The Palmer Rustler (Palmer, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 54, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 29, 1937 Page: 1 of 4
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The Palmer Rustler
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BNE DOLLAR PER YEAR.
VOL. XL NO. 54
Mzaan
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Aimee Loses and Faints
Commercial State
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And Sharecropers
atedin pink and white roses. The k Loctors said she had lived much
Dallas Monday.
been reasonable to expect.
Sunday.
Boys Polo Shirts, 15c, at Hughey’s.
The guests were greeted by Mrs.
i
Mrs. Ervin Elgan spent Monday
Company plant a mile south of
Salary Plan.
Death Breaks
day.
A
at Hughey’s.
Boys Wash
Detroit, Mich. ,April 28.—Lynwood
in Dallas Monday.
Miss Maurine Huffaker of Hearne 1
Mrs. Y. Barron, Mrs. Charlie Far- comedies.
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Legislature Asks
Aid for Tenants
European Buying
Scrap Iron Here
As War Material
11-Year Old Girl
Loses Life Fight
50 Transfusions
Dallas Woman
Killed, 14 Hurt
Sunday Crashes
Blackjacked Man
Dies, 2 Houston
Cops Suspended
Cave-In Cost
Lives of Three
At Port Arthur
Fort worth policemen and firemen
and many others knew Mary Lou
Sunday school every Sunday at
10 o’clock. Church services every
Sunday at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer‘Schwartz at-
tended services at the Ckiristian
Church in TrumbUll Sunday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davis and
Mrs. Ethel Barron were in Ennis
bunday.
Mrs. B. H. Cooke and Mrs. J. C.
Stone have gone to Sherman for a
three weeks visit with their sister,
Mrs. Dittler.
Mrs. S. L. Wadley, Miss Sybil
Williams and Kay Martin were in
Ennis Saturday.
The dead are O. E. Ask and Tom
Shead of San Antonio and Ether-
edge Evans of Corpus Christi. M. L.
Sears of Corpus Christi was not se-
Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Elgan and
Billy were in Glen Rose Sunday.
Port Director Russell Wait says
it is the greatest scrap iron boom
since the world war and promises
to continue well into the summer.
Misses Edith Masters and Lola
Cofer were Dallas visitors Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Williams
visited friends in Ferris Sunday.
r.
Urges State
Public Welfare
Department
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Mrs. Fred Isley of San Angelo,
formerly Miss Ruth Dillon, teacher
in the palmer school, visited friends
here several days last week.
B. L. Freemon and Ralph Risinger
visited friends in Denton Saturday
and Sunday..
Athens, Texas, April 27.— Jim
Braddock and Joe Louis squared off
here Monday, but not to settle the
heavyweight championship of the
world.
’ Mrs. Greenwood Maddux, Green-
wood Maddux, Jr., and Mrs. E. T.
Bentley of Bristol were visiting in
; Dallas Monday.
Jack Ritchie of Dallas visited his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Ritchie
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Merritt and
family of Dallas visited Mrs. J. D.
Odom Saturday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Rigsby of Wil-
mer visited Mr. and rMs. Aulton
Hamblin Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Kelly and Mr.
and Mrs. B. L. Freemon visited rel-
atives in Waxahachie Sunday.
tended by Billy Gene McKeever, and
the flower girls were Judith Leath-
erman and Ann Dorsey.
Mrs. Cude wore a black tucked
I
gether.”
A trade was made.
a sinus infection. He will remain
there for four or five days.
Mr. and Mrs. Gentle Johnson and
family of Telico visited Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Johnson Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Granger, Mrs.
Beulah Granger and Mrs. lifford
Anthony were in Fort Worth Mon-
day.
bowl. Tall pink tapers burned in
crystal candelabra on the table and
buffet.
for an addition to the company’s
power unit. Seven men were working
in the east end, where the cave-in
occurred.
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy S. Cude were
Ennis visitors Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Daly visited Dr.
and Mrs. T. J. Daly in Fort Worth
Sunday.
a school pupil, stepped in the de-
pression and broke his leg. His par-
ents put in a claim for damages and
the $600 award followed.
Miss Mamie Sue McBurnett of
Dallas was the guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Hubert McBurnett last week
end.
His home was in New York. His
widow survives.
Mrs. Bill McKeever and children
visited relatives in Dallas last week
end.
Fort Worth, Texas, April 26.—
Mary Lou Harris, the bright-faced
little Chico girl who wanted to grow
up to be a nurse, died at 11 a. m.
Sunday in a hospital here.
Less than three months ago Mr.
and Mrs. J. o. Harris, parents of
the 11-year-old girl, believed physi-
cians were making progress in ef-
forts to combat the malady that was
causing blood cells to disintegrate.
That was before Mary Lou had to
return to the hospital April 15. She
had gone there many times before
I sation for the 181 members of the
legislature was approved on final
reading, 104 to 35, without debate.
It was engrossed at a night session
last week by 71 to 38. The first at-
tempt Tuesday to poll 100 votes fail-
ed by three, but on reconsideration
a margin of four votes sent it to the
senate.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Smith and chil-
dren of Fort Worth are visiting Mr.
and Mrs. eHnry Pierce.
ions.
It was more than a year ago that
Mary Lou’s father and mother knew
she was the victim of anemia. She
was having her tonsils removed and
narrowly escaped bleeding to death.
Last September she started to school
but had to stop her studies when
violent headaches came.
The body was taken to Chico Sun-
day night.
I Dr. and Mrs. S. L. Wadley were
Dallas visitors Sunday.
Honeyboy And
Sassafrass Team
New York, April 26,— George
Fields, blackface comedian of min-
strel shows, vaudeville and radio,
dropped dead in Pennsylvania sta-
tion Sunday.
He was half of the radio team of
“Honeyboy and Sassafrass,” which
began nationally two years ago. He
had done similar work over stations
in Detroit, Pittsburgh, Wichita Falls,
Fort worth, Dallas and throughout
the southwest.
He was born in Grove Springs, Mo.
in 1894 and ran away from home at
the age of 16 to play in medicine,
tent and minstrel shows and musical
Two Presbyterian
Churches Merged
At Hillsboro
H Mrs. S. W. Cole of Austin is at
Fthe bedside of her sster, Mrs. J. D.
Odom, who is seriously ill.
Serving Palmer and the People of the
Palmer Community
Much Auto Loot
Is Recovered'
Jim Braddock And
Joe Lewis Meet
Make Oil Deal
Mrs. J. S. Cude
Recent Bride
Given Shower
Suspect Admits
Several Thefts
At Waxahachie
Lybrand Heads
Softball League
At Waxahachie
Waxahachie, Texas, April 28.—Fred
Lybrand, deputy tax collector, has
been elected president and Clift
Wilson, postal employee, secretary,
of the Waxahachie Softball League
at a meeting of players held at the
city hall. The club will have four
sponsored teams, which will be a
Mr. and Mrs. Corren Myers made
a business trip to Seagoville Mon-
day,
negotiations by saying, "Well, let’s i pitcher, entered Henry Ford Hos-
square off and see if we can get to- j pital Wednesday for treatment for
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A jury at Los Angeles, Cal., returned a verdict of $2,100 damages against
Aimee Semple McPherson, the evangelist, in the suit for slander brought
against her by her daughter, Roberta Semple. The evangelist fainted
during the summation, and is pictured above, by Soundphoto, as she was
• revived by her son Rolf.
These ships are taking the iron
back to be used in armament fac-
tories as Europe prepares feverishly
' for war. During the first quarter of
this year 70,141 tons of scrap were
exported from Houston ,with Japan
taking 29,848, as the largest cus-
tomer.
j spent the week end here with her rar and Eva Sue visited in Dallas
parents. . Monday., '
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Wlaxahachie, Texas, April 28—
Recovery of automobile tires and
wheels valued at $200 to $300 was
ig
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ser
Mrs. Marvin Borders and ' Mrs.
Urbin McKeever spent the day in
Under the proposal of Augustine
Celaya, the annual salary of $3,000
would be submitted for the present
maximum pay of $10 a day for first
120 days of a regular session and
special sessions, In addition to the
biennial sessions of 120 or more
days, there usually are about two
special sessions of thirty days each
every two years.
Rejection by the house also kill;
ed for the session a somewhat simi-
lar' proposal espoused in the senate
by G. H. Nelson, one of the foremost
unicameralists. He has taken the
lead in urging it but an unfavorable
committee report indicated the sen-
ate likewise would disapprove.
The proposed constitutional amend
ment to change the basis of compen-
d
Mr. and Mrs. Lester McIntosh
visited Mr. and Mrs. Louis McIntosh
in Mexia Sunday.
Mesdames Johnny Allen and El-
mer Norman were Dallas visitors
Wednesday.
hamburger steak” changed to “lib-
erty steak,’’ this city changed the
name of Berlin street to Brussels
street. The name “Berlin” .was chis-
eled out of the cement sidewalk and
the hole never filled up.
Mrs. A. J. Tolleson and Mrs. Bob
Stacks spent Monday in Dallas.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Patterson of
Sherman, Miss., are here viisting
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Spence.
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WANTED.—A good used chicken
brooder. Billy Elgan, Palmer.
Mesdames Bill Gibson, J. B. Mer-
cer, Jr., and Miss Lois Bracken
were Dallas visitors Tuesday.
House Rejects
Unicameral, Ask
$3,000 Salary
Austin, Texas, April 28.—The house
repulsed for another two years by
an overwhelming majority Tuesday
an effort for a unicameral legisla-
ture and then voted to submit, a
proposal to pay members a salary
of $3,000 a year.
33338
The officers are Patrolmen R. V. ;
Harrelson and A. H. Schomburg.
They admitted striking Cortez with
a blackjack when he resisted arrest.
The officers picked Cortez up from
the floor and took him to a hospital.
Doctors said he was dead when he
arrived.
The grand jury Friday began an
investigation. included in the evi-
dence were reports from two autop-
sies, one made for the state and one
for the Mexican consul here. Cortez
was a citizen of Mexico.
dered, the first number being a vo-
cal solo, “You Are the Rose I am
Longing For," sung by Mrs. Blocker
Martin, accompanist Mrs. Wind-
ham.
Miss Kathryn Schwartz gave an
original toast to the bride express-
ing the good wishes of her high 1
school class. Mrs. L. H. Barron gave
a humorous toast to the groom.
Miss Sarah Beth Prichard sang.“I
Love You Truly,” and immediately,
to the strains of Lohengrin’s Wed-
ding March, a miniature bridal par-
ty descended the stairway and en-
Hillsboro, Texas, April 27 —The
two Presbyterian churches of this
city, the First Presbyterian and the
Central Presbyterian, have united
and will meet in the future in the
church structure of the First Pres-
byterian Church.
Action taken by the congregation
of the Central Church in uniting
the two bodies was concurred in by
the Waco Presbytery in its meeting
last week. The Central Texas Pres-
bytery, to which the First Presby-
terian church belongs, will meet in
Fort Worth next Friday to receive
the Central Church into its organ-
ization., on Sunday, May 2, a com-
mission from this presbytery, head-
ed by Dr. T. S. Know, will conduct
a service in the local church con-
summating the union of the two
bodies.
This action eliminates from Hills-
boro an institution that has played
a big part in community life for
almost fifty years, not taking into
account the previous Cumberland
Presbyterian Church, out of which
I grew the central Church.
Tuf-Nut Overalls at Hughey’s.
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Calloway at-
tended the funeral of Mr, Callo-
way’s grandmother in Rockett Fri-
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Less Monthly Discomfort
Many women, who formerly
suffered from a weak, run-
down condition as a result of
poor assimilation of food, say
they benefited by taking CAR-
DUI, a special medicine for
women. They found it helped
to increase the appetite and
improve digestion, thereby
bringing them more strength
from their food.
Naturally there is less dis-
comfort at monthly periods
when the system has been
strengthened and the various
functions restored and regu-
lated. ( (
Cardui, praised by thousands of
women, is well worth trying. Of
course, if not benefited, consult a
physician.
Christian Church
Have \Modher's Day
Service Sunday
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Mrs. Paul Wilkerson and Mrs.
Scott McDaniel were guests of Mrs.
Raymond Barnhardt last week.
! Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Griffith and
Marilyn of Waxahachie and Mr.
J and Mrs. Joe B. Griffith of Paris
visited Mrs. L. B. Griffith Sunday.
Urbin McKeever, H. G. Windham,
Clemont Lanier, Marvin Borders
and Charles Davis were co-hostesses
and included in the house party
was Mrs. L. H. Barron. for examinations, transfusions and,
The reception rooms were decor- one time for an operation.
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Corpus Christi, Texas, April 26.—
A sudden cave-in at the Humble
Hairbrushes From
Boars Hair Sell
Salvatore Ossido, barber and sex
criminal who attacked and killed
9-year-old Einer Sporrer and left
her body in a sack, was found guilty
of murder in the first degree by a
jury in Brooklyn, N. Y. The jury
ignored insanity pleas for the de-
fendant.
Houston, Texas, April 28.—Eight
ships of five foreign nations are in
the port of Houston loading with
scrap iron—six from Japan and one
each from Poland and Germany.
Eight cranes are working the five
ships at the public docks, seven of
which belong to the port commis-
sion.
Marquisette with lingerie touches j riously hurt.
and her corsage was yellow gladiolas. j Twenty-eight men were working in
Her mother, Mrs. l. H. Hughey, i the hole, which was being excavated
were a sheer print with black acces-
sories and her flowers were red car-
nations.
Refreshments which further car-
ried out the pink and white color
scheme consisted of ice cream with
cup cakes iced in white and decor-
ated with pink rosebuds. The plate
favors were dainty pink parasols for
April showers. -
Many lovely gifts attest the popu-
llarity of the{hpnoree.
Mrs. Ervin Elgan visited her
daughter, Miss Adel Elgan, a teach-
। er in the Paradise schools, last Fri-
day. %
he had been beaten with a blackjack
and had fallen striking his head on
the concrete floor of the police sta-
tion.
Waxahachie, Texas, April 27.—A
statement admitting theft of sev-
eral automobile tires and wheels in
this city recently was obtained over
the week end from a man held in
the Ellis county jail. The man was
arrested in another county and was
brought here for questioning by
members of the sheriff’s depart-
ment.
An attempt will be made by mem-
bers of the department to recover
the stolen property, which, the man
said, had been sold to various in-
dividuals and filling stations in Dal-
las.
lI
Agents here were quoting the
brushes at $250 a year ago. But in
the succeeding twelve months the
firm was able to obtain only six
ounces of the precious bristles, or
enough for three brushes.
Their addition has brought the in-
ventory up to nine.
CCC team representing Brooks
Shoe Company; an Humble team,
j managed by Nunsey Bass; a laundry
team, managed by Irvin Johnson,,
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Houston, Texas, April 26.—Two
Houston policemen were suspended
Saturday pending completion of an
investigation into the death of El-
pidio Cortez, who died Tuesday after
TABERNACLE BAPTIST,
J. C. Johnson, Pastor.
Marvin Williams, superintendent.
Eva Ruth Tackett, secretary-treas-
urer.
No. present Sunday 48, collection
A few weeks ago Robert Breuck, $2.38.
Declining sentiment in favor of
substituting a one-house legislature
for the .present two-house system
was indicated by the vote of 88 to
53 to table the proposed constitu-
tional amendment of wilson Fox.
Two years ago the proposal lacked
only five votes of a majority in the
house, where 100 affirmative votes
are needed to approve submission
to the people.
New York, April 26.—The world’s
most expensive hairbrushes, made of
the rare, strong, beautiful bristles
plucked from the neck of Siberian
wild boars of 12 years and older,
and bringing $500 because of Soviet
government’s campaign to teach
citizens of the Steppes to hunt the
beasts for food.
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was kept, it is believed that the girl
} Barron and Mrs. McKeever presided underwent fifty or more transfus-
| at the bride’s register. An unusual
and enjoyable program was ren-
Abilene, Texas, April 26.—In clos-
ing sessions the twenty-seventh an-
nual Texas Conference of Social Wei
fare unanimously passed a resolu-
tion to push for a state division of
public welfare and re-elected its
president, waiter W. Whitson of j
Houston.
When the place committee and
the conference itself tied on votes
for the selection of the next con-
vention city, it was left up to the
executive board. Galveston and
Waco conducted a campaign for
the meeting. Attendance was 675,
largest in the organization’s his-
tory.
Other officers are M. Gladys Pit-
tenger, Fort Worth, first vice presi-
dent; jack Robertson, Dallas, second I
vice president; Ida Bell Woolford,!
Galveston, secretary-treasurer.
For Up to $500 Picture Shows
I Resumed At Palmer
BAPTIST CHURCH,
Rev. L. D. Wood, Pastor.
J. D. Brock, Superintendent.
Geraldine Lasater, Secretary.
Alta Kelly, Treasurer.
Services on the first, second and
fourth Sundays.
No. present Sunday 105, collection
$22.20.
Sunday school every SunWay
morning at 10 o’clock. Church
services every second and fourth
Sunday.. Church services every
Saturday night before second and
fourth Sunday.
B. T. U. Meets Sunday evening
6:45.
assist tenant farmers and share
croppers.
“A deplorable situation exists in
our country, especially in the south,
relative to the tenant farmer,” the
resolution reads. The number of
tenant-operated farms increased
from 25 per cent in 1880 to 42 per
cent in 1935, it said, revealing a
strong trend away from home owner
ship. Debts burden the tenant farm-
er and share cropper, it added, and
they are laboring under most un-
favorable circumstances.
Mr. and Mrs. Max Hampel of
Nacogdoches spent several days with
relatives in Palmer. Mrs. John
Schwartz and daughter, Miss Lena,
accompanied them home.
K I
and a Fant Milling Company team,
with its manager to be appointed by I effected Monday afternoon by Dep-
E. S. Clayton. i uty Sheriffs Jess Cariker and Bill
Rogers. The officers, accompanied
by a Dallas man who admitted sev-
eral thefts here, spent Monday in
Dallas running down the buyers of
the “hot” equipment.
Several additional tires and wheels
may be recovered within the next
1 day or so, it was reported.
tered the living room where, while
Mrs. Windham softly played “To A
Wild Rose,” a double wedding ring
ceremony was performed. The min-
ister, Masser John Keith DeLay; the
lovely little bride (Pauline) was Ma-
rion Sue McBurnett; the maid of - . :
honor, Peggy Browning, the groom, ’ Ingleside killed three men and in-
(Jimmy) Hughey Harvard, was at- l jured another late Saturday night.
——-------- Mrs. Blocker Martin and Mis.
Mrs. Johnnie Allen was shopping Hubert McBurnett speat the day j
in Dallas Monde
Complimenting Mis. J. S. Cude, a
recent bride, Mrs. Ethel Barron en-
tertained with a miscellaneous
shower at her home in Palmer on
Wednesday afternoon. Mesdames
and her ever-ready smile. They
had watched her face, untouched by
fear, as their blood drained into her
veins. Although no accurate account
Sammy Baugh To
Play Independent
Ball With Pampa
Pampa, Texas, April 28.—Sammy
Baugh, former Texas Christian
University star, signed a contract
Wednesday to play baseball with
the Pampa Independent team. He
will report June 1.
_____ dining table was laid'with a lace longer on borrowed blood than had
Mr. and Mrs. Murphy and Erma cutwork cloth and the centerpiece
of Ferris visited friends in Palmer iwas formed of an arrangement of
pink roses ‛ and fern in a crystal
i
Admiration Hosiery at Hughey’s.
JOCALS
Stomach Ulcers, Gas Pains, Indiges-
tion, Heartburn, Belching, Bloating,
Nausea, get free sample doctor’s
prescription, Udga, at McIntosh
' Pharmacy.
(Schoolboy) Rowe, Detroit Tiger
METHODIST CHURCH,
H. R. McDaniel. Pastor.
L. F. Barnhardt, superintendent;
Paulyne Hughey, secretary-treas-
urer.
No. present Sunday 50, collection
$2.40.
Sunday school every Sunday
morning at 10 o'clock. Church
services first and third Sunday ai
11 a. m. and 7 p. m.
CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
Rev. E. H. Hill, Pastor.
Elmer Schwartz, Superintendent
Mrs. Carrie Patton, Secretary
Ireasurer.
No. present Sunday 32, collection
$2.38.
Sunday school every Sunday
morning at 10 o’clock
Church services every first and
third Sunday at 11 a. m. and 7 p.
m.
Instead, Braddock, a Houston oil
man, bought a sizeable lease interest
from Lewis, an Olustee, Okla.,
fanner, who has holding near the
Opelika well of the Tide Water,
Seaboard and Humble Companies.
By appointment the two men met
in a local hotel. Braddock opened
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There will be a Mother’s Day
service at the Christian Church next
Sunday morning, May 2, at the 11
o’clock hour.
The High School Glee Club will
sing at the evening service. The pub-
lis is cordially invited to attend both
of these services.
Raymond Risinger of Denton
spent the week end with relatives
here.
Austin, Texas, April 28.—The
house adopted unanimously Tuesday
a resolution by Bryan Bradbury
asking congress to pass a progres-
sive and far-reaching program to
Dallas, Texas, April 26.—One Dal-
las woman was killed Sunday and
fourteen other residents of the city
injured, at least two seriously, in a
wave of automobile accidents. Eleven
of the persons hurt were involved in I
accidents that occurred within a I
thirty-minute interval at 5:30 p. m. ]
giving deputy sheriffs a busy supper !
hour.
Mrs. Larry Wilson, 49, of Melrose
Court, was killed and three other
Dallasites were injured when an au-
tomobile in which they were riding
plunged off the road at a curve
near Noble, six miles south of Nor-
man, Okla.
Taken to Norman Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. L. A. White and Miss
White Luna, all of Dallas, were in-
jured and were taken to the Ameri-
can hospital, Norman. Mr. White
suffered a fractured neck and leg in-
juries, while his wife received cuts
about the legs and body bruises.
Miss Luna suffered severe cuts
about the head.
The four were on a trip to visit
friends in Oklahoma City when the
accident occurred.
The body of Mrs. Wilson was re-
turned to Dallas Monday morning,
and forwarded to Alexandria, La.,
Monday night. She is survived by
her daughter, Jane, 13, and a sister,
Mrs. Joe Dellmon, Alexandria, La.
. The condition of J. D. Brock is
unimproved.
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MAN DISCOVERS NEW
USE FO32 HIS CRUTCH
IN BEATING UP WIFE
Dallas, Texas, April 28.—A 40-
year-old South Dallas woman com-
plained to police Tuesday night that
her husband had employed his
crutch for a purpose for which it
was not intended. He struck her on
the head with it, she said. The wo-
man was given first aid treatment
at the Emergency Hospital for a lac-
eration over the right eye. The
husband was not arrested.
PALMER, ELLIS COUNTY, TEXAS THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1937
- ■. “
7
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Merchants Sponsor
Business is rapidly improving. The
merchants of Palmer have already
begun the free picture show and a
large crowd was on the streets until
late Saturday night.
Boy Given $600
Damages as World
War Casualty
San Francisco, Calif., Aril 26.—
San Francisco is paying $600 for a
World war casualty—to a child who
was not even alive during the con-
flict.
In the patriotic days that saw
, I Mr. and Mrs. h. B. Copeland of
i ; Dallas visited Mr. and Mrs. A. J.
McKeever Sunaay.
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The Palmer Rustler (Palmer, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 54, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 29, 1937, newspaper, April 29, 1937; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1409881/m1/1/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.