cent of parity
Secondly we cannot be dogmatic
on the morality or Immorality
of subsidies
Subsidies like narcotics can be
evil very evil But when a person
is in excruciating pain there
is no greater blessing that a shot
of morphine v
TOWN TOPICS
fcELYING ALTOGETHER on
the law of supply and de
BWi
mand presents a beautiful argu
ment just like rugged individualism
and Individual Initiative You
can make an eloquent case on the
debate platform for all of these
propositions All are sound if allowed
to operate over a 25 year
period The person In pain likely
will live whether or not he receives
the shot No one ever died
from pain
It certainly Is economically
sound to grow just as much but
no more cotton or wheat than we
can market at a fair price But
when the farmer makes his plans
this month to plant wheat he has
no possible way of knowing what
the demand and price will be
next July in event of no government
Interference If everybody
decides to plant all their land in
wheat and everybody has a bumper
crop the price likely would behalf
what it is now
The law of supply and demand
will take care of this situation the
following year but what about
the high production cost the far
mer has tied up in this years
crop Whats he going to do if
the market price drops 50 per cent
by the time this crop is harvested
If the wheat farmer finds next
July that ho cant pay his butane
bill the implement dealer the
bank and the guy who holds the
mortgage on his farm what condition
is he going to be in to plant
that different crop or aether
year on which he fambles t at
there wil be a demand
TOWN TOPICB
AVERAGE farmer cannot
TIE hold out longenough for the
law of supply and demand to solve
his problems If he loses two
years in a row due to low market
prices hell likely go under as so
many learned in 1930 and 1931
In Swisher county the farmer is
more or less limited to cotton
wheal ami grain sorghums At the
present time we have an overproduction
of cotton and wheat It
is possible that grain sorghums
could be added to the list before
the surplus was used up With
Continued on page 5
Local Peewees Win Tournament
In Exciting Play With Hale Center
Tullas own Peoweo baseball learn won the area tournament played
laii weekend in Tulla by defeating Hale Center 7 io 0 Participating
teams were Halfway Olion Turkey Halo Center Canyon
and Tulla Turkey was third place winner by forfeit Olton boat Canyon
1312 to win consolation honors
Kress Schools
Set Opening
For Sept 7
Kress Public schools will start
Sept 7 according to Supt W W
Webb
The high school faculty will be
composed of Carrol Tarpley principal
Kenneth Smith J B Rid
dle Edith Boushy Melba Potts
Paul Robertson Mrs Chaney and
J W ONeal
In the elementary school will
be Blake Bolton principal Georgia
Graham Ava Jo Hobbs Jolc
D Brown Sue Mathls Mary Holland
Kathleen Tarpley Thelma
ONeal Jessie Lee Riddle Wyama
Weatherred Emma Bridges William
Taylor and Joyce Moore
Revival Begins
At Whitfield
A revival is scheduled to begin
at the Whitfield Baptist church
beginning August 21 and continuing
thorugh August 30 Rev
Clyde Rich of Turkey will do the
preaching
Services wil be hold at 130 a
m and 8 pm each day according
public is Invited
Dennis To Continue
With Local Church
W P Dennis has resumed his
fulltlme association with the Central
Church of Christ He recently
accepted a traveling position but
continued to serve the local
church on Sundays
He has severed his connection
with the traveling position
Mrs Wynn IB Mrs Sweat 2A
Mrs Gargis 2D Mrs McGlaun
2B Miss Devin 3B Mrs Douglas
3C Mrs Wallace 3D Mrs Shelton
3A Mrs Webb 4C Mrs
Chris Ward pitcher and utility
fielder played outstanding ball i
according to Coach Vic Clark Dol
bert Newman shortstop and
Charles Newman catcher played
good ball as did Sherwood Love
3rd baseman Other good players
Included David Madura Earl
Washington Leon Foster Stewart
Johnson Loftln Tommy Edwards
Tommy Hinkle Charle
Aycock Mack Mitchell Jimmio
Nunn and Terry Harman Coaches
were Toby Little and Laverno
Kleman
In the softball league the Baer
cats were on top winning 7 games
and losing 3 In second place
with CV4 wins and 3VS losses were
the Dodgers coached by Don Nelson
Third place winners were
the Rebels coached by Richard
Tucker who won 3V4 and lost 5VS
The Apaches came out fourth
winning one and losing seven Pete
Hardy was the coach
The high school ago baseball
Dewey Bryant were late in get
ting started and played only four
games However they re expected
to show up well next summer
The youth athletic program has
contributed a great deal to Tulla
youth during the season The work
was accomplished through the
sponsorship hard work and financial
assistance of the Lions
club Tulia Jaycccs and Chamber
of Commerce The First National
to Rev J W ONeal pastor The Bank bought uniforms for the high
j school age group The CC gave
each Softball participant about
108 a Tshirt Tho REA city and
Irby Construction company cooperated
by pulling and setting the
old football light poles The poles
were moved to the baseball diamonds
Many Tulla business and
professional men donated cash towards
the Improvement of tho
local field Proper acknowledgment
will bo made in another edition
of this paper
Parents of New Students
Must File Certificates
Parent of students entering Tulia public schools for the first
lime must fill out a Certificate of Residence in lho Superintendents
office according to school officials This certificate must be notarised
This includes all persons who moved into the community after tho
school census which was taken last spring
High school enrollment is scheduled
for Aug 27 and 28 Seniors
will enroll Thursday between
10 am and noon juniors from 2
to 4 pm sophomores Friday
from 9 to 12 and freshmen Friday
from 2 to 4
The entire elementary school
and Junior high will enroll August
28 The first five gradees will
follow the same section as in previous
years Grades C 7 and 8
will enroll in the library
Grade ID will enroll with Mrs
Drake 4A Mrs Gatewood 4B
Mrs Mitchell 5C Mrs Adams
5B Mrs Brewer 5D Mrs Purcell
5A Mrs Swinbum CB Mrs
Carson 6C Mrs Henderson GA
Mrs Massey
The grade school building has
undergone a facelifting during
the summer The walls and woodwork
have been repainted using
pastel colors Asphalt tile flooring
has been Installed throughout
most of the first floor classrooms
Several new tahles have been ad
Clonts 1A with Mrs Rose 1C ded to the lunchroom and impro
vements made in the kitchen The
Interior of the home economics
building has been repainted
A list of the faculty will appear
In next weeks issue of this paper
tLcrofilnt Service Sales Co
Box 8066
95 Per Cent Swisher Farmers Approve Allotments Subsidies
SECTION ONE TWO SECTIONS
The TuLm Herald
Circulation 3153
VOL 4G NUMBER 34
Coverno Swhher County Like Tha Sunthina
TULIA Swisher County TEXAS
THURSDAY AUGUST SO 1953
To Snyder
Promotion cams this weok to
ono of Tullas most progressive
civic leaders
Willard Paine cashier of lho
First National Bank has been
named a vice president of the
Snyder National Bank Ho will
assume his now duties Sopt 1
Mr and Mrs Paine came to
Tulla in tho spring of 1048 following
his graduation from Abilene
Christian colkvo 1Ic k °
came associated with tho First
ers coached by Frank Madura and j National Bank and also taught the
Veterans Vocational school at Naz i
areth
Active in many community affairs
Paine is a state director of
the Junior Chamber of Commerce
teaches a Sunday School class at
the Central Church of Christ is a
member of the local drouth committee
and is a former president
of the Tulla Jaytccs
The Palnes have two children
Rodney 3 and Pamela 1V4
Mrs Nannie Mudd
Former Tuiian
Dies Recently
Mrs Nannie Mudd 73 years old
r ied recently in Los Angeles
Calif and was burled In Vernon
Mrs Mudd who lived in Tulia until
1940 had been living in the
homo of her son Mr and Mrs
Emery Mudd but died at the home
of another son Mr and Mrs Elmer
Mudd
Survivors include her three
sons Elmer Erwin and Emery all
of Los Angeles
Parents Invited
To Cub Series
Parents of Cub Scouts are urged
to attend the scries of meetings
underway each Monday Tuesday
Thursday and Friday nights at
8 oclock In the VFW hall in Tulla
Cub Scout packs from Sllvcrton
Turkey South Plains Dimmit and
Hart arc also invited to attend
Purpose of the scries Is to acquaint
the parent with the how
and why of the Cub Scout programMr and Mrs Milton Fox of
Houston arc the parents of a daughter
born Sunday August 10
named Leslie Dawn Mrs Fox Is
the former Dorothy Lou Jennings
Tulla Kiwanians visiting tho
Wellington club last Friday were
Rev W Nell Record Sam T
Bryan E R Sedgwick Rev Record
was program speaker
MEMBERS OF Delta Sigma chaplsr of Epsilon
Sigma Alpha sorority present Clyde Kilparriclc
chairman of the swimming pool fund drive a
check for S150 as their contribution to tha local
project An intensive drive Is on io secure
sufficient funds for the swimming pool so that
construction can get underway by Sept 1 All
donailons should bo made either io Kilpairick
or 4o other workers In the picture are Dorothy
Ryan Joyce Measles Kilpairick Honey Notion
Shirley Stevenson and Alice Spear The photograph
was contributed by Dallas Studio
Rogers of tho Departments Wogo
and Hour and Public Contracts
Divisions hero said ho wished ho
could convey a personal word tq
boys and girls urging all who
have not graduated to return to
school Pay checks look good to our
young people who havo boon
working during their summer
vacation he said but such
boys and girls should look ahoad
and roallzo that education and
training aro neodod now moro
than over botore
Ho pointed out that the Armed
Services advise young people to
get all tho schooling they can
that business requires trained men
and women that industry wants
skilled technicians and that modern
llfo itself puts a premium on
good education
Congress he said has made it
unlawful to employ children under
10 years of ago in interstate
commerce or in the production of
goods for interstate commerce
In most instances In agriculture
it is unlawful to employ children
under 10 during school hours If
the farm products go into interstate
or foreign commerce
The Law ho explained applies
equally io local resident
children as well as to migratory
children It does not apply tc e
farmors own children working
on their parents farm
Ho said that by school hours
Is meant those hours when school
Is in session for tho district where
the child under 10 Is currently
living Farmers themselves aro responsible
If they employ underage
children during local school
hours
If a local school in closed for
several days during a peak harvest
season It would not be considered
in session at that time
Futhcrmore ho added the Federal
Law sets no nlnlmum ago for
the employment of children in agriculture
before or after school
hours or at any time on school
holidays or during school vacations
But when the school boll rings
on a regular school day children
of school ago are expected to be
in school he said adding that he
hoped widespread knowledge of
the Law would keep them from
being illegally employed and o
krpt away from school
Tulia Cheerleaders
Get Top Rating
At Wichita Falls
Tulla High cheerleaders received
top rating over a fiveday period
at tho Midwestern university
at Wichita Falls The locals were
m competition with 17 t am in
cluding Lubbock Wichita Falls
Vernon and Portaies N M
Members of the Tulla squad arc
BeUy Ruth Watts freshman Pat
Bradley sophomore V1 r ginia
White junior Sib Chandler senior
and Jlmmie Tomlinson senior
and head cheerleader
The girls were instructed by
Lawrence R Herkimer president
of the Nation Cheerleaders Association
and physical education
instructor at Southern Methodist
university at Dallas
TRV A HERALD WANT AD1
Over 12000 Readers
TWO SECTIONS
Fair Plans Take Shape
New Features Are Added
The Swisher County Fair Commitieo hoaded by A Dean Harman
president is proparlng for ono of tho countyi best fairs with
emphasis on homo talent In both exhibits and entertainment The
exhibition slatod for Sept 18 and 19 Is io bo held in lho VFW and
American Legion buildings National Guard armory and the livestock
building in addition to the areas surrounding these buildings
About 300 has been contributed
to the fair fund according to
Claudo T Shelton finance chair
chairman to tho congregation It the per cent of wheat farmers Voting
b ar are a model Plane show a
Aboui 50o1U be needed
man oiMon oti e contcst rnblt nnd poul = l h v0tca to build a IlulldlnR Only two counties of the 181 tak
to itMo ca1or ° Iei dTnrd try ° by show comm Uee wl 1 bo ccctc ngpart n tho oUhBwent again
which goes for prizes and twards the classrooms at the
Shelton said that donors Included
an Illinois resident anil one
from Hale county All checks
should bo made payable to tho
Swisher County Fair The fair
committee decided against the
publication of a catalogue to finance
tho nffnlr Instead ll la
asking all county residents for
donations
The carnival to bo held In the
roadway area Is to bo provided by
local concerns since no outsldo ar
rangements have been made
Among the new features this
Mrs John Culwelt has been added
to tho board of directors replacing
Mrs L F Campbell who
resigned recently
Throe cups will bo given by tho
locnl entitled seed growers for
tho best 20 bowls of open cotton
best gallon of wheat and best 10
head of grain sorghum
More details of the big gala exhibition
will appear In Tho Herald
between now anil the opening
date
U S Labor Officai Urges
Minors To Return To School
Points Out Prohibited Jobs
Whoix the school boll rings this fall Department ol Labor oillcials
hope all oliglble school childron will answer lho roll call particularly
that employment will not choat them out of an oducallon
Regional director William J
Dairy Group
Names Sharp
J P Sharp of Tulla was elected
vlco president of the Trl
Staio Milk Producers Association
which was organized last
week In Canyon by dairymen
from three states Nearly 120
dairymen and milk doalors from
iho Panhandle Eastern New
Mexico nnd Oklahoma atlond
edThe
The group agreed to postpone
any Immediate steps towaid obtaining
a Federal Milk Order until
effects of organization could
bo noted
Both milk handlers and producers
agreed that handling and
marketing problems could bo
handled through tho association
and without a Federal Milk Order
Other officers elected Include
Lewis Hinders of Canyon president
and Richard Hales of Canyon
secretarytreasurer Two directors
from each county In the
Amarillo mllkshcd aro to bo appointed
by their local districts
Hales said 25 per cent of tho
dairymen in this area already havo
Joined tho association and many
more dairymen In the TrlStato
region aro expected to join soon
An FMO Is an order issued by
the Secretary of Agriculture to establish
minimum prices for milk
stabllzc tho milk market stop arbitrary
surplus declarations by
handlers and to assure farmers
of accurate milk weights tests
and classifications
Endorsement Said To Be Slap
At Secy Bensons Farm Policy
The Swisher county vote Friday overwhelming endorsement
to wheat marketing quotas Almost 95 per cent of the countyi
wheat farmers voted for the proposal which previously hud been
opposed by Secretary of Agriculture Benson Final vole was 642 for
Church To Hear
Building Plans
Plans for a new addition io
the educational facilities of the
First Methodist church were discussed
at a meeting of the official
board of the church Thursday
night Proposed plans for
a 51 by 93 foot addition will be
presented to the church Sunday
night August 30
Sketches of tho floor plan will
bo on hand B Hoyce McMurtry
Lubbock architect will bo present
at the meeting to explain the
Seating tor
tear of the sanctuary has already
been ordered matching tho present
sealing of the sanctuary Arrangements
have been made to
seat the balcony to tako care of the
Sunday overflow of tho congregationTulia To Meet
Team Tonight
Thu Tulla Baseball club will
meet Amarillo Air Force Base retraining
group Thursday night
tonight at II oclock on tho now
lighted field near Younger Field
All proceeds will go to tho Improvement
of tho field
Accotdlng to Hardy Feelings nn
Irrigation Belt League tournament
will begin Monday night and
continue through Saturday night
Paitlcipants Include Kress Nazareth
Sllvcrton and Tulla Other
teams are expected to enter bo
fore tho doadllne
Sundays local league game will
be between Tulla nnd Umbariicr
Game time Is 230 p in
to only 37 against
By communities Tulla voted 334
for to 28 against Happy 173 for
to 4 against and Kress 135 for
to 3 against Three votes wore
challenged nnd four spoiled There
arc about 1300 farms In the countyThe topheavy 872 per cent national
affirmative vote set a new
record for wheat referenda It
also was well above the twothirds
majority required by law
Toxns wheat farmers left no
doubt that they favored marketing
quotas and full parity price
support for their wheat
R T Price state administrative
offlcor for the Production Sc Mar
ketlng Administration said the
state count represented about 09
st tho quotas Together their vote
total reached in Kerr county
county voted fl0 against and Llvo
Oak county cast a lone vote againStBut the big wheat counties rolled
up tho tremendous majority
for tho quotas and price supports
Deaf Smith voted 48022 for quotas
Ochiltree 02021 and Wichita
county 21131
Fridays vottns was the first
since HHl when farmers voted
on tho 1042 crops Then about 0Q
per cent of the Tojffis farmers votIng
approved tho quotas But the
1033 voto was oven more heavily
In favor of the quotas and price
supports than the 10232 to 1
132 margin In lMt
Continuance of 00 per cent of
parity supports prices about 221
per bushel would bo one of the
results of tho nationwide quota
approval by tho farmers But any
fanner planting moro acres to
wheat than his allotment colls
for would havo to pay a pcr
bushol marketing penalty on tho
yield from his excess acreage This
usually makes overplontlng uneconomicalWheat allotments In Texan this
year for 1054 harvest total 4800
1103 acres compared with 5423000
acres planted for harvest in 1933
Farmers To Ballot Saturday
In PMA Committee Election
Swlshor farmers will elect PMA community committeemen In
balloting set for Saturday betwoon 8 nnd 5 oclock Boxos will bo at
Harman Toles Happy PMA otilce Tulla and Rockwell Bros Kross
All farmers taking part in any
of the farm programs administered
by community and county
Ptoduction and Marketing Administration
commltetcomen aro urged
to cast their ballots
Tho elections arc nonpartisan
ond tiny farmer whether owner
operator tenant or sharecropper
who la participating In any program
administered by the county
committee Is eligible to voto
Those elected will bo responsible
for administering the Agricultural
Conservation program and
price support operation Including
commodity loans and farm storage
loans When allotments or marketing
quotas are in effect committeemen
determine the farm acreage
allotments They also hove
duties in connection with field
operation of the Federal Crop InsuranceBallots Includo the foltowlng
names Delegate to county convention
AE community Homer
T LaRoo and Leo Pearson alternate
delegates to county
convention Joe F Thornton and
Charles S Evans chalrtfan community
committee Jack Lorlng
and Roscoo J Raymond vlco community
committee Wayne Pearson
and G B Foster member
community committee Chester It
Foster and Raymond Poage first
alternate member community
committee Leo C Gardner and
Leslie O Raymond second alternate
T D Evans and John E
McCuno
AW community dclcgaft Fred
Harris and Doris F Bov j alternate
George Vcnhaus and Jack
Todd chairman community committee
Frank Cox and John J
Irlbeck vlco chairman Ijall
Wrenn and Pat Moynard member
Burl Sims and Wayne George
first alternate Robert Rucker and
Cono W Johnson second alternate
Ross Forsythe and Jack Mld
dlcton
BE community delegate A D Leo
and Samuel T Ingram alternate
Continued on page 3
General Rains Dent Drouth
Showers during ihe past week havo been goneral ov r the Trl hrr i
receiving a much a fir Inch From HopO For Word
ih some area
Stat ar a
lest Monday morning in tho prom
three to five Inches were reported Thursday night and I MJssg
Nazareth area Tulla received 71 of an inch
52 inch Saturday night
Several farmers early this week
complained of too much rain for
their cotton Crops throughout
tho county are good with prospects
for a good fall harvest of cotton
and grain sorghum Temperature
havo been comfortable the past
week with the thermom8tor
oring around the midalghtle
during the day
Almost every area of the county
has recolved showers of some
appreciable amount
The Soil Conservation Service
today reported greatly improving
soil moisture conditions In omo
drouBhtridden areas of Taxa
and Oklahoma with markedly
leasenbd proepocts of widespread
wind erolon damage in the coming
winter and spring months although
general rain are still
needed before tho extreme drought
Is relieved
The improved moisture In 43
counties In western Texas and 10
counties in western Oklahoma ltd
touched off one of the most determined
effort to produce soil
cover In reeem years say Regional
Director Louis P Merrill of
SCS Hundreds of thousands of
acts In tha Rolling Plains the
Boulh Plains and the s ahvblet
sed Panhandle secilons of Texas
already havo gone In grain sorghums
sweet sorghums audan
grass and olher cover producing
crops SCS Hold men havo
reported to Merrill Most of the
plantings aro up io good stands
and with a good rain or two
would make needod cover or
Son In Korea
A dim ray of hop still remains
for Mr and Mrs C O
Smothermon of Kress whose
son Sgi First Clan Clarence
O Smoihermon has been missing
In Korea for almost three
years
A recent notice to the parents
from Mo Gen W E Bergin of
the Department of the Army that
even o crop of grain barring sZl Smothermon Status is un
early frost In Iho Panhandle of changed wa discouraging but the <
1 1
Texas and in northwestern Okl
ahoma sizable areas have accumulated
moisture for wheat
planting next fall but too many
farmers are turning under an
effective stubble mulch before
sufficient moisture has been
trapped to sustain a stand of
wheat
Elghty tx countle in the leas
fortunate areas of southwestern
and southern Texas still have received
no ef foetlve moisture or not
enough to relieve the record
drought conditions
Range grasses are growing rapidly
in areas which have received
moisture in the last five weeks
Merrill reported Returning from
n trip into the High Plain and
Rolling Plains this week Merril
observed that on short range in
poor to fair condltior there Is the
parent still look forward to better
news
Sgt Smothaimon who would bo
28 year of age September 1 served
in World War II Ho recnllst
od about a year after ho was discharged
going back Into the Army
in 1947 Ills enlistment period was
Just about completed when tho
Korean War began
The parents received the missing
in action notice Nov 2 1050
No word Com Sgt Smothermon
has reached them
temptation to keep too many stock
Yhere number have not been
materially reduced as In the Panhandle
countlo
Where numbers have been reduced
there may be a tendency to
restock Ho says it should be re
membered that grass gets about
Continued on page 5
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
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.
Baggarly, Herbert Milton. The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex), Vol. 46, No. 34, Ed. 1, Thursday, August 20, 1953, newspaper, August 20, 1953; Tulia, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth45846/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Swisher County Library.