The Tyler Journal (Tyler, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, December 1, 1933 Page: 1 of 8
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TO DEVELOP
EAST TEXAS RESOURCES
AND
FOSTER EDUCATION
The Tyler Journal
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A CONSTRUCTIVE NEWS
SERVICE FOR SMITH
AND
ADJOINING COUNTIES
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T° “Sell” Smith County’s Better Farming Program to Our Own People and to Texas—and Tyler to Her Neighbors
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VOL. 9. NO. 32
v
TYLER. TEXAS, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 1. 1933
HENRY EDWARDS & CO.. Pub*
THE WEEK*
National and World News
By Alfred Millard
COMMUNITY CHEST IS
NEAR 70% OF GOAL
Desertions. Ground hog opposition
to Roosevelt policies comes out of
its hole to stay. Republicans long
seeking a definite issue, delight
desertions of outstanding Democrats
to the banner of “Sound Money.”
Financier-Democrat Barney Baruch
cracks down on “uncontrollable in-
flation." Then the supposed knock-
out—A1 Smith’s headline denuncia-
tion of the “Baloney Dollar.”
War Council. The President’s clos-
est lieutenant, acting Treasury
Secretary Morgenthau confers at the
“Little White House” in Warm
Springs, Georgia. Also, and with 20
new codes, General Johnson who
smiles when break-down of taxi
from Atlanta forces continuing in a
Blue-Eagleless Ford. Conferences are
unhurried and interrupted daily by
swims in the warm pools which once
marvelously mitigated Roosevelt’s
infantile paralysis. The President re-
fuses- direct comment on the cyti-
cism which brings nation-wide coifh-
ier-blast of support. But a minor
Roosevelt speech does refer to
"those obstinate and powerful who
are intolerant of the things we fight
for today.”
This coolest, most confident Pres-
ident well knows he would' he re-
elected today by a majority even
greater than a year ago. The cheer-
ful, balanced fnith of Franklin Del-
ano Roosevelt whose Thanksgiving
proclamation omits the usual
"whereases” and simply expresses
gratitude for the “passing of dark
days,” is more than ever, America’s
chosen leader._
THE QUEST FOR GOLD
Conquist adores. Like the
Spanish adventurers whose
early
discov-
eries of gold led them onward, re-
actionaries of big business and fi-
nance fight desperately for the priv-
tfrwrei nomm’imr mm
Campaign Director Wilie Has
$6870 of Budget of $10,000
Pledged; Some Not Helping
The proposed community chest
fund of $10,000 for Tyler was “with-
in about 70 per cent of its goal”
Wednesday morning, according to
Cap. C. L. Wilie who is chief direc-
tor of the 1933 campaign. “We have
i.n hand and in definite pledges that
are dependable a total of $6870.00 at
this time,” said the director. He
added that there had been gener-
ous responses from some sources,
meager responses from other sources
-—and no response at all from other
individuals and concerns from whom
we have every right to expect at
least “‘fair play” in community chest
support.
Director Wilie refused to name
any individual who, to use his own
language, is not deemed to be “tot-
ing fair” in respect to individual
obligations. However, he did name a
number of big business concerns op-
erating here and drawing their pa-
tronage from the community, or hav-
ing branch houses or chain-conec-
tions here “and getting more than
their share of community patronage”
which have not offered any support
for the chest He stated that there
were some of these concerns whose
managers and local employees had
not responded individually, not to
mention the lack of response on the
part of the business itself. These
institutions, with their employees
and managers no doqbt tylsy, it is
presumed have merely overlooked or
deferred the matter. They are to be
seen by special committes — and
then if they fail to show a proper in-
terest in this matter, which is a nec-
essary activity in the community
from which the establishments are
drawing their support, we will know
how to shape our budget, and also
what kind of steps to take as to the
fair-tutors end the unfair toters,
said Mr. Wilie in substance.
The committee hopes to announce
the final results of the Community
Chest campaign within the. next
week.
vwwvvwwwwv«y^ f
....East Texas News Briefs.... !
Gregg Man Kidnapped
And Robbed
Gregg county officers are seeking
two men who Monday night accosted
fibred Warnstaff, bookkeeper for a
local oil company, and forced him
into a car and ordered him to drive
out of town. Pistols were placed on
Warnstaff’s side a few ntiles out on
the Gladewater road where the men
put the bookkeeper cut after robbing
him of several dollars and told him
Hhey would phone him Tuesday and
give the location of his cai.
Warnstaff was kidnapped as he got
into his car preparatory to going
home from work.
New Gas Plant
Installed
A new casinghead gasoline plant,
costing approximately $25,000 is
being installed by L. B. Haberle at
Gladewater, and will be ready for
operation within the next three
weeks. It will be a separate corpo-
ration, and will be known as the
Chief Gasoline Company.
catch some one who has been using
slugs in the stations for several
weeks, and suspicioning the girl,
nabbed her in the lobby of a Jack-
sonyile hotel. She had just finished
a conversation on which the charges
were $1.05, officers said. In the sta-
tion box were found 75 cents in
good money, slugs for 25 cents and
a nickel. She has been charged in
Justice J. H. Odom’s court, and re-
leased on bond.
Farm Youth Held
In Attack Case
J. C. Leath, 19, farm youth of
the Pirtle community, was in jail
at Henderson on $3,000 bond, charg-
ed with criminally assaulting a 13-
year-old girl.
Franklin Cox, Death’s cousin, tes-
tified at examining trial Leath had
told him of plans to wait for the
girl by the roadside until she re-
turned from an errand to a grocery
store.
' Tom Whittingin, 27, a farmer,
said he heard the girl scream, went
to her rescue and pulled the youth
away.
East Texas DriBs
Continue Full Tilt
94 New WeUs In
Field Now Hat Nearly 11,500
Completed Oil Wells
94 In Week
Girl Faces Charges
Of Swindling
A Jacksonville white
nabbed Monday morning
and hak heen charged with swindling
in conection with using slugs at
pav telephone stations in Jackson-
ville.
Officers have been endeavoring to
girl was
by officers
Negro Accused Of
Shoplifting
Johnny Anderson, negro, said to
reside in Rusk, was arrested in
Jacksonville Saturday night about
8:00 o’clock, and has been accused
of shoplifting in conection with the
loss of merchandise by at least
three establishments in Jacksonville
Saturday.
Some County Commissioners
“Sorter” Pestered in Mind
ilege of acquiring more. Like their
nverworkod peons who got no gold
anyway, most U. S. citizens remain
unconcerned about gold but insist-
ent. on the fruits of the fair lands
incidentally discovered.
Rabbit Slaps Lion. So Geneva!
Johnson describes ihe dramatically
timed resignation as treasury advis-
or, of Doctor O. M. W. Sprague, re-
cently financial consultant, to the
Banks of England, whose conventions
toward stabilizing international cur-
rencies have been singularly in line
with expressed British policy.
Brown Derby Turns Green. Ad-
vance release of A1 Smith’s bitter
diatribe to he published in his
"Outlook” Magazine, foreshadows re-
alignment of major American polit-
ical parties but falls flat in its
chief purpose of forcing change in
administration policies. Al, sulking
silently in his tent since he lost | court routine, with NRA.
the winning Democratic nomination I AAA, with big “A,” little “a”
to Roosevelt, can’t stand it any I about every other thing that
longer.
Business continues to steadily im-
prove. IT. S. honds sink sharply but
recover with government market sup-
port and statements on the “sheer
Two of Smith county’s hard-work-
ing countv commissioners came run-
ning to this reporter the other day
with a kind of “pestered look” on
their faces. They wanted this paper
to make a little explanation
them. Here it is:
Club Women Visit Co.
Farm Near Lindale
Lindalc, Nov. 29.— Approximately
15(f members of the county’s Home
Demonstration clubs, composing del-
egations from some thirteen clubs,
Co. In terse holastic League
Director Writes to Teachers
Roy W. Smith, principal of Murph
school,, address Rt. 7, who is direc-
tor of Smith County Interscholastic
League, addresses the subjoined par-
-spent Saturday at the County L arm J agraphs to the school teachers and
four miles north of here. Delega- officials; of the county on the sub-
tions began to arrive early and by 10 ject of- membership in the League:
o’clock the group was “ready to ( a member of the
take things in hand.” the forenoon |
was spent in setting out in the yard J
and upon the lawn of the farm cer
Drilling in East Texas, the
world’s greatest oil field, with a
total of 11,451 completed oil pro-
ducers, continues unabated. The week
ended November 25 recorded 94 new
producers completed, one more than
for the previous week.
The Longview division led with 35
new wells, seven less than for the
week before. The Longview division
now' numbers 4326 completed wells.
The Kilgore division reported 31
new wells, one more than for the
preceding week, giving that division
a total of 3479 completed wells.
The Joiner division reported 28
new wells, seven more than for the
week bpfore. The Joiner division
now numbers 3646 completed wells.
Daily average crude oil production
from the East Texas field for the
week registered a decline of 9730
barrels, totaling 394,270 barrels. The
Longview division reported 167,830
bfttTrtsifldhily, a drop of 4310 barrels
compared with the figures of the
previous week. The Kilgore division
reported 119,560 barrels, a drop of
3140 barrels, while the Joiner divis-
ion reported 106,880 barrels, a drop
of 2280 barrels.
Crude oil movement to market
totaled 3,038,700 barrels, a drop of
88,830 barrels compared with the
preceding w'eek’s runs. Of this vol-
ume main pipe lines ran 2,775,080
barrels, a drop of 64,400 barrels.
Local refineries took 262,990 barrels,
a drop of 23,450 barrels. Tank car
movement totaled 83, a drop of 140
cars compared with the previous
week’s movement. Daily average de-
liveries over fhe above the amount
reported totaled 278,810 barrels for
the week, a drop of 20,720 barrels
compared w’ith the preceding week’s
figures.
Recovery of crude from the East
Texas t field -at the end of the week
totaled 139,789,310 barrels.
NATION HAS 200,000
UNEMPLOYED TEACHERS
Reduced Revenues Causing
Thousands of Schools to Close;
Shorter Terms for ^Others
CHILDREN WITHOUT A CHANCE
'
tain species of shrubbery and planfts
that w’ere donated for the purpose
by the Bickerdike Nursery of Tyler
and the Troup Nursery Company of
Troup.
Inspections w'ere made of the
shrubbery set last year when the
| club women held a similar outing
for j at the farm. Most of this shrubbery
was declared to have made satisfac-
idioev" of doubting IT. S. National
credit. The likely 50c dollar has al-
ready arrived at about 60c in gold
through the less obvious forms of
inflation. Thus Roosevelt shrewdly
achieves his ends before the contro-
versy boils over. The “aroused nub- . , , . ,, , t
lie opinion" upon whidh opposition the several dubs^ight not^fullyun
counts, will flop because the I Big
Federal, State and county govern-
ments are having a hand in for the
purpose of getting people off the
relief rolls and on to a job where-
by they could work and support
themselves and dependents. Really
nobody knows just how strenuous
and exacting are the demands that
are now being made upon such of-
ficials.
The said county commissioners
were afraid that their friends of
Shots who sponsor it have already
jipped a large part of “the public”
and nearned the complete distrust of
an.
squeaky WHEELS
City gathered statistics supposed
to prove farm prosperity, are broad-
cast to deaf rural ears. But money
talks across a thousand prairie
miles. I^ast week the first $730,000
in wheat acreage-reduction checks
go to 15 thousand farmers in 15
states. Corn and hog monev is com-
ing. As cotton checks soothed South-
ern rural revolt two months ago,
those cheerful panel- slips carry
conviction to the Midwest. A new
government project contemplates
purchase of low grade farm land
with its return to forest and graz-
ing. And exports to recognized Rus-
sia. whoever pays for them, are sure
to he largely farm products. With
politirs as with the old hay-rick —
“Tf’s the soueaky wheel that gets
fhe grease.”
FIRE-EATERS ORDER MILK
All the Way with NRA? As this
week opens, reactionaries are becom-
ing more appreciative of NRA and
other Administration 'agencies
Tooscvelt’s intervention forces true
Jnring 30 fact-finding days to
The County Judges and Countv torv growth and to be lending it-
Commissioners have born invited out j self nroperly to the scheme of yard
to about all of the achievement days ! beautification which the County
that have been held by Smith coun-1 Council of W. H. D. clubs had in
ty club women. They are busy with j mind when iniuating this project a
CWA. year ago. Tl\e dry weather had mih-
and tated against the best growth and
development of some of the species
set last year—and these were re-
moved in nart and replaced with
later donations.
At the noon hour picnic lunch was
spread—and that was supplemented
by an abundance of very fine barbe-
cued beef, a product of the farm,
and prepared for the occasion by the
farm manager, Mr. Gimble.
A check-up of delegations showed
that Prairie Lea from the extreme
southeast part of the county had
sent representatives from the great-
est distance away.
Following the dinner the visitors
talked individually and by groups of
the various phases of their work
having common interest. Then fol-
lowed a number of games and diver-
sions among which were nail-driv-
ing contests in which there were no
casualties to anybody’s fingers. A
hog-calling contest was alko a fea-
ture of the play period—but it is
not stated who was the winner.
derstand and would conclude that
the court and its members are in-
different to club work— or might
have lost interest—or something like
that. We can say for the commis-
sioners that they arc as proud of
the women’s club work as a 3-vear-
old boy is of a speckled pup with a
red leather collar around its neck
—and our guess is that they will
stay with it just like a Louisiana
coon hunter would if somebody was
“a-kicking his dog around.”
pre
I vTlr
vent Recovery’s first railroad strike
..Saturday when “108 Grievances” of
Southern Pacific employees in Texas
, ..and Louisiana are m< “ ”
\VlTTi1 flffletni*?
ultimatum of “No more concessions.”
American department stores resolve
on strict code adherence and statis-
tician Roger Babson says: “Break-
down can only come through cow-
ardice of Trade Associations.” In, . .
the Ford controversy, while Henry approval on the worlc
has shown he can “take "it.” he does
not come hack for / more. North Da
All Clubs Have Held
Their Achievement Days
For more than a month the vari-
ous W. H. D. Clubs of the county
have been holidng their several
achievement Hays. Some clubs held
theirs several weeks ago and other
clubs last week and the week be-
fore. Union Point and Bullard clubs
held theirs Monday. Then followed
those of Friendship and Joy. At
these days not only did many of
the residents of the several commun-
ities holding them attend and get a
better understanding of the real ob-
jectives of Farm Extension Service
as it affects the home and econom-
ic status of the women engaged in
it, but not a few of these Aehieve-
TiTPTTl~ Days drew—delegations—from.
the cities and towns and from parts
of the county remote from the par-
niwe worn mu nil y .•..whn.it: fijttfa
kota’s Senator Nye criticizes NRA
but it is for permitting “monopo-
V (Continued on last, page)
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holding its achievement day. It ap-
pears, in a general survey of the
purposes and practical results of
these exhibitions that it can not be
in any sense a question of whether
the county as a whole looks with
he work of these club
women, hut rather a question of
whether means can be provided to
the work over 'fd all ttrc com-
munities in the county whose > people
are desiring to avail themselves of
it. *•
you
Interscholastic League, you princi-
pals are urged to see that your fees
have been paid by Jan. 15, as that
is the late date on which fees can,
be paid.
No other extra-curricular activity
engages the interest and stimulates
endeavor along helpful lines more
than the contests which are sched-
uled for the county meet. Here we
have an activity for practically ev-
ery child. There is opportunity for
participation in fifteen different
fields, both athletic and ‘literary, J
ranging from the third grade on1
up to the last year in high school.
The State office is ready to dis-
tribute the Constitution and Rules
upon receipt of membership fees. I .... .- ,
The director general of Smith coun- Lindale; H._ D. Harris, Tyler; J. W.
ty would like to see a one hundred Mallory, Mineola, Rt.. 4; R. L. Ja-
cent membership of the schools cobs, Tyler, Rt 2;
Petit Jury List For
Tyler District Court
Is Announced Here
Petit jurors for service during the
week beginning December 4 in Sev-
enth Judicial District Court, at Ty-
ler, will be selected from the fol-
lowing l»st:
J. .1. Horn, Tyler; C. S. Shambur-
ger, Winona; L. R. Shelton, Tyler;
«C. F. Ham, Lindale, Rt. 2; R. W.
Hall, Lindale. Rt. 1; Joe R. Tun-
nell, Tyier; Fisher Godfrey, Tyler;
Dugins Bynum, Tyler; A. H. Starnes,
U D Horvic Tvlor* -T W.
per
in this county. Applications for mem-
bership are going in from all ’’over
the state and you should get in on
the ground floor and begin prepara-
tions early. The Interscholastic
League should have the active co-
operation of every school teacher in
Texas, and every school in Texas,
no matter how small, should become
nn active member. There were 5629
schools in Texas that joined the or-
ganization in 1932-33; they were
Rt 2; D. F. Gilley,
Whitehou.se; W. J. Scurlock, Tyler;
R. A. Rushing. Whitehouse; W. H.
Holland, Mineola, Rt. 4; O. O. Wea-
ver. Winona; E. L. Dunn, Tyler, Rt.
3; C. B. Cates, Lindale, Rt. 4; C.
A. Hanson, Tyler; C. A. Bearden,
Tyler; Z. D. Norton, Tyler; W. E.
Phillips, Tyler; C. O. Perdue, Tyler;
Henry York, Tyler; C. D. Braly,
Troup; Geo. R. Murphy, Jr., Tyler:
B. F. Wilson, Tyler; F. E. Pool,
Lindale: R. W. Foshee, Tyler, Rt. 7;
distributed over 220 counties. There T. O. Hill, Whitehouse; H. C. Low-
Editor’s Note — Speaking about
“hog-calling contests,” as our Lin-
dale correspondent does in the re-
port abewe, reminds us that a club
woman recently enquired of us if
hog-calling and husband-calling con-
tests are really one and the same
thing. We told her we didn’t know
—and now we need more light on
the subject.
S. F. A. Ex-Students Plan
Banquet At Teachers Meet
S. A. Kerr of Nacogdoches, pres-
ident of the Ex-Students Association
of Stephen F. Austin State Teachers
College, has arranged a banquet for
all ex-students and friends in con-
nection with the meeting of the
Texas State Teachers Association in
Austin -during 4-he.....-Thanksgiving pe
riod. It is hoped that all former
students will make it a point to at-
U»«d
-ImmuiimI. pat-l/ipi.thor
meeting. The banquet wjll be held1
at the Stephen F. Austin Hotel Fri-
day noon. December 1, and plates
can be arranged for by calling at
the hotel Thursday or Friday or by
communicating with S. A. Kerr,
Nacogdoches, Texas". :
Mias Velma Coltharp—Queen The-
at re
Mrs. A. A. Fleming—Queen Thea-
tre V
are contests arranged for every
class of public school, inVluc(ing
rural, ward, and both small and
large high schools, and all-round
championships are decided in each
of the divisions at the county meet.
The executive committee is willing
and anxious to help every school in
the county to make this year as
successful for the Interscholastic
League as Smith county has ever
had in the past. In order to do this
we must have your co-operation.
The members of the executive
committee are as follows: Director
General, Roy W. Smith (Murph
school), Tyler, Rt. 7; director of
debate. W. H Woodall, Arp; direc-
tor of declamation, Miss Mincy
Hinds, Bullard; director of extempo-
raneous speech, Mrs. Alma Evans,
Lindale; director of essay, Miss
Ruby Brooks, Troup, Rt. 2; director
of spelling, Miss Stella Crews, Tyler,
Rt. 2; director of music memory,
Miss Bertha Henley, Overton, Rt.
2; director of*.picture memory, Miss
Fredda Mink,'Arp; director of ath-
letics, Mr. Oden Dumas, Bullard; di-
rector of arithmetic, Henry Kgy,
Arp; director of choral singing, C.
J. Jackson, Bullard; director of
story-telling, Mrs. Lola Cox, 614
East Etwin, Tyler. :
L=G. N. Operating Revenue*
In October Show Decrease
ery. Arp; J. F. Thedford, Tyler; L.
O. Cagle. Tyler; S. L. Heath, Tyler,
Rt. 5: Geo. W. Florence, Tyler; J.
T. Colter, Lindale, Rt. 3; A. H.
Blackwell, Tyler; P. F. Gaston,
Tyler; W. W. Bonner, Troup. Rt. 2;
1 eo Barron, Tyler; H. D. Lorance,
Tyler: J. A. Massey. Tyler, Rt. 5; L.
F. Kay, Tyler; W. P. Fowler, Tyler;
F. A. Eason, Lindale; A. T. Bdiley,
Flint, Rt. 1; J. M. Hazle, Tyler; Nat
Shannon, Lindale, Rt. 1; O. L.
Shamburger, Tyler. •* :
Unpaid Salaries Now $40,000,006;
City and Rural Suffer Alike
Washington, Nov. 29.—Two thous-
and and sixteen rural schools in the
United States failed to open last
September as the third year of the
economic depression shrunk tax col-
lections or drained them into politi-
cal, public relief, or public work
channels. A total of 1,025,000 chil-
dren in rural areas alone are paying
for the present financial breakdown
V- no educational opportunities at
all, or by greatly reduced school
terms and curtailed school services.
The number of rural children
ngainst which the school doors are
shut this fall is 110,800. This is
more children than there are enroll-
ed in the entire public school sys-
tem of thp entire state of Arizona,
according to the National Education
\srociation. which has just announc-
ed. these figures after a nation-wide
study of what is happening today in
the rural schools.
Salaries have been reduced to a
noint where teachers are no longer
sble to maintain the standard _ of
living expected of them, according
to the Association’s report. Approx-
imately half the rural teachers in the
nation will receive less income for
the year 1933-34 than President
Roosevelt’s blanket code prescribes
for factory hands. Many teachers’
salaries are less than half the min-
imum prescribed for unskilled labor.
An annua! income of less than $300
is not unusual.
The financial situation of the
schools is as had, or worse, in the
larger cities than it ip in the rural
areas. Teachers in some of the larg-
est cities have heen unpaid for •
months. More than $40,090,000 is
now owed in hack salaries to teach-
ers who are carrying on solely be-
cause *hev cannot «ee children suf-
fer a loss which will handicap them
throughout life.
A survpy of city school conditions
announced bv the United States of-
fiee of Education shows that one out
of every four cities has shortened
its school term. Due to lack of avail-
able funds the schools of 700 typical
cities have curtailed their education-
al offering as follows: 67 reduced
art instruction—36 eliminated it; 110
reduced the music program—29 elim-
inated it: 81 reduced the physical
education work—29 eliminated it; 65
reduced home economics work — 19
eliminated it; 58 reduced industrial
art instruction—24 eliminated^ it; 89
reduced health service—22 elin^inat-
ed it.
There are 200,000 unemployed
teachers; 18,600 fewer teachers are
employed in city schools today than
in 1931. At the same time, school
enrollment has increased more than
half a million, Classes have been en-
larged so that in many schools
teacher attention to the needs of
individual nupils is no longer pos-
sible.
“Unless the federal government
steps forward immediately to give fi-
nancial aid to local schools many of
them will be crushed or forced to
revert to eigtheenth centurv stand-
ards,” says Secretary J. W. Crab-
tree of the National Education As-
sociation in summarizing the condi-
tions shown by this survey. “Every
citizen interested in the welfare of
childhood should write at once to his
representatives in Congress asking
the earliest possible ednsideratiort
of financial aid to schools after the
convening of Congress in January.
Already we have delayed too long.
The school doors were closed against
many children last year * and the
year before. The situation is growing
This year’s turkey supply for
Thanksgiving and Christmas is esti-
mated at 20,000,000 birds.
In this fair land of ours 12,000j
persons are murdered (1,000 a)
month), 100,000 assaulted, 50,000 j ---
robbed and 3,000 kidnapped every; Mrs. Mollie Shelton—Queen Thea-
year. | tre
worse. We cannot afford to have 'a
Forgotten Generation.’ ” / :p
J. M. Hodges—Queen Theatre
•' tM
■ :,ra
t
TOMATO EXPERIMENT STATION
IN CHEROKEE IS REQUESTED
County Council To Meet
Saturday At 1:30 O’clock
Ail members of the Smith County
On the International-Great Nor-
thern, net railway operating income
in October, this year, was $108,-
530,85, as compared with $140,548.14
in October, 1932, and, total operating
revenues, $969,380.63, as , compared
with $878,991.67 in the same month
last year. Total operating revenues
VfoTO >10,539.718.54 for the first tew
months of 1933, as compared with
$8,489,255.28 in the corresponding
period last year.
Council of Women’s Home Demon-
stration Clubs arc especially urged
Saturday afternoon ai ine court, j mato piant. This amount is suppos-
house. This is the last regular meet-1 0(j to suffice for a period of two
mg of the year and it 'is desired by \ yGarg.
at the
The State of Texas will receive
a request from the Jacksonville
Chamber of Commerce for the build-
ing of a tomato experiment station
in this immediate vicinity......-in the
near future, it was announced by of-
ficials of the Chamber of Commer -
ox commerce.
At the' last session of the Legisla-
ture, an appropriation of. $2500 was
^ tiig
T
Miss Cooper that both the old mejn-
bers and those chosen to serve dur-
ing the coming year shall be pres-
ent. Many matters of vital import-
ance to the proposed program of
activities for 1934 arc to have con-
sideration.
C. O. Perdue—Queen Theatre
It is pointed out that experiment
stations for study of diseases of
various 6ther plants have been set
up, and it is' felt a Similar station
should be established to study the
tomato. Since TSharokaa
the State in tomato production,
is the logical location of such a
station.—Jacksonville Progress. s
S
JO
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Edwards, Henry. The Tyler Journal (Tyler, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, December 1, 1933, newspaper, December 1, 1933; Tyler, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth620120/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Smith County Historical Society.