The Clifton Record (Clifton, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, November 17, 1933 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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To —derstand gold’s place in the
world today and how H affects opr
well being. one must Ant swiftly
trace its aw through other tines.
Europe's gold when Col am bos first
sailed westward amounted to less
than soaw present-day family for-
tones. Part of this Europe had mined,
part she had ptondcred from other
ia tka amount I nse la cleansing the cawn. Tala la daae with Htl
m dtortS! to tle patient. It la PeeeAUTQMATlCALLY.
Bl^apreMtt^ConstipTurn!’ Pitts! »f, are hipart dae U la
tSJt£*bm,7S then COLONIC IRRIGATIONS mare ,
^TkkeVfew of these and yea srlfl la anrprtaai haw araeh bettei
W A lady assistant is In ekargs of lady patients.
DR. CORNE1L O. BROWN, D. C, N. D
Turkeys
WAITED
MRXIA LEGISLATOR
FOR IMPEACHMENT
OF BOMB OFFICIALS
ON TEXA8 FARMS
W. H. Darrow, Eat. Serriee Editor
We Pay High
$1$ Dollars $$$
Dtlhrand to Our Plant
Other things equal, good seed wins.
Austin Bishop, Jr., Red River county
4-H club boy, picked more than a
bale of cotton to the acre on three
acres planted to pedigreed seed. His
father made three-fourths of s bale
planted on the same kind of land at
the same time.
Mexia, Nor. 9.—George W. Win-
ningham, representative in the legis-
lature, in a statement to the press,
favors immediate convening of the
legislature in an impeachment ses-
sion. He says he is shocked at the
revelations of job-a*Uing, which he
terms “about the lowest form of
racketeering.” He would oust all con-
nected In any way with the “racket.”
As a permanent policy, there
Something green from the garden
was used on the dining table of the
Ed Sklar home in Wharton county
every day from late last fall until
now with the exception of two weeks
following last year’s freeze. The gar-
dener waa Irene Sklar, president of
the Muldoon 4-H club.
As a permanent policy,
should be martial law in Austin dur-
ing legislative sessions to keep out
the paid lobbyists, be says. He con-
fesses amazement at the operation of
public affairs ia Austin during his
first term in odfce.
When half through terracing a field
last year rain set in and prevented
Oscar Mangold, Medina county farm-
er, from finishing the job. The rain
was costly, the county agent says.
The terraced land was the poor up-
land half of the field but it made 10
bushels more corn to the acre than
the richer bottom land.
Hungary is wrestling with the
problem of marketing its abnormal
wheat surplus.
A one section farm in Hale county
made money for C. H. Day and sons
last year, the county agent reports.
With the help of 4 sons Mr. Day grew
wheat, cotton, alfalfa, sudan, oats,
barley and grain, sorghums and bal-
anced crops up with hogs, dairy cat-
tle, baby beeves and poultry. A gar-
den and orchard helped, too.
D. A. CARPENTER
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Office: Carpenter Bros. Drug Store
Day Phone 63 Night Phone 241
CLIFTON : TEXAS
Pillage.
India, in time, became the world’s
******** gold hoarded. “The treasure
sink of the world,” she has been
called. Just how much gold is still
hidden in the seem vaults of her
prince*, nobody knows; from 1873 to
isse, however, the records show that
India imported about *2^00,000,000
Anything from bathroom fixtures
to false teeth are bought with canned
products in Tarrant county this year
accordnig to reports of home demon-
stration club members. Plumbers,
laundries, filling stations, news stands
and dentists are among the concerns
accepting pay in canned goods.
TEXAS’
LEADING
NEWSPAPER
**a gold bring* them all into the px-tureijef ,
*** «f international relations.
ang Yew think of all this when you bef,
watt through the United States mmvry
**’ » Fhiiodelphia and see the shiny trm
<*** new gold coins come tumbling out; ¥
or when you explore the vast. sOeat the
ten vaults of the Federal Reserve bank Chi
m lower New York city, sunk far be- com
and low the Hudson river level, with he I
their stocks of gold bars and bogs of \ mm
DAILY and SUNDAY
WHAT WILL
CONGRESS DO?
Extraordinary powers were placed in the hands of Pres-
ident Roosevelt before Congress adjourned hi the *«—w
of 1933. The next regular teas km pminimia
measures, whether of help or hindrance remains to be
seen. The News has the facilities of Associated Press,
United Frees and North American Newspaper Alliance.
These would be sufficient for moot newspapers, hut not
for The News which maintains lta*own staff of corre-
spondents. The News is the only paper in the Southwest
with Sts own Washington bureau, being ruprmntrd by
Mark^ Goodwin, outstanding correspondent ea national
&SSSSr3Sr£SS
Sunday.
: Value
For ACHES /PAIN’S
Potc/rates ' ^ootfics /
BUY NOW-SAVE 10%
.she
■amaMfea. is VMO.
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Baldridge, Robert L. The Clifton Record (Clifton, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, November 17, 1933, newspaper, November 17, 1933; Clifton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth776070/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nellie Pederson Civic Library.