The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 8, 1954 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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Homemakers Must
Clyde McPherson of Van spent
Old Bethel
He'd Better Hurry
STRICTLY FRESH
Bible Comment:
Mount Lebanon and Mr. and Mrs.
)
Mrs. M. S. Helms of Seadrift Canton visited Mr. and Mrs. Jim
$-
23
EWRM3 ’
The economic
1
We never permit our son to do B
Read the Classified Ads.
K
e
Stop and Swap
2 •
?
889Y
FILLERS
1
I
IRE SALE
WEEKLY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Get New, Lifetime-Guaranteed
Here’s the Answer
Bornean Monkey
DjN
1110
ipestOgQ
W
Ticklers
By George
TIRES NOW
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34
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Anes
36
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Your Old Tire Will Make The Down Payment...low as 75c a Week
.. S
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CANTON MOTORS STATION
L)
1
CANTON
TEXAS
34
Imr!
PEGGY
Low Pressure
Super-Balloon
Soft, Easy-Riding
CHAMPION
Jesus" Authority
Was in His Words
And Noble Deeds
ther Smith. He brought two good
messages, even though the crowd
nine billion dollars. Last year ac-
cidents took some 95,000 lives—
38,000 died in traffic accidents.
The greatest safety gimmick
any car could have is no engine.
Is Recappable
PLUS TAX
[ THAT 5 what
YOU’RE GIVING
ME THE FIVE
DOLLARS
A FO! &
7
(
gasp
dcik
afternoon.
Miss Novelle White accompan-
ied a group from Canton school to
SIZE
6.70-15
IM
g
We’re living in a world of
much change, but don't tell that
to the person who puts a dollar
bill on the counter
\ I
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32 Genus of
moths
33 Simpleton
34 Reins for
driving
39 Solar disk
40 Breathing
organ
41 Symbol for
thallium
F $4
2
and Mrs. Joe Harper of Athens.
Mrs. Leva Stout spent last Sun-
day with Mr. and Mrs. Joe John-
son of Arlington.
night.
Mr. and Mrs. Will
We don’t mind so much paying
through the nose: it’s through
the pocket that hurts.
• • «
A man’s financial success can
sometimes be measured by how
6..
3 *
12 Gluts
14 Down
16 Drivel
21 This----is
from Borneo
22 Earns
23 Dispute
24 Prayer
31 Decorous
42 Too
43 Portuguese
money of
account
46 Sesame
48 Sorrowful
50 Universal
language
52 Symbol for
tellurium
Honored With Shower
Mrs. Albert Pirtle honored Mrs.
Eugene Wilhite with a pink and
blue shower Friday, April 2.
Several neighbors and friends
attended. She received many nice
gifts.
17 Near
18 Foe
19 Behold!
20 Group of
players
23 Ignoramus
25 Anglo-Saxon
slave
26 Gaelic
27 Bustle
28 Doubly
(prefix)
29 Tone E
(music)
30 Vipers
33 Prostrate
35 Ripped
36 Lubricants
37 He lived 905
years (Bib.)
38 Preposition
39 Sacrificial
block
44 Jumbled type
45 Permit
47 Thin veil net
48 Body of water
49 Eel-shaped
amphibian
51 Oriental
guitar
53 It is a----
---monkey
VERTICAL
1 Touch lightly
2 Railroad (ab.)
■
0
0
OKAY...
WHAT
.15 IT?
—
-
9)
, A
, “The doc's fees come awfully high. .. . He’ll accept only
coffee as payment for his witch-doctor brews!”
MSan A
A single filament of silk is
stronger than a filament of steel.
Starr
Rev. Harve Dunbar of Edge-
WHAT5 the
DIFFERENCE
BETWEEN
A WOMAN
AND A
MULE?
AaXNOW -112
8PE
•sy-
%eT
"e
‘THE longer the world turns on
1 its axis the dizzier it seems
to get.
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lo
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3,1
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ermed
?
2 - 9,
THAT5
EASY: A
MULE
DOESN'T
WEAR A
. HAT.'
-
his wife talks to him in public
6.00-16
EXCHANGE
If Your Old T
Surprised With Shower
Mrs. Hardy Watkins was sur-
prised with a pink and blue show,
er one afternoon last week. She
received several nice gifts.
iVL—
r
i ki
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Church was well attended Sun-
day morning and night with sev-
eral visitors present.
P 3 c Harold Cash is hove with
his wife and parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Early Cash, this week. He is en
route to San Antonio.
Mrs. Susie Thompson of Dallas
spent part of last week with Mrs.
<• - .
2
2
-22
■' $
20837
A 182
SAY, MAW, I'LL BETCHA
FIVE DOLLAR YUU •
CAN'T ANSWER. J
THIS RIDDLE! .
r~
is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Adolph
Heddin and daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Chamblee
and Mark of Tyler spent Satur-
day with Mr. and Mrs. R. F.
Chamblee.
Mrs. Mamie High was ill the
past week.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Vaughn
and children of Dallas spent Sun-
day with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Har-
rell and children.
Robert Earl Carpenter of Went-
White of worth visited Mr. and Mrs. Jim
tion of accidents is estimated at
\
Time And Money
College Station — Jig Time
meals, or meals in a hurry, enable
the homemaker to waltz through
meal preparation like a breeze,
but she must also keep one eye
on the budget for she is aware
that someone must “pay the fid-
Wills to Watkins. We will miss them,
her but hone they will come back to
visit our community.
n here!
‘HONESTLY SALLY, AT TIME,—-
DON'T THINK MY PARENTS HAVE
THE FAINTEST DEA OF WHAT
--r GOING ON IN THE
---(WORLD!! »
• G7)/-.
8
len-
INTELEGRAM
Check the correct word.
1. The capital of Switzerland is (Berne)
(Geneva).
2. Idaho is associated with (tomatoes) (pota-
toes).
3. The edge of a woven fabric is called a
(selvage) (hem).
4. Former President Wilson's first name was
(Thomas) (Woodrow).
5. The calory is a measurement of (rainfall)
(heat).
6. Paper is (organic) (inorganic) matter.
7. A trefoil is a (plant) (carpentei’s tool).
8. Basilisk is a (mythical dragon) (ornamental
column).
S. The Sugar Bowl is in (Alabama) (Louisi-
ana).
10. Arteries carry blood (to) (from) the hearL
Check your answers, scoring yourself 10 points for
each correct choice. A score of 0-20 is poor, 30-60.
average; 70-80, superior; 90-100, very superior.
Decoded Intelligram
uox—01 ‘euetsmnoT—6 uoZexp [—8 uetd—L rue3.o
—9 feail—G seuoH— • 3en[s— € sood—z ug—t
An ounce of silkworm eggs
will yield 100 pounds of cocoons.
Twelve pounds of cocoons yields
one pound of raw silk.
The average automobile gen-
erates enough heat to warm a
six-room house. The car would
burn up within an hour if it
weren’t for the cooling system.
•*6
In 1953, motor vehicles trav-
eled some 547 billion miles, the
equivalent of one car traveling
50 mph, for about 1,250,000 years.
An average silk thread fur-
hished by one average cocoon is
32,400 inches long, equivalent to
900 yards.
o
(Ast
Ora Thompson.
Visitors attending the quilting at
the home of Mrs. Opal Shatley
Wednesday of last week were
Mesdames Pauline Johnson, Bee
Hyde, Sue Murphrey, Eula Lind-
sey and Ella Dyre of Mabank;
Halbert Shaw, Jesse Shaw of
High, Nora Foster of Dallas; Vada
Watkins and Grace Bass of Jack-
2
u
’ Famous
CHAMPION
TIRES
Save on famous
Champions! Enjoy
greater blowout pro-
tection, longer mile-
age and greater
non-skid safety. Life-
time Guarantee.
Stop and Swap to-
day!
Williams Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Will White of
Mount Lebanon spent Friday with
Mr. and Mrs. Tom White.
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Bailey and
daughter, Mrs. Dovie Chaney of
son, Sammie Walker, Lovie Fos-
ter, Odelia Cash and Anna Bell Ed-
monson. The next quilting will be
with Mrs. Beaver April 14 Every-
one is invited.
Mrs. R. F. Chamblee is quite
ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Toddie Lee Bums
and children of Dallas visited Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Stout Sunday
afternoon.
Mrs. Gilbert Stout and children
of Greenville are spending this
8,24
1% > 2
14“
$E4a"
‘ Recappable
E ■ Ps TV
Williams Sunday afternoon.
Farming is in full swing in this
community, although everything
is badly in need of rain.
.-sr-- "F- 8325e2
<- C K718
ie ,220
as he pleases. He just does it
without our permission.
MOON ROCKE‛
JNDER AKI
CONSTRUcTION
2 cesaxaT10**
MA *°ow _
274
=n-S
W
dr”
JESUS, so far as we know, had
• no authority other than that
inherent in His words and deeds.
He was neither a priest, a Levite
nor a scribe.
He had nothing corresponding
to a modern diploma or creden-
tials, and His “school” must have
been almost, if not completely,
unique in the annals of educa-
tion.
The great fact of this supreme
but unofficial Teacher, depending
only on the inherent authority of
the truth He uttered, is impres-
sive. The lesson which it signi-
fies should not be minimized.
• in our complex world, stand-
ards are necessary. Our schools
would suffer without some stand-
ard of qualification for teachers.
We would be at the mercy of
quacks if doctors did not need
proper credentials.
All that is plain. But what is
important, and sometimes forgot-
ten, is that such authoritative
and official credentials do not by
any means guarantee what they
are supposed to imply.
Incompetent .doctors and un-
trustworthy lawyers are fairly
common. So authority rests ul-
timately upon something more
than official status. Sometimes
a teacher, a bone-setter, a
preacher comes along who, with-
out any official standing, reveals
a knowledge and competency be-
yond that of many who are out-
wardly qualified.
Such a one pre-eminently was
Jesus. But He has not been
alone among the great unofficial
teachers of religion. Many un-
official prophets have proclaimed
God’s truth and won men to the
truth they declared.
And it ought to be so in the
realm of religion, where values
are inherent, or lacking, in actual
word and action.
The realm of religion ought tc
te the most free and untram-
meled of all of life's areas.
week with her mother, Mrs. R. F.,
Chamblee.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Brunson
and son Sherman, spent the week-
end with Mr. and Mrs. Irby Wil-
son and daughters of Houston.
Mrs. Murlene Carpenter accom-
panied them to Houston.
Mrs. Sally Cravy of Pleasant
Glade spent Friday with Mrs. R.
F. Chamblee.
Mr. and Mrs. Luther Hargrove
and Dell spent Saturday with Mr.
of canned, prepackaged, and pur-
chased foods.
Here's how the three plans
work with the same menu. The
dler." The busy homemaker will
want to consider saving time ver-
sus saving money, for it is a law
of economics that if one saves
time and energy one must spend
money, says Louise Mason, foods
and nutrition specialist for the
Texas Agricultural Extension
Service.
She suggests three plans to
aid the housewife in ner decision
to step to jig-time shortcuts, or
"sing a song of sixpence." Using
essentially the same menu, the
homemaker may choose (Da com-
pletely home-prepared meal, (2)
cost to the na- a partially-prepared meal by mak-
ing use of packaged and frozen
items, (3) a ready-to-serve meal
71
peeneME
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59
d
F*e,
(69#
rm
822* 2
N-wv
4A,
d" 4
& grgo
No
A
g
eace
i
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs. Tom White. I A, _
u . Mr. and Mrs Jim Williams vis- (hooce Ratwpen
wood preached at the church here ited Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reyn-vIIVV-VV-IV’I
Sunday morning and night in the olds of Willow Springs Sunday
absence of the pastor, Rev. Lu-
v-g““
§386388603339,
223333,,,
99,28
Several from here attended the rs. Henry Derring and daugh-
senior play in Canton Tuesday ter and the former's grandson,
glath-
080
1285385/-
. { 4 A $"
-
V
s
eK*/M
5446y
most economical step would be
for the housewife to cook all of
this lunch or supper herself: Mac-
aroni and cheese, green salad with
tomatoes and homemade dressing,
corn muffins, sliced fresh peaches,
raisin cookies.
A compromise would be the
use of packaged macaroni and
cheese, packaged green salad with
tomatoes, prepared-mix corn muf.
tins, frozen sliced peaches, pre.
pared-mix raisin cookies.
The speediest method and most
expensive would be to use canned
macaronio and cheese, pre-pack-
aged green salad with tomatoes,
commercial salad dressing, pur.
chased com muffins and raisin
cookies, and canned sliced pegches.
an
8,
w
"89
was small due to illness in the, . - • ...
community. Trinidad Saturday, She reported
....a good time.
Tom White has been ill with the Mrs. Ethel Stanbery and son
Hu but is improsing. have moved from this community
Mrs. Homer Esans of
Point spent Saturday with
daughter, Mrs. Joe Clair.
888
CW 282
AAAGRas
2a" ■ - -
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" 2—THE CANTON HERALD Thursday, April 8, 1954
MKK*
HORIZONTAL 3 Hideous
1 Depicted . monster. ,
animal, the 4 Hasexisted
,1 monkey eKean
10 Product of
bees,, 8 Brother of
12 Perched Osiris
13 Fortification 9 Newest
15 Scatter, as hay 11 Shouts
F J
be 7
77
y/
K R,
HUH 3 WHAT'S
A HAT GOT ■
TO DO WITH .
—T?
PeK1
--41 S
F-
7 4 9
< ? ft
COME to think of it. 'n
THRES NO DIFFERENCE
BETWEEN ME AND ON/
8 •(E)E,
7b M70Tem
•-TnR4 X
- 1 $*a. > "p
V p 2 1
.BEE
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14
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The Canton Herald (Canton, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 8, 1954, newspaper, April 8, 1954; Canton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1516552/m1/2/?q=wichita+falls: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Van Zandt County Library.