The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 29, 1939 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Van Zandt County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Van Zandt County Library.
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THE CANTON HERALD
PAGE TWO
THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1939.
Italian Masterpiece At Fair
Plane Carries
U. S. Will Crack
ABSTRACTS
Down On Spies
Summer Salad
0
3 sa
93
/
Phone 112
Canton
on
8
4
15
Nkea
1
• R
of,
IS WHAT MOTORISTS WANT
Taylorville, Ill. — Two Taylor-
-
g
2,
6 e
Spoiled Food
4
I
0
c ()
X
weather,
0
“Altering course
Qa
ON BRAND NEW
GOODYEAR
TIRES
HALF PRICE
entire absence of flies. Adequate
arily insane.
are
commented:
"Quite frequently I have seen worthwhile.”
on
in
smelting center, which
$8.25
only.
town of 900 inhabitants would be
KM
WMMMANAMTINMSTESNTMESandxmeu
0
NOW IS THE TIME TO KEEP
McLeod
SERVICE
STATION
Phone 127
j
HIS SUICIDE PREDICTED
BY ASTROLOGER, BAKER
R. E. Blackwell, Mgr.
North Side Square
have
the
Tenth Century before Christ with
the aid of thousands of laborers
who probably were for the most
ing bases at San Diego and San
Pedro. About half of all planes
made for the army and navy are
THIS OFFER EXPIRES AT MIDNIGHT JULY 4th
1939, AND INCLUDES ANY GOODYEAR TIRE.
THIS PRICE INCLUDES YOUR OLD TIRES
BUY ONE TIRE AT LIST PRICE
AND GET SECOND TIRE AT
worth his Balt?”
The replies came fast, mostly
in nautical lingo.
School of Oriental
Jerusalem, Yale
nounced Sunday.
Many buildings
up,” wrote one agency, offering an
interview.
PRICE INCLUDES
OLD TIRE AND TUBE
The first successful adding ma-
chine was sold in 1884.
military area. The order forbade
fishing in neighboring waters.
be on the same night of the broard-
cast.
Sell whatever you might have
in your way through the classi-
fied section of this paper.
222
3254
New Dressing
Adds Zest to
and declare that 500 miles to the
gallon will not be impossible.
‘av
mg
129,969 Cuttings
Rooted in 1938
Land in Argentina is measured
by the cuadra, equals to 4.2 Ameri-
can acres.
EXTRA SPECIAL
6.00 x 16 TIRE AND
H. D. RED TUBE
COLLEGES MUST SERVE
THE INTERESTS OF THE
AVERAGE MAN AND GENIUS
fied with a huge wall.
“There was, so far as we know, I
tg
MODERN REFRIGERATION
SHOULD BE PROVIDED FOR
FOOD IN SUMMER
-
% ' A
country W. Cox state health officer. Vari-
PRISON BROADCAST
ADDS DAY TO LIFE OF
CONDEMNED FELON
If You Have A Land
Matter of Any Kind See
Us.
VAN ZANDT COUNTY
ABSTRACT CO.
SHIPWRECKED SAILOR'S
SCHEME PUTS JOBLESS
GRADUATE AT WORK
ALL TIRES ARE FULLY
GUARANTEED.
TEXACO PRODUCTS
Wills Point, Texas
This work of Andre del Sarto, one of the Italian Old Masters on
display in the Palace of Fine Arts at the California World’s Fair, is
the “Virgin and Child and Infant St. John.” Thousands upon thou-
sands will view the famous paintings and sculptures on Treas
Island, where they will remain until the Exposition closes.
i The most important trend in the
field of domestic politics is the rapid
return to favor of the Republican
party. A recent Institute report
shows that fifty-one per cent of the
people would like to see a Republi-
can president in 1940. Three men
COME IN TODAY AND TAKE
ADVANTAGE OF THIS SENSA-
TIONAL VALUE.
39 Passangers
In First Flight
, port of Director Glueck. “He was1
King Solomon.”
1203
/
2*4
ks I e 9 MM"a
f
saccmma Aad
New York landed here today
the first leg of a test flight.
Aboard were 39 persons —
Lack of effective cooling process
I causes meat to spoil and milk to
contain a dangerously large num-
ber of bacteria.
Resort to thorough cooking or
rapidly at high temperature. Some
to pick you ; of the most valuable foods are of
SPECIAL SALE
1.4.50 x 21 H. D. Red Tube, 98c
4.75 x 19 H. D. Red Tube, 98c
5.50 x 17 H. D. Red Tube $1.20
6.00 x 16 H. D. Red Tube, $1.20
OTHER SIZES PRICED
PROPORTIONALLY LOW
The Hoover Library of War,
Revolution and Peace, at Stanford
University, contains 5,000,000 items
bearing on the World War and its
aftermath.
COOL
COOLING SYSTEMS OF ALL KINDS
SEE
7g
.a
। which need to be used if perish-
able foods are to be kept whole-
some are the following:
.2 i
90250
e
3
trip to .New York,
i -----------------------------
GALLUP SAYS AMERICA
OPPOSES FOREIGN WAR
2oiu2
gena
came
to the
THEN HANGS HIMSELF boiling is the simplest and yet
■-- I most successful method of pre-
ed bottles addressed to
agencies throughout the
and carry this appeal:
53 4
. "o "
zsig
Ac.g"
don’t
g for
hazard is greater in warm weath-
j er, because germs or their pro-
cide. Tuesday Walter was found
hanged. A coroner’s jury returned
motorists’ dream 160 miles on a
gallon of gasoline.
New Haven, Conn., June 11.—
The site of wise King Solomon’s
great factory town of Ezion-Geber
on the Red Sea—the Pittsburg of
Palestine—has been uncovered in
excavations completed by Nelson
Glueck, director of the American
for a man who can prove he’s
named as most likely candidates by
Republican voters are: Thomas E.
Dewey of New York, Senator Arthur
II. Vandenberg of Michigan and
Senator Robert H. Taft of Ohio
Dewey is the leading choice.
-
-
progress of the Nazi regime in Ger-
many. Americans regard the growth
part slaves. The place was forti- of Nazi and Fascist ideologies as a
threat to all democratic nations.
They fear that if the Rome-Berlin
only one man who possessed the Axitainhound “SncUthe'United
strength and wisdom capable of states would be the next object of
of initiating and carrying out the invasion. A small per cent of the
। construction of a highly complex | voters interviewed said they would
and specialized site,” said the re- like to sell food and armaments to
. । these nations for strictly economic
reasons.
2., /e E‘ 172632286365
An
Some form of modern refrig-
eration or cooling is necessary to
preserve food from day to day.
Rafe Lee Walker, alias Rafe
Banks, Friday was given twenty-
four hours more to live.
Walker was convicted in Free-
stone County of criminal assault
and assessed the death penalty. He
“Glad to have you aboard for a j Among well-known precautions,
Cherra Punji in Assam is the
wetest place in the world, the
mean rainfall being 610 inches.
inventors Saturday
a verdict of suicide while tempor- consumer or patron if there is an
“Stranded!
“On an island in Cambridge,
Mass., a college graduate-to-be in
June. Will work like hell for pass-
age to port. Gold stored here with
me (training in arts, sciences,
business, including marketing and
tion is in “complete control.”
He asserted that reports
join a Philadelphia firm in a few
weeks.
cases, is none other than a food
infection due to the presence in
food of harmful .bacteria or germs.
“Perishable food, if contaminat-
ed, endangers human life. This
spices, ivory, gold and precious
woods from Arabia, Africa and
India.
In constructing the town, Solo-
mon used thousands of sun-dried
.bricks which in themselves were
of such quality that some 3,000
years later some of the walls still
stand almost to their original
height while walls in the modern
villages nearby crumble or pull
apart at the corners within a few
years after they are built.
perishable nature. Such foods de-
mand the exercise of safeguards.
the vast
was be-
Dr. Harry R. Hoffman of the provision for screens and applica-
criminal court behavior clinic ' tion of every known means of fly
advertising; past experience in
newspaper office, summer theatre,
steel mill. Best references.) You’re j
going ahead and I’m going your [
way. Have you room in the hold
ar*."
lieved to have been constructed all
at one time from a preconceived
and carefully worked out plan,
were air conditioned for heat and
contained an elaborate system of
flues and air channels that per-
mitted utilization of strong north
winds as natural blasts.
June 23.— Be-
broadcast was
penitentiary on
his execution,
and insect extermination
*0 ak
Cleveland, Ohio, Juhe 1.—The
world's largest land plane, carry-
ing more persons than ever have
flown before between Chicago and
“Leto’s” for Sore Gums
An Astringent vith Antiseptic
properties that must please the
user or Druggists return money if
first bottle of “LETO’S” fails to
satisfy.
NOLEN BROS. DRUGGISTS
555**2.*28e
E5 -
—
"yslte‘
bacterial organisms. And
make the mistake of lookin
In growing potatoes, Belgium
averages more than 300 bushels to
the acre; Holland, 280 bushels; .
Germany more than 200 bushels; I
Russia, 118 bushels, and the
United States 113 bushels.
Cambridge, Mass., June 5. —
With no prospects of a job after
his graduation Tuesday from
Massachusetts Institute of Tech-
nology, John A. West, Jr., of Chi-
cago several weeks ago hit on a
novel but successful idea to win
a placement in an advertising
agency.
Adopting the course of a ship-
wrecked sailor, he tossed “over-
Suggestions for the salad bowl
always at its height of popularity
during the warm weather months
have not been overlooked in’the
summer menu suggestions from
Hawaii.
First of all there is a brand
new salad dressing which artfully
blends canned unsweetened pine-
apple juice and a little cornstarch
to a smooth, creamy mixture. This
in turn is spiced with a dash of
curry powder. The quantity of the
curry may be varied according to
taste, but should never predom-
inate the pineapple flavor.
This is the basis for many dress-
ings and before serving is mixed
with mayonnaise, whipped egg
whites or whipped cream accord-
ing to the type of salad with
which the dressing is to be served.
Mayonnaise will be your choice
if the dressing is to blend garden
vegetables. The addition of mayon-
naise or whipped egg whites to
the pineapple curry foundation is
recommended for egg, seafood,
meat or chicken salads. Whipped
cream is added to the foundation
only when the dressing is to com-
plement a mirture of fruits.
One and one-half tablespoons
cornstarch, 1 cup canned unsweet-
ened pineapple juice, 3-4 teaspoon
curry' powder, 1 teaspoon cold
water.
Cook cornstarch and pineapple
juice until thick and creamy, then
add curry powder which has been
mixed with cold water. Beat
92
i*
(Unc
«rgHE American Public is still
i overwhelmingly opposed to
military participation in a foreign
war,” Dr. George Gallup, Director
American Institute of Public
Opinion, states in an article in thc
July issue of Cosmopolitan in which
he tells what Americans are think-
ing about. “It regards entrance into
the last World War as a mistake and
84 per cent of the voters oppose
sending an army or navy abroa4: At
least 61 per cent favor a national
referendum before any citizen can
be drafted to fight overseas.”
Gallup’s findings, based on the
results of interviews by seven hun-
dred American Institue of Public
Opinion researchers who question a
carefully selected cross section of
voters in all parts of the country
each week, indicate that the three
main preoccupations of American
minds at the present are: war or the
threat of war and what the United
States ought to do to protect itself
from embroilment in foreign diffi-
culties; unemployment and inse-
curity, a hangover from the depres-
sion which wiped out jobs, assets
and savings of millions of families;
the New Deal and the future politi-
cal course of this .country.
There is a strong revival of inter-
est in European affairs, Gallup goes
on to say and a growing sentiment
toward giving all possible aid short
of military participation, to Eng-
land and France. This reaction has
rapidly gained ground with the
2N38483 T
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agbeu2eea,27e- ’ * -r
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asdsns-e
Solomon is .believed to
constructed Ezion-Geber in
A M
2
Ivan Sanders and James O.
Simons claim their invention al-
ready has succeeded in taking a
car that far on a single gallon
manufactured on the coast.
Recently, the War Department
has ordered airplane manufactur-
ers to keep a closer check on
aliens employed. Another phase of
the government effort to protect
its war preparedness operations
ous intestinal disorders result
from food which has in some way
been rendered unwholesome. Sum-
mer diarrhea or “summer com-
plaint,” affecting young and old,
is a serious type of stomach and
bowel condition. So-called “pto-
maine poisoning,” in nearly all
.inn
ey
JOE II. FRY
Phone 64 Wills Point, Texas
J
Austin. “It is a matter of vital
sabotage at aviation plans are be-! WHAT INVENTORS CLAIM
ing investigated. --------—
Extension Service, has several
suggestions for helping the cut-
tings survive the drought and heat
of the summer.
The combination of a partial
shade and a good mulch will hold
down the loss of cuttings and
young seedlings in dry weather,
she says.
A dense shade will weaken the
growth, and the ideal is one that
will cut about half of the sun-
shine. She recommends lath, thin
coverings of twigs, burlap bags, or
stems of wild cane—anything that
will serve to conserve moisture in
the soil and to decrease evapora-
tion from the leaves of the plants.
A mulch of partially decayed
leaves or straw, applied to the top !
of the soil, will also hold moisture.
Miss Hatfield warns that fresh
straw should not be used, as this
materials are lacking, the top of
the ground should be kept very
loose so as to decrease the loss
of miosture.
importance, particularly during
the warm summer season, that m e
board” in the United States mails sanitary measures be applied to | Keware (If
eighty-one identical notes in seal- prevent the contamination of
various perishable foods,” state Dr. Geo.
more than the previous land plane
record between the Mid-West and
the East.
The new ship is worth $500,000
and can carry 42 passengers. The
plane is the largest commercial
land airplane ever built and is de-
signed eventually for service on
U. S. airline. It is three times the
size of any plane in commercial
use now.
Aboard were 32 aviation experts
and newspapermen and a crew of
seven commanded by Walter
Adams, a division flying chief of
United Air Lines, which sponsored
the flight.
After an official welcome the
ship was to continue to Floyd Ben-
nett Field, New York, with an es-
cort of national guard planes for
ceremonies headed by Mayor Fio-
rello H. La Guardia.
“The rise ruler of Israel was
| a copper king, shipping magnate,
a merchant prince, a great build-
er,” Glueck said in his statement
released through Prof. Millar
Boroughs of Yale, president of the
American School of Oriental Re-
search.
He explained that the smelters
and refineries of Ezion-Geber, lo-
thoroughly. Cool on ice. It should
be the consistency of brown sauce.
If too thick, all a little pineapple
juice. Vary quantity of curry ac-
cording to taste, but never let the
curry flavor predominate the pine-
apple.
When ready to serve, all whip-
ped cream, whipped egg white or
mayonnaise, according to taste.
This sauce will keep for several
days in the refrigeration and may
be used for salads or with cold en-
trees, meat, chicken, eggs or fish.
Yield: Approximately one cup.
"8
1
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ae
* - 42622
25
talk,” said another.
"We may soon have a place on
our ship for you and your ‘gold,’ ”
replied a third.
center, he said. We ate going to । stay, which the governor granted,
see that there isn t any laxity. after prison officials requested a
The justice department, he delay so the execution would not
said, intends to see that the situa-
Pastries and food products
make a far greater appeal to the
235,
.33x,86
I Research in
University an-
gradual increase in the number of. 5
cutting beds, and Sadie Hatfield, S
specialist in landscape gardening ।
with the Texas A. & M. College
irdividuals get a report from a •---------------■
fortuneteller and carry out the | STORK OV ERLOOKS
acts forecast. It is a dangerous NEW HAMPSHIRE TOWN
thing for an emotionally unstable ; -----
person to consult anyone who pre-j Northwood, N. H., June 23.
tends t predict events of the fu- This Southern New Hampshire
ture.”
The cheapest advertising me-
dium is the Chronicle and Herald
want-ads.
Instead of trying to water the
entire garden on the same day, or
evening, concentrate on one por-
tion and give it a thorough soak-
ing, at least a foot down. Next
day try another spot. Such soak-
ing should last a week, and the
water will not be cold very long.
val activity along the Pacific
Coast. Since 1932, the United
States fleet has been concentrated
in the Pacific, with major operat-
first was sentenced to be electro-
cuted May 30, but Lee O’Daniel
granted him his usual thirty-day
stay, postponing the date until
June 28. The Board of Pardons
recommended a twenty-four-hour
venting illness of food-borne
character. This precaution applies
especially to food prepared for in-
fants and children.
Contamination of perishable
food is avoided through the con-
A California scientist has in-
vented a sphere which will reflect
light ten miles distant, inteded
for use by airplanes forced down
at sea.
in the dog house in countries
where large families are en-
couraged. Town Clerk Mark A.
Piper admitted Friday.
Since July 19, 1838, not a single
birth has been recorded.
Piper said he wondered if the
stork just forgot the town exist-
ed.
From other offers of a job,
West made his choice and will
Solomon’s Pittsburg
‘Palestine’ Unearthed
3*,"4338
Ten months ago an astrologer, slant exercise of cleanliness on the
told Walter his destiny was sui- | part of those who handle food.
The device, for which a pat-
tent has been applied, uses heat
from the car engine to develop
fumes from gasoline from which
the driving power of the machine
is obtained, according tot he in-
ventors.
The two men plan to give their
invention a practical test on a
pa
i "d
\
3 W--'
a282. "
Austin, Teras,
cause a radio
scheduled at the
the night set for
College Station.—Some people I
depend on their nose to tell them
when food is spoiled, but some-
times a custard has no detectable
odor and yet. will make one ill,
says Miss Nora Ellen Elliott, food
specialist of the Texas A. & M.
College Extension Service. This is
because it has been improperly
stored and has developed certain
An espionage investigation, he
added, is under way in San Fran-
cisco. ville
There is much military and na- forth with the answer
Austin, May 27.—Where is the
“ceiling” for more and yet more
education?
This question Dr. H. T. Manuel,
Univeristy of Texas educational
psychologist, raises after survey-
ing youth of college age in Texas,
for the Texas Commission on Co-
ordination in Education, in the
ninth of a series of research
studies covering the whole field of
education in this state.
A third of the white 16-year-
olds in Texas are out of school,
half the 17-year-olds and more
than two-thirds of the 18-year-
olds, he found.
Pegging a portion of his re-
port on the findings of the 21-
month survey made in Dallas by
the American Youth Commission,
headed by Dr. Homer P. Rainey,
since named president-elect of the
university, Dr. Manuel pointed to
an unemployed 24 per cent of
white youth, 38 per cent of negro
youth and 49.5 per cent of Mexi-
can youth.
That 40 per cent of the unem-
ployed white youth have high
school educations or better con-
tributes to the complexity of the
problem, he believes.
Dr. Manuel supplemented these
figures with the federal unemploy-
ment census of 1937 showing 96,-
807 unemployed young Texans 15
to 24-years-of-age.
Approximately 19,000 Texas
youths between 16 and 24 are work-
ing on federal projects—National
Youth Administration and Civilian
Conservation Corps — which offer
the opportunity of part-time edu-
cation, and another 14,000 are be-
ing assisted to continue their edu-
cation in schools and colleges, he
added.
“So far as number is concern-
ed, there is ample room for expan-
sion of high school and college en-
rollments,” Dr. Manuel declared.
“Facing the realities of the
situation, we are forced to I
abandon the fiction that college is
for the select few. We shall have
to plan our work to take care of
a range of abilities from that of
the average man to genius.
“If colleges are to continue to
enroll the average man, the genius
and all between, they must do
much more than they have done 1
to serve the intersts of j
each. They must learn how to
individualize objectives, materials |
and methodis more effectively.”
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, ■
cated a comparatively long dis-
tance from Jerusalem, provided
I King Solomon with finished ore
products which he exchanged for
Miss Elliott further warns, for it
can happen any time of the year.
When a custard is made, it
should be kept cold until used, and
used as soon as possible. The food
and drug administration of the U.
S. Department of Agriculture is
often called on to ascertain the
cause of food-poisoning outbreaks.
Too many times it has been
traced to some moist food as cus-
tard, custard pastries, a gravy or
sauce, or some left-over meat or
fish that has not been properly
kept before eating.
In case it is necessary to serve
custard pies later than the day
they are baked, Miss Elliott sug-
gests that the custard part and
the pastry combined just before
serving.
College Station. — Texas home
demonstration club women and
4-H club girls rooted 129,969 cut-
tings in 1938—cuttings of trees,
shrub8 and so on that by now
are making their contribution. to
the home surroundings of rural
homes. .
The success of the work in pre-1
vIouh years has resulted in a ■
was an order making San Cle-
mente Island, off San Diego, a
ducts multiply or develop more this danger onlv in hot
232222352
9 kg 98g** $g 4
Washington, — An intensive
campaign against foreign spies on
the Pacific Coast, especially in the
areas around vital army, navy and
aviation establishments, was an-
nounced recently by Attorney Gen-
eral Murphy.
Returning with J. Edgar
Hoover from a flying trip to the
coast, he told his press conference
that counter espionage lines “out
there” have been tightened “for
very specific reasons.”
“We took adequate measures
.because of the geography there
and military, naval and aviation
Chicago, Ill., June 22. — The
death of George Walter, 52, an un-
employed baker, was cited Thurs-
day by psychiatrists as an ex-
ample of the danger of a sugges-
tible person visiting an astrologer.
am Euam
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Lumpkin, Ila. The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 29, 1939, newspaper, June 29, 1939; Canton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1516313/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Van Zandt County Library.