Claude News (Claude, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, May 30, 1947 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Richard S. and Leah Morris Memorial Library.
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nm&y. mat M.
iprap p
* 1 • " • - ' '
*>•* •" %> ■ rf .'■ ■ . v~-
i ' * V
tfao*. t.
j. a VAooom
cecil a waggoner
Owner
I u Mcnod das mail maOa
at Iht pan office at Claodt Texas.
U* Art of March 30 1SW.
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
Subscription Rates
In this Trade Temtnrv. year $2 DO
Omade Trade Ttmxory resr *230
MEMBER
FAMIANDLE PRESS
ASSOCIATION
d a farther shore
and fdt already tqxn hb mated
brow the breath of the eternal
morning.
of that
The Former
Editor Says .
'By
The*. T. H
Any erroneous reflection upon the
char-octer. stmding cr reputation of
■any pers-jn, firr. or corporation that
mar appear in 'hr- columns of The
Claude New will gladly be correct-
ed upon its bong brought to the
attention of the publisher-.
In the case of error ir: k-ga! or
othe' aovenisfcig the -jrblishers do
not Ivaid iherr sel.es liabie for da-
mages in «"tcii of the amount paid
for such advertising.
All resolutions of respect, card of
thanks, advertising of chur.-h or
society functions. when admission i'
charged. Till be treated as advertis-
ing and charged for accordingly
For Fathers Day . . .
GIFTS see
Tin;
Diamond Shop
Ail Nationally Known Brand's
of line Jewelry
514 Polk
Amarillo
Rheumatism
and Arthritis
Doctors di3cr as to the merits of
UUE-OVO. Many users say it has
oro ight them relief. If you suffer from
P.heum2tiwn or Arthritis *'• '.y not
r.-rite for literature on NUE-OVQ
f.-om Haiearch Laboratories. Ir -v.,
403 N. W. Cfth, Portland, Gregor.
E. B. BURGESS
LUMBER
At 5th <Ss Tyler St. Ph. 2-4321
Amarillo, Texas
A masterpiece of oratory ras the
eulogy by James G Bias? or. the
martyred President. Jarr.es A Gar-
field
Great in life, he was anpaisinglv
great Jn death F~r ivj ca.-ise. in
the very frenzy of vantonnes-s and
wickedness by the red hand of
murder, he was thrust from the
full tide of thir world's interest,
from its hopes, its aspirations, its
victories, into the visible presence
of death—and he aid not quail.
Not alone for on short moment
in which, stunned and dazed, he
could give up life, hardly of its
relinquishment but through days
of deadly languor, through weeks
of agony that was not less agony
because silently borne, with clear
sight and calm courage he locked
|into his open grave.
What blight and ruin met his
I anguished eyes, whose lips may
tell—what brilliant, broken plans,
what baffled, high ambitions, what
bitter rending of sweet household
ties' Behind him a proud expec-
; tan', nation, a great host of sas-
■ taining friends, a cherished and
i happy mother, wearing the full,
rich honors of her early toil and
;tears; the wife of his youth, whose
j life lay in his; the little boys not
jyet emerged lrctr. childhoods day
of frolic; the fair young daughter;
the sturdy sons just springing into
closest companionship, claiming
i every day and every day reward-
ing a father's love and care; and
I in his heart the eager, rejoicing
! power to meet all demands. And
jhis soul was not shaken.
His countrymen -.vere thrilled v.-;th
; instant, profound and universal
| sympathy Masterful ir. his mortal
| v.-eakness, he became the center of
1 a nation's love, enshrined in the
prayers of a world. But ail the love
: and ail the sympathy could not
:hare with him his uffering. He
I trod the wine-press alone. With
! unfaltering front he faced death.
With unfailing tendernes- he took
I leave of i.fe Above 'he der: .iniat
I hiss of the a-.sas.-ir.'- Luiiet, he
Three cjdona, originating sooth
of White Deer wrought destractioo
to time ton to thb area, leav-
ing a known total of MB dead and
many hundreds wounded. — The
Miami Chief.
• • •
Many farmers and local grain 1
men are comparing this year with
The old savins No profit no ^ 0f 1944 when ,
War" soil holds good The War ><>* ? of
Mongers are sull at their old tricks. bam*!dl * ^
. _ acres of land That year, crop con- I
in trying to get the unsofisticaied. .... _ . . , , . f* .
.v. „ . . , ditions remained ideal through har- J
the ignorant, to favor war as soon . . . •
.v „ „ .. , _ vest, and while conditions have i
as they give the siznal. Naturallv ... ,
.' been ideal so far this year many •
they are not going to give this . . . •
_ , .. r~ '. things could happen to the crop I
signal until thev have bought up . ~ TZ ■
,. _ , . " . vf _ oetween now and hearvest. as any !
the Radio the Press and the Pol- . ... ' J
^ wheat farmer will point out—The •
pit. to train the lenorant into be- - . .. . „ ,. i
.. ? .... . . " Ochiltree County Herald .
iievmg they must fight for the |
Three freedoms." what they call
Democracy, or some other catch
word, they used in the past. The
big boys, those who do no fight-
ing at all who want to protect
and save foreign trade, wherein
the little fellows—who do all the
fighting but receive nothing what-
ever in return—educate him to be-
lieve he is fighting for Freedom.
and not to protect their trade in-
terest ,r. other parts over seas
'Alien he is so educated they call
a war. To illustrate; The very-
thing that most people believe to , , . ,
be untrue and a camaflodge in ^ ^ ^ J^e
excuse for a war: the big boys will Jul>' aad /ugust-but the ther-
jast buy most of the time on the didn Never before, nor
Radios, the Press and the Pulpit, ^ m tlhe hfor>" of l'le
teUing the illiterate people that a try ha"\ lhere *?n another
war is called to make us safe for * a P°pulace
Democracy, a thing the people ,'he ^ves
too, at that tune, is untrue: by wondered Moff Nalare had
use of the Press, Radio and Pulpit g°!^ da{t
they proceed to change their minds , ^ere wa! fl?* 6Ver?', mo",h
and in less than three years thev Apnl was aufew degre« cooler than
.v-, . , _ _ * * average, vnth more cold aav.s. Farm -
are to life hi to redeem Democracy , . , .
and not to make the rich man looked forward to a warm, aver-
richer and the Poor Man Poorer ^ge ^^ure oi tess than o3
Yes in le,.s than 3 vears the and JuneK fcr0"?ht Sr'°'
. . , .* , ana days when the thermometer
Dupe- fa J fir their palav-
or and ue: lull of so-called Pat-
fiatuAe
SIMMERLESS SUMMER
The summer months of the year •
1816 very nearly frightened the j
American people out of a year's |
l
CITY DRUG COMPANY
Prescription Specialist
Doyle Catching—Pharmacist
Courteous Fountain Service - Cosmetics - Magazines
and Gift Items
"NI BESBA AQUA QUE NO VEAS,"
* an old Spanish proverb which translated means . . .
"LOOK AT TUF. WATER BEFORE YOl DRINK"
Of course now we know it is Impossible to tell whether water is pure c'." not by
simply looking at it . . . And it would be just as absurd to relv on the appearance to
determine the quality or accuracy of a prescription. A bottle of medicine may be a
beautiful shade of pink but that doesn't tell whether it is pure or noison.
But there is one infallible sitn that a prescription has been carefullv and accurately
filled from the highest quality drugs. Just be sure it Harries the City Pru« label.
WE RE HERE TO SERVE YOU ... TO THE BEST OF OI R ABILITY!
It keeps us on our toes from morning 'till night, but we can still take care of your
needs in a mighty line manner. You'll find our prescription department second to none
for accuracy and dependability.
it it h
/SL
Words o/
j|w§| the Wise
Bedroom Suites - $89.50 up
Virt-.e is like a rich stone—best
plain set—Francis Bacon.
He was a bold man that first
never reached 45. For a whole A-eek ate an oyster.
riotism, as a dog is flees, and want
the temperature hung between 35
—Jonathan Swift
to fisht; believing "I am lightina "T", ™ *•' ** knows little who will tell his
to defend my country" when only cl"? d^e€S. ^Ued crops a" he knows.
three years before we knew posi- . , 11118 .I*?5 ^ *rost- —Thomas Puller
m"° h"""" """ Heaven has no rage like love to
lively that such a thing is a lie to
and 40 degrees, winding up in
n
day in the last week of August the natred turned. Nor hell a furv like
detieve the unsofisticated, to get u V . " " ,
, .. , y. !or th Presen.atlon of hl^hPSt temperature was 3, degrees. a *-oman scorned.
"; • " . " Dust in the upper air from a series —William Conereve
tr.e big boys trade ana property ,f , .. . .. . . —wiuiam uongreve
over seas The Radio Press and alcanoes biamed. the dust Monarciis ought to put to death
Pulpit orator, will have changed ^reven"nff l^€ suns ray'! from geN the authors and instigators of *ar.
ting through -- .i— ■— --j
.he .J.eterates minds and we are
And 1816 went down in histor
,, . ., .. , „ as Eighteen-Hur.dred-and-Froze-to-
fce ca::ed until the public, that 1>!ath
as their sworn enemies and as
ready to fight. Of course no war dangers to iheir states.
heard
•. '.:ce of G'-'i
simple
welcome r*wi in every home where men,
wornefl or youngsters luner from consti-
pation. Today you cm get the new, im-
proved Adlerika, the famous Tone-Up
laxative in almost ar.y drug store.
AdUUKA stimulates slugg:ih intestinal
muscles. moves waste quickly, but gent-
ly and pleasantly through the digestive
tract. F.n)oy that splendid feeling of warmth
and vitality that comes from a healthy
digestive system. Know the joy of happy
relief from constipations miseries. Get a
oottle of AIjUhika, the Tone-Up laxative
originated l>y a drxtor and compounded
jnder the direction of registered p har ma-
^ts. Caution: take only as di ccted.
Camera Supplies
Amarillo Photo
Supply
EVERYTHING I'llOTOtWt.M'IIK
128 E. 7th Street
C.A 'Cy' Clemmorr, Amarillo
Experience Watch
Repairing
ONE DAY SERVICE
OUR WORK GUARANTEED
PUBLIC TRADING
POST
123 E. 4th
I resignation, he bowed to th< Divine
decree.
; ajj the end drew near 1.. early
craving for the - *- ■- "■ ;rnf'i. The
'stately mar.--.on p-ver hat1 been
| to him the v.ea:i' rr.' hospital of
ipain and he r>e;' ;ed to oe taken
from his prison walls from its op-
pressive, stifling air, from home-
jiessness and it--: hopei' net. Oc-n-
j tly, silently, the love of a great
i people bore the paie ufferer to
Ithe longed-for healing of the «ea
• to Jive and to die as God should
: will, within ';ght of the heaving
I billows, within sound of it. mani-
i fold voices.
! With a wan, fevered face tender-
j iy lilted to the cotjline M' « ze, he
| i'/jked wistfully upon the ocean
changing wonders; on its far saiis:
on It; re?:tless waves, roll.'.g shore-
i ward to break and die r eneath the
1 noon-day sun; on the red clouds
of evening, arching low to the
horizon; or. the sere;-.' and hining
pathway of the stars Let us think
that his dying eye; read a mystic
meaning which only the rapt and
parting soul may know Let us be-
wi
is a majority of the people have
teen aecer.ed and made to want
t-j fight Take a vote bc-fore this
d Kept; on campaign FOR WAR
and you - .11 find that 90 percent
the people OPPOSE WAR, and
then *ake a .oic 3 years later af-
ter th. tampaign of deception, and
over hci? the people are ready for ar,d whsle "-ored m *>ins.
war Then bruits the drafting or aries' dweUines and other buildings
ct-r.fiscatu.:' of the lives of innocent
men—those who do the agalnst flre and lightening only at
—Ekzateth. Queen of England
You're really at home on the
job when you've- emptied and re-
Windstorm and Fire
I_ . m . nged every drawer in your new
insurance at Harvest .v..:.
Did you know that you can in-
sure your wheat, standing in field, iiti «
while being cut, while being thrash- VV here r arm
ram- Power Comes From
tanks stacks cribs and sh'-"- ne Rural Electrification Admin-
co;.,- and men-those who do the °T a"u Bl itv as the Meat
fight,ng but gain nothing what- J cents per $100 for one month or ^ agriculti
istration has received wide public-
ity as the great white hope of Ain-
ire so far as elec-
concerned. It has re-
ceived enormous grants of money
of
ans are ready
e;astance.
t/i put
Jpo.o this nation Why? The )eopl' on 'jncut Pain-
'e r tfn to nnri m-rf' w>iiov<, Also 'mle harvesting you can ,
are I.IED TO and nude to believe insure tractors or combines and from the Federal lreasur>'. " d ha*
other harvesting machinerv against ,'ee,i " affed with an army of tax-
lightening and fire for 32 ctnts suPP°rtw' job-holders. So it may
per $100. one month or 49 cents tome 35 news t0 man-v PeoPle
per S100 for two month t0 learn that the REA 15 a lon8
For Windstorm and hail an A'ay fct'Wnri.lhe uniubsidized Priv"
farm machinery one month 12 cents ate industry in the job of
eks ago Han well Ja- ')cr *10". two months 18 cents ]jer f
Ionic c ner of a turkey farm in 1100
northeast Texas, set out to do ChaS. W. SteWRl't
about the turkey econo- ; Agent
A wide selection
of lovely Bedroom
Suites priced from
$89.50 up.
ARE YOU SHORT A BEDROOM?
If so, select a com-
fortable bed - type
sofa from our lar-
ge stock, ranging
from $54.50 up.
SOUTHERN FURNITURE CO.
Successor to Jeff Burks Furniture
312 E. 10th Amarillo
Free Parking Convenient Terms
Clippings from
Our Exchange .
A fc
4th ik Taylor
Amarillo
Clean DENTAL
PLATES
7hi* Easy Way..,
A UM. • «va y
lw 4*-nr«l anil
br*<f«r If I A I I V rlfin.
Ju«l put your pint* In •
r«.f «ai r K6A • Ii«tt
* «irh arfing r.f KKM IK w.jh «aV|r.|lk«
• '*ril, <fi«iuloration.aiain# nnd drntur# odora
«atiufc -- thr orltinal rlran brirhlntaa U
|t n rant rtonuimral anif aafa.
A-h r«uf for Kl.i:KNITK lodaf.
Jutf
BIO SHOWS
AFT. tr EV£.
t" v A Jor*i Brot Prodot
- // Idf-tt BulU —
Fovi« i Col't". —B >t Cowboys
1 ft m Corion or.«J Holly
wood, Colif , (tolurmtj Tr <l
— fonty R'dirio ond Pop
>«•
something
my of hi country, in which mer-.
chandising i trying to fit 140
million pounds of cold storage tur-1
keys into the scheme of things.!
When you want a steak dinner.'
you don't buy a whole steer, and!
when you want a lamb chop, you I
don't buy a whole lamb, do you? j
Jalonick reasoned and asked. Well. |
hen you want a turkey dinner, do
you have to buy a whole turkey?
; Resul's of hi. efforts have been
turkey -teaks, roasts, chops, fillets
of dark or white meats, turkey-
burgers, drumsticks and wings, all
|ne;.t!y packaged in cellophane, with
giblet gravy and soupstock separ-
ately.
Cold storage birds are not dres-
ed and packed for steak process-
ing, ft. is said. Those birds will
have to move through the usual
channels clubs, safes and hotels.
But the new industry is catching
on with the housewives and far-
sighted individuals, and may pre-
vent large surpluses of birds from
accumulating. At least, it will re-
delivering power to rural America
At present, about 60 per cent of
; electrified farms get iheir power
from the private utilities. 35 per
Phone 30 cent from the REA. and 5 per
History Class
t
ItfcNIJJ fhe Brushless Woy
I
Oct KEENITE today at City
Drag and all good dragglsN.
B & T Truck Line
Eight Out Of Ten Say
R. Ac T. Again
move the turkey from the rank make a pile of money by corner-
of seasonal food and place it on | ing the gold supply. The only
the week-end tables of the people drawback to this scheme was that
of the nation.—Brady Standard. j the government might dump enor-
] mous quantities of Ti easury-held
If there was any doubt whether1 gold on the market to stabilize the
or not mother nature has her own I price.
BLACK FRIDAY — 1*69 they were satisfied that Corbin
Lots of Americans lost their shirts had Grant "fixed," they launched
In 1869. Ulysses S. Grant was pres- their secretive campaign to cor-
ident; the South was being ' re- ner gold Working rapidly and
constructed," the stock market was quietly they soon had contracts
assuming vital importance in na- for almost twice as much gold as
tional affairs; men who didn't there was available. Gold started
care how they got it were becom- at 132 on Sept. 1—and by Sept. 24
ing millionaires, and the nation it stood at 162. But they had
was ripe for Black Friday, Sep- erred in thinking Grant was fixed,
tember 24. 1869. j On Sept. 23 Grant became sus-
Two of the biggest speculators picious.. saw what was taking place
of the time were Jay Gould and and instructed the Secretary of the
Jim Fisk. In that era gold was Treasury to sell Federal gold in
bought and sold for future deliv- any quanity necessary to bring the
ery, like corn or cotton. Fluctua-1 price down.
tion in price made a speculative Gould foresaw Grant's action and
market. secretly sold out, clearing several
Early in the summer of 1869 millions and leaving Fisk and a
Gould and Pisk decided they could large group of speculators holding
the bag. The crash came Sept, 24
The government put four million
dollars in gold on the market—and
the bottom fell out.
Long after dark, crowds of ruin-
ed and rumpled speculators trud-
ged the streets of New York search-
atomic weapons, as shrewd as any So the schemers plotted to con- j ing for Gould and Fisk. They want-
man might devise, most persons in (trol President Grant through his ed to lynch them. But Gould and
this section of the Panhandle have' brother-in-law, A. R. Corbin. When Fisk were no where to be found
Will You Be Ready ...
IS YOUR COMBINE READY TO GO
If not, you had better see us
your repairs, so you can repl
all worn parts.
tor
ice
Play safe, have your machine
ready when the wheat is ready
to cut.
Farmers Grain & Implement Co.
Phone 37 Claude
cMrn,vrnlfrsystems abip ma
hnnrt'rert'' ust'y- "wned bv V,M'V smn minority of our farms
hundreds of thousands of Individ- will have a power line within easy
ual Investors, has voluntarily taken reach.
avn!l[ih'lpSe'n Flnv fnrmers «*ed <o be sold on
ava able, as rapidly as possible, to the value of electricity as an ally
I is eivmTthat°t t U"1'edStates 10 lu,'P **>' > i" doing the work of
, T i 'lln,mn'S fnrming ^ml improving the
to an A-l priority. To that end, it family's way of llvin ' It is the
has made $300,000,000 available for cheapest of servants, it is always
equipment, on call. And the Industry supplies
needed construction and
';s 1natlonal "> «'" <' it has a record of unbroken, over-
and will be felt In every state. By improving service to the nation in
•j
the end of 1948. if the utilities
are war and in peace.
POSSUM FLATS ... barber shop chatter
t'mon Panpfmonium!
PAT CAT-FEKSH A'FRVIN',
PEfA BISCUITS
A'UAKIH'
GET
THAT HAIR
OUT'A f/W
E-W E S, vlOE.
1 missed tm6
GLADlOLft
platter oncet
this
MoawiN'
you HEAP
WHAT fOP
WPES 5AIP
on the
saturpav
night shin-
pig LAVT
DIPN'T POP SAV —
'too manw modern
go-<3ette«s wave
TO be tolp whereto
go anp what to
get ">
NOW, TALK IN
ABOUT
GLAD10L A
BISCUITS-
wurrv
it up, Joe
we're havin
'eta fop supper
tonight!
SHCOE-
1 AI.V(A/S
TOME IN TO
WFAA
OR
WOA1
WCI K
„FO THAT
"* zS-i)
K<#i
ewervdopy bakim
GLAO^OLA
FLOOR r>NV nafw
A B SC.UIT KCW
ME "
-1M
Hum TEW
uHAHAM Hunter
j:
&
\^IZT tVfRv caking uouR
W'TM G, APIOL n FL0OR i
— '
ERWBOPy &AKIN1 ^ I ,s"*—
warn a
FLVI/R
'*Nt Mlltl.ltl COUfiNT
L
^ "Tv ,
mmji
\)X
i ' iTTwwi •
• ]
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Waggoner, William J. B. & Waggoner, Cecil O. Claude News (Claude, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, May 30, 1947, newspaper, May 30, 1947; Claude, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth353982/m1/2/?q=carry+nation: accessed June 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Richard S. and Leah Morris Memorial Library.